Red Rocks Park

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Red Rocks Park District
(U.S. National Register of Historic Places)
Red Rocks Area
Red Rocks Area
Location: Morrison, Colorado
Built/Founded: 1928
Architect: Hoyt,Burnham; Rosche,W. R.
Architectural style(s): Pueblo
Added to NRHP: May 18, 1990
Reference #: 90000725 [1]
MPS: Denver Mountain Parks MPS
Governing body: Local

Red Rocks Park is a mountain park in Jefferson County, Colorado, west of Denver, owned and maintained by the city of Denver. The park is known for its very large red sandstone boulders. Many of these formations within the park have names, from the mushroom-shaped Seat of Pluto to the inclined Cave of the Seven Ladders. The most visited rocks, around the amphitheatre, are Creation Rock to the north, Ship Rock to the south, and Stage Rock to the east.

The red sandstone found throughout Red Rocks Park is geologically identified as belonging to the Fountain Formation.[2] Other Colorado examples of Fountain Formation geology include nearby Roxborough State Park, Garden of the Gods near Colorado Springs and the Flatirons near Boulder. These rock formations came to existence when the Rocky Mountains were formed during the Laramide orogeny.

The park was in times far past a favored campsite of the Ute tribe. Its earliest known name was the Garden of the Angels, reputedly given to it on July 4, 1870 by Martin Van Buren Luther, a pioneer Colorado judge. It was renamed Garden of the Titans in 1906 by famed editor John Brisben Walker when he purchased the place with proceeds from his sale of Cosmopolitan Magazine. Known however by the folk name of Red Rocks since the area was settled, it was formally given that name when Denver acquired it in 1928.

Within the park boundaries is the Red Rocks Amphitheatre, a world famous venue used for over a century, which hosts many concerts and other events. Red Rocks Park was also the site of the Start and Finish line of The Amazing Race 9 which aired in the spring of 2006.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2006-03-15).
  2. ^ Dick Gibson. Geology of Boulder Flatirons - The Fountain Formation.

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 39°39′41″N, 105°12′29″W

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