Grand Canyon–Parashant National Monument Explained

Grand Canyon–Parashant National Monument
Map:Arizona#USA
Relief:1
Location:Mohave County, Arizona, USA
Nearest City:Las Vegas, Nevada
Coordinates:36.4°N -155°W
Area Acre:1,048,325
Governing Body:National Park Service and
Bureau of Land Management
Website:Grand Canyon–Parashant National Monument

Grand Canyon–Parashant National Monument (sometimes referred to as Parashant National Monument) is located on the northern edge of the Grand Canyon in northwest Arizona, on the Arizona Strip. The monument was established by Presidential Proclamation 7265 on January 11, 2000.[1]

Description

The national monument is a very remote and undeveloped place jointly managed by the National Park Service (NPS) and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). There are no paved roads into the monument and no visitor services. The 1048325acres monument is larger than the state of Rhode Island. The BLM portion of the monument consists of . The NPS portion contains of lands that were previously part of Lake Mead National Recreation Area. There are also about of Arizona State Land Department lands and of private lands within the monument boundaries. Grand Canyon–Parashant is not considered a separate unit of the NPS because its NPS area is counted in Lake Mead National Recreation Area.

Elevation ranges from above sea level near Grand Wash Bay at Lake Mead, to at Mount Trumbull. The Interagency Information Center is located in the BLM Office in St. George, Utah.

The name Parashant is derived from the Paiute word Pawteh 'ee oasoasant, meaning "tanned elk hide," or "softening of the elk hide."[2]

There are a number of ruins of former Mormon settlements in the area, such as the Oak Grove Dairy.[3]

Wilderness areas

Grand Canyon–Parashant includes the following wilderness areas:

Cave animals

So far, a 2005 expedition to examine 24 caves in the park has produced two new species of millipede, the first barklouse discovered in North America, a whole new genus of cricket and four new cricket species.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Proclamation 7265 of January 11, 2000, Establishment of the Grand Canyon–Parashant National Monument. http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2001-title3-vol1/xml/CFR-2001-title3-vol1-proc7265.xml. Retrieved 2012-1-27
  2. News: Keith . Rogers . A New Playground to Kick Around On . . 2000-07-03 .
  3. Web site: Oak Grove – Grand Canyon–Parashant National Monument (U.S. National Park Service). 2020-12-21. www.nps.gov. en.
  4. Web site: NAU researchers chirping over discovery of new cricket genus . . https://web.archive.org/web/20061231061756/http://vocuspr.vocus.com/VocusPR30/Newsroom/Query.aspx?SiteName=nau&Entity=PRAsset&SF_PRAsset_PRAssetID_EQ=108547&XSL=PressRelease . dead . 2006-12-31 .