Visitwallpapers.com


Login
Gallery : www.visitwallpapers.com Natural landscapes National park Wallpapers Parks_392
Advanced Search
View Slideshow

National park Wallpapers

1. Parks_404 2. Parks_395 3. Parks_392 4. Parks_391 5. Parks_386 6. Parks_381 7. Parks_362 ... 410. Parks_403

Random Images

Fantasy_382

Fantasy_382

Date: 02/08/2008 Views: 1041

yak_06

yak_06

Date: 09/06/2012 Views: 1275

Image_1152

Image_1152

Date: 12/31/2020 Views: 1674

Parks_392

Saguaro National Park is a United States national park in Pima County, southeastern Arizona. The 92,000-acre (37,000 ha) park consists of two separate areas—the Tucson Mountain District (TMD), about 10 miles (16 km) west of Tucson, and the Rincon Mountain District (RMD), about 10 miles (16 km) east of the city. Both districts preserve Sonoran Desert landscapes, fauna, and flora, including the giant saguaro cactus.

The volcanic rocks on the surface of the Tucson Mountain District differ greatly from the surface rocks of the Rincon Mountain District; over the past 30 million years, crustal stretching displaced rocks from beneath the Tucson Mountains of the Tucson Mountain District to form the Rincon Mountains of the Rincon Mountain District. Uplifted, domed, and eroded, the Rincon Mountains are significantly higher and wetter than the Tucson Mountains. The Rincons, as one of the Madrean Sky Islands between the southern Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Madre Oriental in Mexico, support high biodiversity and are home to many plants and animals that do not live in the Tucson Mountain District.

Earlier residents of and visitors to the lands in and around the park before its creation included the Hohokam, Sobaipuri, Tohono O'odham, Apaches, Spanish explorers, missionaries, miners, homesteaders, and ranchers. In 1933, President Herbert Hoover used the power of the Antiquities Act to establish the original park, Saguaro National Monument, in the Rincon Mountains. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy added the Tucson Mountain District to the monument and renamed the original tract the Rincon Mountain District. The United States Congress combined the Tucson Mountain District and the Rincon Mountain District to form the national park in 1994.

Popular activities in the park include hiking on its 165 miles (266 km) of trails and sightseeing along paved roads near its two visitor centers. Both districts allow bicycling and horseback riding on selected roads and trails. The Rincon Mountain District offers limited wilderness camping, but there is no overnight camping in the Tucson Mountain District.

Date: 04/10/2024
Size:
Full size: 4500x3000
nextParks_391lastParks_403
Parks_404first Parks_395previous
Parks_392
nextParks_391lastParks_403
Parks_404first Parks_395previous