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Navajo State Park

Coordinates:37°00′32″N107°24′31″W / 37.00889°N 107.40861°W /37.00889; -107.40861
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State park in Colorado, United States

Navajo State Park
Navajo Lake at sunset from Rosa Campground
Map showing the location of Navajo State Park
Map showing the location of Navajo State Park
LocationArchuleta /La Plata counties,Colorado,United States
Nearest cityArboles, Colorado
Coordinates37°00′32″N107°24′31″W / 37.00889°N 107.40861°W /37.00889; -107.40861
Area5,087 acres (2,059 ha)
Established1964
Visitors379,545 (in 2021)[1]
Governing bodyColorado Parks and Wildlife

Navajo State Park is astate park ofColorado, USA, on the north shore ofNavajo Lake. Touted as Colorado's answer toLake Powell, thisreservoir on theSan Juan River begins in Colorado'sSan Juan Mountains and extends 20 miles (32 km) intoNew Mexico. Its area is 15,000 acres (6,100 ha), and it has 150 miles (240 km) of shoreline in two states. Park activities include boating,houseboating, fishing, camping, and wildlife viewing.[2] There is a New Mexico state park at the southern end of the lake.

History

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The area where Navajo State Park now sits was originally inhabited by theAncestral Puebloans who abandoned the area around 1050 A.D. because of a serious drought at that time. TheUte andNavajo tribes settled the area during the 14th century.

The 10 explorers of theDominguez–Escalante Expedition were some of the first white men entering the area. Their mission was to create a route from New Mexico to California for the Spaniards. In the early 1880s, theDenver and Rio Grande Western Railroad laid their tracks in the area. The railroad served the area until 1967 and was an important part of the economy.

TheNavajo Dam was constructed in 1962 to provide irrigation water for theNavajo Nation.

Ecology

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Many migratory and resident birds are known in this area, including several species of raptors, pinyon jay, black-billed magpie, common raven, and waterfowl and shorebirds which are attracted to the reservoir. Mule deer are a common sight, as are cottontail rabbit, coyote, red fox, porcupine, striped skunk and ground squirrel. Rare wildlife species present include the river otter (which has been reintroduced to the Piedra River), the bald eagle, and the white pelican (a summer resident). Anglers are attracted by the warm- and cold-water fishing opportunities, which include largemouth and smallmouth bass, crappie, bluegill, catfish, northern pike, rainbow trout and kokanee salmon.

Park uplands are dominated by pinyon-juniper woodland, sagebrush shrubland and western slope grassland communities. Short-statured pinyon pine and Utah juniper trees with an understory of shrubs and grasses comprise the pinyon-juniper woodland community, occupying dry slopes, hills and mesa tops. Common understory plant species include Gambel oak, big sagebrush, Indian ricegrass, western wheatgrass, galleta and blue grama. The sagebrush shrubland community is dominated by big sagebrush, rabbitbrush, Gambel oak and skunkbrush sumac. This shrub community occupies moremesic slopes and provides understory for the pinyon-juniper community.

Western slope grasslands support the sod-forming blue grama, galleta and western wheatgrass, and the bunchgrasses Indian ricegrass, needle-and-thread grass and Junegrass. Wetland, riparian and aquatic plant communities have become established around the reservoir, in the San Juan and Piedra river valleys above the reservoir and on ground water seeps.

Geology

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Navajo State Park features a 15,000 surface-acre reservoir formed in the San Juan River Valley of southwestern Colorado. The San Juan River is joined by thePiedra River near the northern park boundary. Uplands within the park are characterized by flat-topped mesas and gently rolling hills, occasionally cut by steep-sided canyons. The uplands areTertiary sedimentary rocks deposited duringEocene times, which are represented by sandstones and conglomerates of the San Jose and Blanco Basin formations and Telluride Conglomerate.Quaternarysurficial deposits are present along both rivers as alluvium, terrace gravels and alluvial fan deposits.

Two Rivers Marina on Navajo Lake

References

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  1. ^"Colorado State Parks Region Annual Visitation Report"(PDF).Colorado Counties, Inc. 2023. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on January 4, 2024. RetrievedDecember 6, 2023.
  2. ^"Navajo State Park". Colorado State Parks. Archived fromthe original on March 2, 2010. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2011.

External links

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