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They're called "Miracles of Nature," and it's not possible to find a higher concentration of them anywhere in the world outside of Utah. Arches National Park contains so many natural red sandstone arches that there isn't a specific count (over 2000 have been found in the park), and erosive forces over the course of time mean they're constantly being created (by erosion) and destroyed (through natural collapses) in a geologically dynamic desert landscape. The National Park Service accepted the responsibility of protecting these natural wonders in 1929 when Herbert Hoover declared portions of the site a National Monument. In 1971 a finalized area hugging the western edge of the Colorado River was designated as the 34th National Park. Over a million visitors travel amongst the sandstone formations of Arches each year, marveling at landscapes appearing too good to be true, but real enough to hike up to and touch. The pillars, spires, balanced rocks, fins, monoliths, and arches were (and still are) carved by wind, water, and ice into the famous features we experience today.
Two layers of ancient red sandstone, the Entrada (deposited ~140 million years ago) and the Navajo (deposited ~210 million years ago) make up the layers of rock in which Mother Nature has sculpted these features. Over the High Desert 'High Desert' is a term in climatology combining elevation (above ~3000 feet) and limited rainfall (~10 inches a year or less). Sometimes referred to as 'cold deserts,' these inland ecosystems can have huge swings in temperatures over a six month period of time. Arches National Park has elevations that vary from 4000 to 5600 feet, with winter lows in the 0°F range and summers that can reach over 100°F. This image was taken at midday in June, the temperature, 101°F. Hiking is the signature activity of the park, with trails that vary from wheelchair accessible to extremely difficult to rock climbing/canyoneering. What sets Arches apart is that many of the hikes include trails atop the actual red sandstone fins themselves, leading visitors to locations with unparalleled views.
View from the Top Many panoramic viewpoints are easier to reach than their photos might suggest. I saw visitors of all ages tackling these hikes, with the key to success being a backpack full of water.swissgear synergy 16 laptop backpack At the trailhead to one of the most popular hikes in Arches National Park, Devils Garden, the National Park Service has installed a water station to ensure visitors maintain proper hydration. wagner backpack sprayerHiking in the midday sun (even hiking mornings and afternoons) in the high desert is a workout for the body, a body that needs to stay hydrated. flamingo backpack icingSo make conscientious use of the parks fountains, that's what they're there for!heineken backpack cooler
Devils Garden is the northernmost hiking area with a parking lot at the trailhead. It contains an incredible collection of the park's popular (and extremely photogenic) arches. Tunnel is the first arch visitors reach along the Devils Garden trail, and is one of the thickest in the park. Pine Tree Arch, down the trail from Tunnel, is the first arch in Devils Garden where it's possible to stand directly beneath the stone opening to pose for pictures. Landscape has the longest span of any arch in the park, measuring 290 feet. Recent updates to the measurement of Kolob Arch in Zion National Park (also in Utah), have shown that Landscape Arch is actually 3 feet longer than Kolob. This makes Landscape Arch the longest red sandstone arch in the world. I Think I'm Lost Remember to keep an eye out for trail markers on primitive trails (those small manmade stone towers, officially called 'cairns'), because it can be easy in Arches to wander down the wrong path, as I did several times.
Two special times of day where Arches lights up with the familiar 'red' stain of these incredible rocks, are dawn and dusk. It can be mesmerizing to watch the colors change as the sun rises or sinks in the sky. There's a reason Utah chose to put Delicate Arch on their license plates as a representative symbol of the State. It's unforgettable, and unmistakeable. I first visited the park when I was 13 years old on a family road trip to the western states. I've returned several times since then and it takes my breath away each and every time; one of those places you never get tired of seeing. So if you're in the market for an outdoor adventure, picture perfect, experience you can find nowhere else on the globe, consider Arches National Park. The town of Moab, an adventure sport capital, sits just 4 miles to the south of the park entrance. Photographs taken on November 1st, 2014 and June 22nd 2015 by Kevin Richberg Utah Travel Utah Arches National Park National Parks National Park Service
• Five people were reportedly taken into FBI custody on Sunday night during a traffic stop in Brooklyn. • Sources say police want to speak to a man spotted in surveillance footage at both sites in Chelsea. • Pipe bombs were found at a train station in Elizabeth, New Jersey, on Sunday night. It’s still unclear if there’s any connection between the bombs found in New Jersey and in Chelsea, or the stabbings at a mall in Minnesota this weekend. A powerful bomb struck the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan on Saturday night. The explosion, which authorities believe was from an improvised explosive device, occurred around 8:30 p.m. in front of 131 West 23rd Street, between Sixth and Seventh Avenues. Twenty-nine people were injured, but only one person was seriously hurt. At the time of the explosion, witnesses reported hearing a “deafening boom” and feeling a shock wave, then seeing a “cloud of white smoke.” The bomb blew out building and car windows and scattered debris over the street.
