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Echo Canyon (Summit County, Utah)
Echo Canyon may refer to: Places in the American West * Echo Canyon State Park, a state park in Nevada * Echo Canyon Reservoir State Wildlife Area, a fishing and birding area in Colorado * Camelback Mountain, Echo Canyon Recreation Area, a park in Phoenix, Arizona * A canyon in Chiricahua National Monument, Arizona * A canyon in Death Valley, California * A canyon in Summit County, Utah * A canyon in Zion National Park, Utah * Echo Park (Colorado), an area in Dinosaur National Monument ** Echo Park Dam, a proposed dam in Echo Park that was never built Music related * The New York City studio of the band Sonic Youth, and "Bad Moon Rising" by that band ** Echo Canyon West, the Hoboken, New Jersey, studio of the same band that replaced the aforementioned studio * An album by jazz flautist James Newton James W. Newton (born May 1, 1953) is an American jazz and classical flutist. Biography He was born in Los Angeles, California, United States. From his earliest years, James Ne ...
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Echo Canyon State Park
Echo Canyon State Park is a public recreation area located about east of the town of Pioche, Nevada, United States. The state park surrounds the Echo Canyon Reservoir. The scenic area around Echo Canyon has several ranches and farms. The park ranges in elevation from to and sees occasional winter snows. History The reservoir was created with the building in 1969–70 of the Echo Canyon Dam in the Meadow Valley Wash The Meadow Valley Wash is a southern List of Nevada rivers, Nevada stream draining the Meadow Watershed that is bordered on three sides by the Great Basin Divide. The wash's Lincoln County, Nevada, Lincoln County head point is in the Wilson Cree ... approximately ten miles downstream from Eagle Valley Reservoir. It is also a historical site along the Mormon trail. Following development of a camping area, the Nevada Division of State Parks took control of operations in 1970. Activities and amenities The park offers campsites, picnicking, boat launch, and fish ...
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Echo Canyon Reservoir State Wildlife Area
Echo Canyon Reservoir State Wildlife Area is a fishing lake and birding area in Archuleta County, Colorado. It is stocked with rainbow trout, largemouth bass, yellow perch, green sunfish, and channel catfish The channel catfish (''Ictalurus punctatus''), known informally as the "channel cat", is a species of catfish native to North America. They are North America's most abundant catfish species, and the official state fish of Kansas, Missouri, Nebra .... References Protected areas of Archuleta County, Colorado Wildlife management areas of Colorado Parks in Archuleta County, Colorado {{Colorado-protected-area-stub ...
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Camelback Mountain
Camelback Mountain () is a mountain in Phoenix, Arizona, United States. The English name is derived from its shape, which resembles the hump and head of a kneeling camel. The mountain, a prominent landmark of the Phoenix metropolitan area, is located in the Camelback Mountain Echo Canyon Recreation Area between the Arcadia neighborhood of Phoenix and the town of Paradise Valley. It is a popular recreation destination for hiking and rock climbing. History A cave discovered on the north side of Camelback Mountain indicates that it was used as a sacred site by the prehistoric Hohokam culture before they abandoned the area in the 14th century. In January 1879, United States President Rutherford B. Hayes included Camelback Mountain as part of a one million acre (4,000 km2) reservation for the Salt River Pima and Maricopa American Indian tribes. Six months later, at the behest of Charles Poston, the Arizona Territorial Legislature reversed the decision in order to ensure ...
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Chiricahua National Monument
Chiricahua National Monument is a unit of the List of areas in the United States National Park System, National Park System located in the Chiricahua Mountains of southeastern Arizona. The monument was established on April 18, 1924, to protect its extensive Hoodoo (geology), hoodoos and balancing rocks. The Faraway Ranch Historic District, Faraway Ranch, which was owned at one time by Sweden, Swedish immigrants Neil and Emma Erickson, is also preserved within the monument. Just over 85% of the monument is protected as the Chiricahua National Monument List of wilderness areas of the United States, Wilderness. Geology Located approximately southeast of Willcox, Arizona, the monument preserves the remains of an immense volcano, volcanic eruption that shook the region about 27 million years ago. The thick, white-hot ash spewed forth from the nearby Geological history of the Chiricahua Mountains, Turkey Creek Caldera, cooled and hardened into Tuff#Rhyolitic tuff, rhyolitic tuff, la ...
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Geology Of The Death Valley Area
The exposed geology of the Death Valley area presents a diverse and complex set of at least 23 Formation (stratigraphy), formations of sedimentary units, two major gaps in the geologic record called unconformity (geology), unconformities, and at least one distinct set of related formations geologists call a group (geology), group. The oldest rocks in the area that now includes Death Valley National Park are extensively Metamorphism (geology), metamorphosed by intense heat and pressure and are at least Mesoproterozoic, 1700 million years old. These rocks were intruded by a mass of granite 1400 Year#Abbreviations yr and ya, Ma (million years ago) and later uplifted and exposed to nearly 500 million years of erosion. Marine deposition occurred neoproterozoic, 1200 to 800 Ma, forming thick sequences of conglomerate (geology), conglomerate, mudstone, and carbonate rock topped by stromatolites, and possibly glacial deposits from the hypothesized Snowball Earth event. Rifting thinned hug ...
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Summit County, Utah
Summit County is a county in the U.S. state of Utah, occupying a rugged and mountainous area. As of the 2020 United States census, the population was 42,357. Its county seat is Coalville, and the largest city is Park City. History The county was created by the Utah Territory legislature on January 13, 1854, with its description containing a portion of the future state of Wyoming. It was not organized then but was attached to Great Salt Lake County for administrative and judicial purposes. The county government was completed by March 4, 1861, so its attachment to the other county was terminated. The county boundaries were altered in 1856 and in 1862. In 1868 the Wyoming Territory was created by the US government, effectively de-annexing all Summit County areas falling within the new territory. The boundaries were further altered in 1872 and 1880. Its final alteration occurred on January 7, 1918, when Daggett's creation took a portion of its eastern territory. Its boundary ...
