America, Antelope, Antelope Canyon, Arizona, Canyon, Canyons, Desert, Deserts, Landscape, Landscapes, National Park, National Parks, Nature, Navajo, Rock, Rocks, Sandstone, USA,
America, Antelope, Antelope Canyon, Arizona, Canyon, Canyons, Desert, Deserts, Landscape, Landscapes, National Park, National Parks, Nature, Navajo, Rock, Rocks, Sandstone, USA,
America, Antelope, Antelope Canyon, Arizona, Canyon, Canyons, Desert, Deserts, Landscape, Landscapes, National Park, National Parks, Nature, Navajo, Rock, Rocks, Sandstone, USA,
Canyon de Chelly National Park, Chinle, Arizona, USA; ; National Monument America Architecture artifacts rock imagery living community of Navajo people landscape of great historical and spiritual significance infused with collective memory Navajo Tribal Trust Land Navajo Nation overlook cliff canyon wall caves rock stone ruin history native American Indian Anasazi cliff dwellings villages Antelope House Ruins trails guide American de chelley
sandstone; Navajo; natural; rock formations; stone; extremely beautiful; colour; color; sand; river; fresh water; green; canyon; flow; high; height; freshwater; geology; scenic; view; north America; united states of America; USA; national park; vista; red rocks; bluff; overlook; scenery; geologic; geological; limestone; erosion; chasm; Awesome Beauty; scar; meander; Colorado River; Page; Arizona
Description
Horseshoe Bend in Colorado River, just outside the tourist town of Page, Arizona, close to the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, just downstream of Lake Powell and just upstream of Lee's Ferry.
Horseshoe Bend in Colorado River, Page, Arizona, USA; sandstone; Navajo; natural; rock formations; stone; extremely beautiful; colour; color; sand; river; fresh water; green; canyon; flow; high; height; freshwater; geology; scenic; view; north America; united states of America; national park; vista; red rocks; bluff; overlook; scenery; geologic; geological; limestone; erosion; chasm; Awesome Beauty; scar; meander
Description
Located just outside the tourist town of Page, Arizona, close to the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, just downstream of Lake Powell and just upstream of Lee's Ferry.
United, States, America, USA, US, West, Utah, canyon lands, canyons, grasshopper, pallid, winged, Trimerotropis, pallidipennis, insect, fauna, red, rock, redrock, sandstone, camouflage
Description
The pallid-winged grasshopper (Trimerotropis pallidipennis) is a common grasshopper of the family Acrididae, native to the deserts of western North America from British Columbia to Argentina.[2] They are more active during the summer months, and their pale, mottled coloration makes them hard to see against surfaces such as the granite often found in the gravel of dry river beds.[3] They grow to be 37 millimetres (1.5 in).
United, States, America, USA, US, West, Utah, canyon lands, canyons, grasshopper, pallid, winged, Trimerotropis, pallidipennis, insect, fauna, red, rock, redrock, sandstone, camouflage
Description
The pallid-winged grasshopper (Trimerotropis pallidipennis) is a common grasshopper of the family Acrididae, native to the deserts of western North America from British Columbia to Argentina.[2] They are more active during the summer months, and their pale, mottled coloration makes them hard to see against surfaces such as the granite often found in the gravel of dry river beds.[3] They grow to be 37 millimetres (1.5 in).
America, Arizona, Canyon, Canyons, Desert, Deserts, Landscape, Landscapes, Monument, Monument Valley, National Park, National Parks, Nature, Navajo, Red, Rock, Rocks, Tourism, USA, Valley,
United, States, America, USA, US, West, Utah, canyon lands, canyons, long, nosed, leopard, lizard, Gambelia, wislizenii, red, rock, redrock, sandstone, desert, dry, reptile
Description
The long-nosed leopard lizard, Gambelia wislizenii, is a relatively large lizard ranging from 3¼ to 5¾ inches (8.2-14.6 cm) snout-vent length (SVL). It has a large head, long nose, and a long round tail that can be longer than its body. It is closely related to the "blunt-nosed leopard lizard" which closely resembles the long-nosed leopard lizard in body proportions, but has a conspicuously blunt snout. They were once considered part of the genus Crotaphytus. The epithet wislizenii is in honor of the German-American surgeon and naturalist Frederick Adolph Wislizenius, who caught the first specimen near Santa Fe, New Mexico.