Monument Valley
Tsé Biiʼ Ndzisgaii
View of West Mitten Butte, East Mitten Butte, and Merrick Butte
View of West Mitten Butte, East Mitten Butte, and Merrick Butte in northeastern Arizona
Highest point
Elevation5,000 to 6,000 ft (1,500 to 1,800 m)
Coordinates36°59′N 110°6′W / 36.983°N 110.100°W / 36.983; -110.100
Naming
Native nameTsé Biiʼ Ndzisgaii (Navajo)
Geography
Monument Valley is located in Arizona
Monument Valley
Monument Valley
Monument Valley is located in the United States
Monument Valley
Monument Valley
Monument Valley (the United States)
Geology
Mountain typeButte
Type of rockSiltstone
View of Monument Valley in Utah, looking south on U.S. Route 163 from 13 miles (21 km) north of the UtahArizona state line
The Monument Valley View Hotel.
The Monument Valley View Hotel.

Monument Valley (Navajo: Tsé Biiʼ Ndzisgaii, pronounced [tsʰépìːʔ ǹtsɪ̀skɑ̀ìː], meaning valley of the rocks) is a region of the Colorado Plateau characterized by a cluster of sandstone buttes, the largest reaching 1,000 ft (300 m) above the valley floor.[1] The most famous butte formations are located in northeastern Arizona along the UtahArizona state line. The valley is considered sacred by the Navajo Nation, the Native American people within whose reservation it lies.[2]

Monument Valley has been featured in many forms of media since the 1930s. Director John Ford used the location for a number of his Westerns; critic Keith Phipps wrote that "its five square miles [13 km2] have defined what decades of moviegoers think of when they imagine the American West".[3]

Geography and geology

Location of Monument Valley in the United States
Location of Monument Valley in the United States
Location of Monument Valley in the United States

The area is part of the Colorado Plateau. The elevation of the valley floor ranges from 5,000 to 6,000 feet (1,500 to 1,800 m) above sea level. The floor is largely siltstone of the Cutler Group, or sand derived from it, deposited by the meandering rivers that carved the valley. The valley's vivid red color comes from iron oxide exposed in the weathered siltstone. The darker, blue-gray rocks in the valley get their color from manganese oxide.

The buttes are clearly stratified, with three principal layers. The lowest layer is the Organ Rock Shale, the middle is de Chelly Sandstone, and the top layer is the Moenkopi Formation capped by Shinarump Conglomerate. The valley includes large stone structures, including the "Eye of the Sun".

Between 1945 and 1967, the southern extent of the Monument Upwarp was mined for uranium, which occurs in scattered areas of the Shinarump Conglomerate; vanadium and copper are associated with uranium in some deposits.[4]

Major formations include West and East Mitten Buttes, Merrick Butte, and Hunts Mesa.

Tourism

Monument Valley, Apache scout

Monument Valley includes much of the area surrounding Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, a Navajo Nation equivalent to a national park. Oljato, for example, is also within the area designated as Monument Valley.

Visitors may pay an access fee and drive through the park on a 17-mile (27 km) dirt road. Parts of Monument Valley, such as Mystery Valley and Hunts Mesa, are accessible only by guided tour.

Climate

Monument Valley experiences a desert climate with cold winters and hot summers. While the summers may be hot, the heat is tempered by the region's high altitude. Although the valley experiences an average of 54 days above 90 °F (32 °C) annually, summer highs rarely exceed 100 °F (38 °C). Summer nights are comfortably cool, and temperatures drop quickly after sunset. Winters are cold, but daytime highs are usually above freezing. Even in the winter, temperatures below 0 °F (−18 °C) are uncommon, though possible. Monument Valley receives an occasional light snowfall in the winter; however, it usually melts within a day or two.

Climate data for Monument Valley, Arizona
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 60
(16)
69
(21)
77
(25)
90
(32)
99
(37)
101
(38)
107
(42)
100
(38)
97
(36)
86
(30)
73
(23)
62
(17)
107
(42)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 52.07
(11.15)
59.41
(15.23)
70.37
(21.32)
80.04
(26.69)
88.27
(31.26)
96.64
(35.91)
99.44
(37.47)
96.13
(35.63)
90.48
(32.49)
80.36
(26.87)
65.18
(18.43)
51.89
(11.05)
100.17
(37.87)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 40.6
(4.8)
47.3
(8.5)
58.2
(14.6)
67.3
(19.6)
77.6
(25.3)
88.1
(31.2)
92.0
(33.3)
88.8
(31.6)
80.6
(27.0)
67.9
(19.9)
51.5
(10.8)
40.9
(4.9)
66.7
(19.3)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 24.3
(−4.3)
28.2
(−2.1)
35.5
(1.9)
42.4
(5.8)
52.3
(11.3)
63.1
(17.3)
67.0
(19.4)
63.9
(17.7)
57.3
(14.1)
45.1
(7.3)
32.9
(0.5)
24.6
(−4.1)
44.7
(7.1)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 12.25
(−10.97)
15.25
(−9.31)
22.04
(−5.53)
28.69
(−1.84)
35.24
(1.80)
47.08
(8.38)
57.58
(14.21)
54.73
(12.63)
44.72
(7.07)
32.61
(0.34)
18.75
(−7.36)
12.78
(−10.68)
11.50
(−11.39)
Record low °F (°C) −8
(−22)
−4
(−20)
9
(−13)
15
(−9)
20
(−7)
31
(−1)
49
(9)
38
(3)
33
(1)
22
(−6)
6
(−14)
−9
(−23)
−9
(−23)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 0.26
(6.6)
0.19
(4.8)
0.19
(4.8)
0.24
(6.1)
0.30
(7.6)
0.10
(2.5)
0.54
(14)
0.79
(20)
0.73
(19)
0.68
(17)
0.32
(8.1)
0.19
(4.8)
4.54
(115)
Source: The Western Regional Climate Center[5]