People rushed from the scene in a panic, with some taking refuge in nearby stores. This surveillance video shows the blast in the background, starting at about 31 seconds: These two videos show the immediate aftermath of the explosion: Police officers patrolling West 23rd Street saw the blast and immediately called for assistance. Nearby fire-department units also heard the blast and were quickly on the scene. It was later discovered that the bomb was left near a dumpster in front of an apartment building that provides affordable housing for the visually impaired, which was undergoing renovations. The blast was strong enough to send the dumpster flying across the street. The 29 victims suffered mostly minor injuries from flying shrapnel. Twenty-four people were then taken to local hospitals, and by midday on Sunday all had been released. Following the explosion police launched a sweep for unexploded bombs, searching block by block from 34th Street to 14th Street, according to the New York Times.
A second explosive device, a pressure cooker with a cell phone attached, was found on West 27th Street, about four blocks from the site of the first blast. “They circled the block and they parked their vehicle and actually walked down the block, and that’s how they found it,” new NYPD Commissioner James O’Neill said of the officers who discovered the bomb. “They did a great job.” Police have not confirmed that a tip led them to the device, but Chelsea resident Jane Schreibman told the New York Post that she spotted the pressure cooker near her front door while trying to investigate the first blast. “It looked weird, and I thought it was a kid’s science experiment, with wires coming out of the pressure cooker every which way. someone was throwing it out,” she said. After a second look she decided to report it to the police. Soon the bomb squad was on the scene. They investigated the device using a robot, and transferred it to a “total containment vessel.”
According to the Times, the NYPD is believed to have at least three such vessels, which look like a “spherical chamber hitched to a police truck.” They are “essentially an inside-out diving vessel,” with the ability to contain a blast of 25 pounds of TNT. The vehicle left the area around 2:25 a.m on Sunday morning, and headed to Rodman’s Neck, a peninsula in the Bronx. The police facility there is often used to examine suspicious packages. On Sunday, police disabled the bomb using a controlled explosion and it was sent to the FBI laboratory in Quantico, Virginia, for further analysis. There are multiple local and federal agencies involved in the investigation, including the Department of Homeland Security, the NYPD counterterrorism unit, and the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force. Officials said the second bomb is the best lead so far. A source told The Wall Street Journal that the bomb from West 23rd Street contained small bearings or metal BBs, and the second device contained similar material.
According to the Times, both devices were constructed using pressure cookers, flip phones, and Christmas lights. Pressure cookers were used in the Boston Marathon bombing that killed three people. Why the bombs were left on two residential blocks in Chelsea, not one of the city’s many landmarks, remains a mystery. One anonymous law-enforcement official told the Times, “We don’t understand the target or the significance of it. It’s by a pile of dumpsters on a random sidewalk.” Authorities are also combing through surveillance footage collected from the area, and on Sunday evening CBS New York reported that they’ve spotted what appears to be the same man near both bomb sites in Chelsea. Officials described the man as a potential witness, but stopped short of calling him a suspect. On Sunday night, investigators stopped a car in Brooklyn on the Belt Parkway, and five people were taken into custody. According to the AP, they were taken to an FBI office in lower Manhattan for questioning in connection to the bombing.
One official told the Times that all or most of them were from the same family, and they may have been headed to the airport. The FBI confirmed that agents stopped “a vehicle of interest in the investigation.” It’s unclear if the other “person of interest” was in the vehicle. Earlier on Sunday, FBI agents searched the car of an Uber driver whose car was damaged in the Chelsea blast. MD Alam had just picked up three passengers when the bomb went off, shattering his windows and leaving holes in the rear passenger-side door, according to the AP. Later he filed a police report for his insurance company, and officers contacted the FBI. Authorities have yet to determine if there is any connection between the Chelsea incident, the explosion of a pipe bomb in New Jersey on Saturday morning, and the stabbing attack at a mall in Minnesota on Saturday night. Cell phones were used in all of the bombs, but residue from the explosive substance Tannerite was found in the bomb that went off in New York, but not the remnant of the pipe bomb in New Jersey.
Pipe bombs were found in a backpack at a train station in Elizabeth, New Jersey, on Sunday night. Five devices were found, and one exploded as police were attempting to disarm it. No one was injured, but train service through Elizabeth has been suspended as of early Monday morning, affecting around 2,000 commuters. New York officials said on Sunday that the motive behind the bombing is still unknown, and while terrorism hasn’t been ruled out, so far there was no evidence of links to international terrorist groups. Mayor Bill de Blasio called the blast a “deliberate act,” though he refused to speculate as to whether it was a “political act.” Law-enforcement officials said they do not believe there is an immediate threat to New York, but the NYPD is increasing its presence throughout the city. Governor Andrew Cuomo also deployed an additional 1,000 National Guard personnel, who will help patrol transit hubs and landmarks. The bombing comes as New York hosts the annual United Nations General Assembly.