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Rainbow
Bridge National Monument consists of a 160-acre block
of land surrounded almost entirely by the Navajo Indian
Reservation. Its prime attraction is Rainbow Bridge, the
largest, the most symmetrical, and arguably the most beautiful
natural bridge in the world. Rising 290 feet above the
streambed of Bridge Creek, the bridge is 32 feet thick
at its narrowest and spans 270 feet. It consists entirely
of salmon-pink Navajo sandstone.
Located on the northwest flank of 10,000-foot-high Navajo
Mountain, Rainbow Bridge lies on the floor of a deep sandstone
canyon, whose sheer cliffs rise as much as 1,000 feet.
The setting was so spectacular that Zane Grey wrote a
novel entitled Rainbow Bridge, in which the natural
bridge takes on a mystical aspect. Former president Theodore
Roosevelt, on a visit in 1913, wrote that he awakened
several times in the moonlit night to gaze silently at
the looming arch.
Although known to Navajos and Paiutes living in the area,
the bridge was not formally discovered by white men until
14 August 1909 when two exploring expeditions, one headed
by Dr. Byron Cummings, and one headed by William B. Douglass,
joined forces. They were guided by two Paiutes, Nasja
Begay and Jim Mike. John Wetherill, well-known professional
guide and Indian trader, was also listed as a guide (although
he had never been there). Their route to the bridge was
around the east end of Navajo Mountain. Charles L. Bernheimer
sponsored three expeditions to the bridge in the early
1920s. Participating were well-known guides Zeke Johnson
and John Wetherill, and archaeologist Earl Morris. The
Bernheimer groups opened up a new route through the rugged
sandstone canyons west of Navajo Mountain.
President William Howard Taft set aside the bridge as
a national monument in 1910. For many years it was one
of the most isolated and hard-to-reach units of the National
Park Service. However, in 1956 Congress passed an act
authorizing the construction of Glen Canyon Dam. Suddenly
Rainbow Bridge, which would be on the projected shoreline
of the reservoir to be named Lake Powell, became controversial.
The act decreed that barrier dams had to be built to keep
the lake out of the monument, but the U.S. Court of Appeals
ruled in 1973 that since Congress had repeatedly refused
to appropriate funds for these barrier dams, that special
provision of the act pertaining to them had been abrogated.
Navajo Indians maintain that Rainbow Bridge figures prominently
in their religion as a symbol of rainfall and fertility.
The Navajos were unable to halt the rise of Lake Powell
to the bridge, but the National Park Service agreed to
prohibit "disrespectful" acts--such as swimming
under the bridge.
Because of its proximity to Lake Powell, Rainbow Bridge
is today heavily visited during the warm months. During
1988 the monument received 238,307 recorded visitors.
A Bureau of Reclamation report dated 1985 stated that
a ten-year study showed that the presence of Lake Powell
had no effect on the stability of the bridge. The report
continued, "Joint controlled rockfall was the predominant
erosive process in forming the bridge. [This process is]
actively continuing today and will eventually cause the
destruction of the bridge."
W.L. Rusho
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