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Natural Bridges National MonumentSipapu Bridge
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Natural Bridges National Monument
Nature & Science
 
Owachomo Bridge
NPS Photo by Neal Herbert
Owachomo Bridge
 
Stand for a moment at an overlook. Nothing in the scope of your vision moves. Strain your ears for a sound; silence alone greets them. The desert landscape seems eternally unchanging. But stay a moment longer and a small animal sends a pebble clattering down the slickrock. Stay for an hour and the wind picks up, blowing sand and dust against you. Tomorrow a thunderstorm may send a flood twisting down the course of White Canyon. In one month, several tons of rock may thunder down from Kachina Bridge as it did in June of 1992 when 4,000 tons fell from the bridge. If you return next year, Owachomo Bridge may no longer be standing. The momentary stillness of Canyon Country is deceptive; the same processes which formed the seemingly eternal landscape you are enjoying today are still at work, continually changing the face of the earth.
Milky Way at Owachomo Bridge
Dark Midnight Skies
The dark skies at Natural Bridges are worthy of protection.
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Scientific Research
Scientific Research
Many scientists conduct research in the national parks of southeast Utah.
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Bookstore
Looking for more?
Guidebooks, maps and other publications are available in our bookstore.
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Horsecollar Ruin  

Did You Know?
Horsecollar Ruin is a major attraction at Natural Bridges, and one of the best-preserved ancestral Puebloan sites in the area. Named because the doorways to two structures resemble horse collars, the site was abandoned more than 700 years ago.
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Last Updated: September 22, 2006 at 14:14 EST