In visual media

Monument Valley
Monument Valley from the valley floor

Monument Valley has been featured in numerous computer games, in print, and in motion pictures, including multiple Westerns directed by John Ford that influenced audiences' view of the American West, such as: Stagecoach (1939), My Darling Clementine (1946), Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), and The Searchers (1956).[3][6][7][8]

Many more recent movies, with other directors, were also filmed in Monument Valley, including Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in the West (in 1967), the first Spaghetti Western to be filmed outside Europe, and Gore Verbinski's The Lone Ranger.[9]

In Airwolf: The Movie and the subsequent series, a hollow mesa in Monument Valley was the hiding place for the fictional helicopter. It was referred to as 'Valley of the Gods'.

Panorama

See also

References

  1. Scheffel, Richard L.; Wernet, Susan J., eds. (1980). Natural Wonders of the World. Reader's Digest. p. 255. ISBN 978-0895770875.
  2. King, Farina (2018). "Náhookọs (North): New Hioes for Diné Students." The Earth Memory Compass: Diné Landscapes and Education in the Twentieth Century. University Press of Kansas. pp. 142–74. doi:10.2307/j.ctv6mtdsj. S2CID 135010884.
  3. 1 2 Phipps, Keith (November 17, 2009). "The Easy Rider Road Trip". Slate. Retrieved December 16, 2012.
  4. Malan, Roger C. (1968). "The uranium mining industry and geology of the Monument Valley and White canyon districts, Arizona and Utah". Ore Deposits of the United States, 1933–1967. New York: American Institute of Mining Engineers. pp. 790–804.
  5. "Seasonal Temperature and Precipitation Information". Western Regional Climate Center. Retrieved March 24, 2013.
  6. Howze, William (September 2, 2011). "Ford's consistent use of popular imagery in Western and Non-Western films". The Influence of Western Painting and Genre Painting on the Films of John Ford (Revised ed.). "Ford is popularly regarded as a director of westerns, the director who made John Wayne a star and made Monument Valley the locus for the myth of the American West. It was a reputation he encouraged. 'My name's John Ford – I make westerns', he once said by way of introduction.1 Among his most popular westerns are Staqecoach (1939), My Darlinq Clementine (1946), Fort Apache (1947), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), The Searchers (1956), and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962). "Western or non-western, Ford's films exhibit characteristics that transcend those categories. Critics have recognized Ford's preoccupation with the traditional values of home and country, whether the country is Ireland or the United States; they have characterized his heroes as loners, men disappointed with life in some way that is only implied; and they have enumerated the elements of a typical Ford film: Monument Valley, the Seventh Cavalry, a fight, a dance, a wedding, a funeral, and the members of the so-called John Ford Stock Company, actors who appeared again and again in his films: John Wayne, Victor McLaglen, Henry Fonda, Ward Bond, Olive Carey, Harry Carey, Jr., John Qualen, and Hank Worden among others.
  7. Punch, David A. (September 2, 2018). "Stagecoach: Defining the Western, How John Ford's 1939 western classic transformed the dying genre into the epitome of American cinema". Medium. "Monument Valley resides on the Utah–Arizona border, within the territory of the Navajo Reservation. Encompassing approximately 30,000 acres, the land is noteworthy for its incredible sandstone buttes, which reach as high as 1,000 ft. Realizing how magnificent the location would be for a western picture, resident Harry Goulding approached John Ford about shooting his next film there. After previewing the landscape through some pictures Goulding brought along with him, Ford was certain he wanted to film Stagecoach there. Some of the motivation for that was the remoteness of the location. Hundreds of miles away from any form of civilization, it certainly discouraged nosey producers from prying, though the natural beauty of the terrain was a deciding factor. It became his preferred location for shooting westerns; Ford favored its majesty over accuracy in films like My Darling Clementine (1946), set in Tombstone, Arizona, and The Searchers, which substitutes the location for practically everywhere the characters travel to. The expansive countryside embodied the untamed potential of the western frontier so vividly it has become the iconic image of the west. Ford's discovery of Monument Valley was crucial in piecing together his image of the frontier — a vision which has become the defining portrait of the American West."
  8. Movshovitz, Howard (1984). "The Still Point: Women in the Westerns of John Ford". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. University of Nebraska Press. 7 (3, Women on the Western Frontier): 68–72. doi:10.2307/3346245. JSTOR 3346245.
  9. "50 Years Ago, Two Iconic Films Featured Monument Valley". 2017-06-05.

Further reading

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