Zion National Park is located along the edge of a region known as the Colorado Plateau. The rock layers have been uplifted, tilted, and eroded, forming a feature called the Grand Staircase, a series of colorful cliffs stretching between Bryce Canyon and the Grand Canyon.
The bottom layer of rock at Bryce Canyon is the top layer at Zion, and the bottom layer at Zion is the top layer at the Grand Canyon. To experience Zion, you need to walk among the towering cliffs, or challenge your courage in a small narrow canyon.
See East Temple, the Court of the Patriarchs and the Great White Throne. These unique Navajo sandstone cliffs range in color from cream, to pink, to red. They could be described as sand castles crowning desert canyons. View the massive canyon walls as they ascend toward a brilliant blue sky.
Travel through the 1.1 mile Zion-Mt. Carmel Tunnel, constructed in the 1920s to connect Zion National Park to the Grand Canyon and Bryce Canyon.
While at Zion National Park you will view the stunning scenery, the spectacular network of colorful canyons, forested mesas, and fascinating deserts, sandstone cliffs that are among the highest in the world, diverse plant and animal communities and learn about ancestral Puebloan, Paiute and Mormon pioneer history.