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Zion National Park
Zion National Park is a national park of the United States located in southwestern Utah near the town of Springdale. Located at the junction of the Colorado Plateau, Great Basin, and Mojave Desert regions, the park has a unique geography and a variety of life zones that allow for unusual plant and animal diversity. Numerous plant species as well as 289 species of birds, 75 mammals (including 19 species of bat), and 32 reptiles inhabit the park's four life zones: desert, riparian, woodland, and coniferous forest. Zion National Park includes mountains, canyons, buttes, mesas, monoliths, rivers, slot canyons, and natural arches. The lowest point in the park is at Coalpits Wash and the highest peak is at Horse Ranch Mountain. A prominent feature of the park is Zion Canyon, which is long and up to deep. The canyon walls are reddish and tan-colored Navajo Sandstone eroded by the North Fork of the Virgin River. The park attracted 5 million visitors in 2023. Human habitation of ...
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Echo Park (Colorado)
Echo Park is a remote river bottom surrounded by canyon walls on the Green River, just downstream from the confluence with the Yampa River and across the stream from the dramatic southern end of Steamboat Rock in Dinosaur National Monument. Description The valley was first mapped and given its name by the Powell Geographic Expedition in 1869. A proposed dam at Echo Park turned into a nationwide environmental controversy in the early 1950s. The Sierra Club and other conservationist groups helped forge a compromise in Congress that eliminated the Echo Park Dam from the Colorado River Storage Project Act of 1956. See also * Dinosaur National Monument Dinosaur National Monument is an American national monument located on the southeast flank of the Uinta Mountains on the border between Colorado and Utah at the confluence of the Green River (Colorado River tributary), Green and Yampa River, Y ... References External references Echo Parkat Dinosaur National Monument ...
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Echo Park Dam
Echo Park Dam was proposed in the 1950s by the United States Bureau of Reclamation as a central feature of the Colorado River Storage Project. Situated on the Green River, a major tributary of the Colorado River, the dam was proposed for the Echo Park district of Dinosaur National Monument, flooding much of the Green and Yampa river valleys in the monument. The dam was bitterly opposed by preservationists, who saw the encroachment of a dam into an existing national park as another Hetch Hetchy, to be opposed as an appropriation of protected lands for development purposes. The Echo Park project was abandoned in favor of Glen Canyon Dam on the main stem of the Colorado, in lands that were not at that time protected. This was eventually regarded as a strategic mistake by conservation organizations. Project history The Echo Park Dam project was first proposed in 1941. Dinosaur National Monument was, at the time of its designation in 1915, a small park unit focused on the dinosaur ...
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Sonic Youth
Sonic Youth were an American rock band formed in New York City in 1981. Founding members Kim Gordon (bass, vocals, guitar), Thurston Moore (lead guitar, vocals) and Lee Ranaldo (rhythm guitar, vocals) remained together for the entire history of the band, while Steve Shelley (drums) followed a series of short-term drummers in 1985, rounding out the core line-up. Jim O'Rourke (musician), Jim O'Rourke (bass, guitar, keyboards) was also a member of the band from 1999 to 2005, and Mark Ibold (bass, guitar) was a member from 2006 to 2011. Sonic Youth emerged from the experimental no wave art and music scene in New York before evolving into a more conventional rock band and becoming a prominent member of the American noise rock scene. Sonic Youth have been praised for having "redefined what rock guitar could do" using a wide variety of scordatura, unorthodox guitar tunings while prepared guitar, preparing guitars with objects like drumsticks and screwdrivers to alter the instruments' ti ...
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James Newton
James W. Newton (born May 1, 1953) is an American jazz and classical flutist. Biography He was born in Los Angeles, California, United States. From his earliest years, James Newton grew up immersed in the sounds of African-American music, including urban blues, rhythm and blues, and gospel. In his early teens he played electric bass guitar, alto saxophone, and clarinet. In high school he took up the flute, influenced by Eric Dolphy. In addition to taking lessons in classical music on flute, he also studied jazz with Buddy Collette. He completed his formal musical training at California State University, Los Angeles. From 1972 to 1975, together with David Murray (saxophonist), David Murray, Bobby Bradford, and Arthur Blythe, Newton was a member of drummer (and later critic) Stanley Crouch's band Black Music Infinity. From 1978 to 1981, he lived in New York City, New York, leading a trio with pianist and composer Anthony Davis (composer), Anthony Davis and cellist Abdul Wadud (mu ...
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Rosalie Sorrels
Rosalie Sorrels (June 24, 1933 – June 11, 2017) was an American folk singer-songwriter. She began her public career as a singer and collector of traditional folksongs in the late 1950s. During the early 1960s she left her husband and began traveling and performing at music festivals and clubs throughout the United States. She and her five children traveled across the country as she worked to support her family and establish herself as a performer. Along the way she made many lifelong friends among the folk and beat scene. Her career of social activism, storytelling, teaching, learning, songwriting, collecting folk songs, performing, and recording spanned six decades. Accolades Rosalie's first major gig was at the Newport Folk Festival in 1966. Rosalie recorded more than 20 albums including the 2005 Grammy nominated album "My Last Go 'Round" (Best Traditional Folk Album.) She authored two books and wrote the introduction to her mother's book. In 1990 Sorrels was the recipient ...
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