Colorado Park List

Rocky Mountain National Park Dinosaur National Monument California National Historic Trail Pony Express National Historic Trail Old Spanish National Historic Trail Santa Fe National Historic Trail State of New Mexico
Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park
Black Canyon of the Gunnison's unique and spectacular landscape was formed slowly by the action of water and rock abrading down through hard Proterozoic crystalline rock. No other canyon in North America combines the narrow opening, sheer walls, and startling depths offered by the Black Canyon of the Gunnison. With a plethora of recreational activities, including hiking and ranger guided programs, there are many ways to experience Black Canyon.
Colorado National Monument
Preserving one of the grand landscapes of the American West, Colorado National Monument is bursting with sheer-walled canyons, towering monoliths, colorful formations, desert bighorn sheep, soaring eagles, and a spectacular road. Located within Colorado National Monument's 32 square miles is a fascinating landscape of deep canyons and soaring cliffs, reflecting the environment and history of the plateau-and-canyon country. The monument offers activities for visitors of all abilities and interests, including hiking, sightseeing and bicycling to name a few.
Curecanti National Recreation Area
Curecanti National Recreation Area encompasses three reservoirs, which form the heart of the park. Colorado's largest body of water, Blue Mesa Reservoir, is the largest Kokanee Salmon fishery in the U.S. Morrow Point Reservoir is the beginning of the Black Canyon, and below, East Portal is the site of the Gunnison Diversion Tunnel, a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark. Panoramic mesas, fjord-like reservoirs, and deep, steep and narrow canyons abound. Also, recently discovered dinosaur fossils, a 5,000 archeological district, a narrow gauge train, and traces of 6,000 year-old dwellings draw visitors from around the world.
Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument
Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument lies beneath a grassy mountain valley in central Colorado. The monument boasts one of the richest and most diverse fossil deposits in the world. A very different, prehistoric Colorado is revealed by the petrified redwood stumps up to 14 feet wide and thousands of detailed fossils of insects and plants in the monument.
Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve
Welcome to the alpine tundra, forests, massive dunes, grasslands, and wetlands of Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve. Come and explore the tallest dunes in North America! Whether hiking, sliding, exploring in a dunes wheelchair - or simply playing - the Great Sand Dunes are a unique wilderness area protected for all to enjoy.
Hovenweep National Monument

Hovenweep National Monument protects six prehistoric, Puebloan-era villages sprawling over a twenty-mile expanse along the Utah-Colorado border. Multi-leveled and strategically positioned towers lead visitors to marvel at the skill and motivation of their builders.

Mesa Verde National Park
Mesa Verde, Spanish for green table, offers a spectacular look into the lives of the Ancestral Pueblo people. The Pueblo people made it their home for over 700 years, from A.D. 600 to A.D. 1300. Today, the park protects over 4,000 known archeological sites, including 600 cliff dwellings. These sites are some of the most notable and best preserved in the United States.
Rocky Mountain National Park
This "park in the sky," which captures the full grandeur of the Rocky Mountains, is one of our country's most frequently visited national parks, attracting more than three million visitors each year. 76 of the great mountains in the park reach elevations of 12,000 feet or more. Forests of spruce and fir tower over wide valleys where aspen and willow line hundreds of streams and lakes. At the highest elevations, above the tree line, is the fascinating, arctic-like alpine tundra, fraught with blizzards in winter and filled with flowered meadows in summer. All this is just 65 miles northwest of Denver! Rocky Mountain National Park offers visitors an enormous variety of things to do throughout the year, ranging from all snow-related activities during the winter, to hiking, biking, camping and fishing during the summer.
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park is the point where the Chugach, Wrangell and St. Elias mountain ranges all converge in what is often referred to as the "mountain kingdom of North America." This is the largest unit of the National Park System. The park includes the continent's largest assemblage of glaciers and the greatest collection of peaks above 16,000 feet.

Yucca House National Monument
The name "Yucca House" was selected for the monument because the Ute Indians called the area by a name meaning yucca, for there is an abundance of the yucca plant growing on the mountainsides. The long-term preservation of Yucca House ensures that archeologists will be able to continue studying Ancestral Puebloan society and what caused them to migrate from this region in the late 1200s.