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Factory Butte in Wayne County, Utah, is a 6,302-foot (1,921 m) summit in the Upper Blue Hills [1] in northern Wayne County, Utah, United States, [2] [3] about 12 miles (19 km) northwest of Hanksville and about 14 miles (23 km) east of Capitol Reef National Park boundary. The butte was so named by early settlers who thought its outline resembled ...
Clifton Flat Junction. Lower Gold Hill Road. Old Lincoln Highway National Historic Trail. Tooele. About 10 miles (16 km) northeast of Ibapah and about 19 miles (31 km) north-northwest of Callao. Lower Gold Hill Road was once part of the Old Lincoln Highway. [29] Columbia Junction.
West Hills. / 41.965201°N 112.353855°W / 41.965201; -112.353855. The West Hills are a 20-mile long (32 km) mountain range located in northeast Box Elder County, Utah, United States. [1] [2] The range is connected to the Samaria Mountains, a small range on the north in southern Idaho. The West Hills are also connected to another ...
Pink Cliffs. The Pink Cliffs [1] are a series of highly dissected cliffs on the Colorado Plateau in Garfield, Iron, and Kane counties in southwestern Utah, United States. Contrary to the implication of the name, the cliffs are not a single set of rock formations, but actually a geological formation that manifests itself in multiple sets of rock ...
Kings Peak (Utah) in August 2004 Mountains in Utah are numerous and have varying elevations and prominences.. Kings Peak, in the Uinta Mountains in Duchesne County, Utah, is the highest point in the state and has the greatest prominence.
Kimball Creek. Kimball Creek, the other named tributary of Currant Creek, is an intermittent stream and is located in southern Utah County. The creek rises on the east face of the south side of Tintic Mountain at the top of Big Dog Canyon within the East Tintic Mountains range, at an elevation of approximately 7,250 feet (2,210 m) and just east of the Juab‑Utah county line.
Description. Established in 1961, Wasatch Mountain State Park is Utah's most developed state park. Named for the Wasatch Mountains, [Note 1] the park consists of 21,592 acres (8,738 ha), and sits at an elevation of 5,900 feet (1,800 m). [5] Wildlife in the park includes deer, elk, wild turkeys, and moose. Although the southern part of Wasatch ...
Chester was founded by David Candland. In the beginning the town was named Canal Creek after the waterway [5] from which the community received its water. Candland then changed the name to Chesterfield after his hometown in England; it was later reduced to Chester. [8] Chester had its own post office until 1967.