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Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area

The Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area in Clark County, Nevada, United States, is an area managed by the Bureau of Land Management as part of its National Landscape Conservation System, and protected as a National Conservation Area. It is about 15 miles (24 km) west of Las Vegas. More than three million people visit the area each year.[2]

This article is about the National Conservation Area in Nevada. For other uses, see Red Rock Canyon (disambiguation).

Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area

197,349 acres (798.64 km2)[1]

1967

2,000,000+

The conservation area showcases a set of large red rock formations: a set of sandstone peaks and walls that were formed by thrust faults including the Keystone Thrust. The walls are up to 3,000 feet (910 m) high, making them a popular hiking and rock climbing destination. The highest point is La Madre Mountain, at 8,154 feet (2,485 m).


A one-way, loop road, 13 miles (21 km) long, provides vehicle access to many of the features in the area. Several side roads and parking areas allow access to many of the area trails. A visitor center is at the start of the loop road. The loop road is also popular for bicycle touring; it begins with a moderate climb, then is mostly downhill or flat.


The Rocky Gap Road in Red Rock Canyon NCA is a side canyon accessible only by an unmaintained primitive road from the scenic loop which mostly only off-road or high-clearance vehicles can access. State Route 159 cuts through the Cottonwood Valley, also a side trail of the Old Spanish Trail. The Wilson Cliffs, a massive escarpment, can be seen to the west from SR 159.


Toward the southern end of the National Conservation Area are Spring Mountain Ranch State Park; the town of Blue Diamond; and Bonnie Springs Ranch, which includes a replica of a western ghost town, but which in 2019 was sold and closed to the public.

: 900 to modern times

Southern Paiute

Culture: 900 to early historic times in the 1800s

Patayan

Ancestral Puebloan: 1 AD to 1150

[4]

: (Archaic) 3500 BC to 1 AD

Pinto/Gypsum

: 7000 to 5500 BC

San Dieguito

(Tule Springs): 11,000 to 8000 BC

Paleo-Indians

1998 – A fire occurred in the loop area. By 2003, regrowth has made it difficult to find the burn area.

June 25, 2005 – The Goodsprings fire consumed more than 31,600 acres (49.4 sq mi; 128 km2), burning into Red Rock NCA's southern area.

July 22, 2005 – Lightning caused an 800-acre (1.3 sq mi; 3.2 km2) fire in the loop area.

September 6, 2006 – Another fire was started by lightning in the loop near the visitor center and burned around 1,500 acres (2.3 sq mi; 6.1 km2).

July 2013 – The burned mainly in the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area, but encroached on the northwest portion of Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area. It was caused by lightning in Trout Canyon nearby.[17][18]

Carpenter I fire

Several significant wildfires have burned within the Red Rock Canyon NCA in recent years, including:


Damage caused by wildfires, as well as evidence of the ability of the desert to heal itself over time, is visible from the loop road.


Recent fires were in part fueled by the thick growth of invasive species red brome and cheat grasses. The Bureau of Land Management has not developed plans to control these species, because control methods, such as using herbicides, can be costly and damaging to native plants.[19]

La Madre Mountains Wilderness

flag

Nevada portal

Urioste, Joanne, The Red Rocks of Southern Nevada, , 1984 ISBN 978-0-930410-17-9

American Alpine Club

Clinesmith, Larry L. and Elsie L. Sellars, Red Rock Canyon Plants, Red Rock Canyon Interpretive Association, 2001  978-0-9707179-0-0

ISBN

Handren, Jerry, Red Rocks Climber's Guide II, 2016  978-1-4951-8204-4

ISBN

BLM's Red Rock Canyon Site

Flowers of RRCNCA

Red Rock Canyon Interpretive Association