Trail Run Project Logo

A geology enthusiast's delight, traversing millions of years of stratigraphy in just over a mile.


Your Rating: Rating Rating Rating Rating Rating      Clear Rating
Your Difficulty:
Your Favorites: Add To-Do · Your List
Zoom in to see details
Map Key

1.4

Miles

2.3

KM

97%

Runnable

6,022' 1,836 m

High

5,758' 1,755 m

Low

264' 81 m

Up

0' 0 m

Down

3%

Avg Grade (2°)

9%

Max Grade (5°)

Dogs No Dogs

Features Views

Description

Red Canyon is the perfect place for geology enthusiasts and runners alike. Its beautiful scenery, compacted into a short, 1.4-mile canyon, leaves all who enter its broad canyon walls both inspired and humbled by their natural surroundings. Not to mention, the canyon happens to have been cut perpendicular to the rock layers in this area, providing visitors with a first-hand experience with the vibrant sedimentary rocks that make Capitol Reef famous.

Starting where the Red Canyon Trail ends at the wash, the thin red beds of the Carmel Formation rise steeply on the south side as the drainage cuts across them. Shortly, the tan sandstone of the Page is followed by the slightly whiter Navajo, as the wash turns north about a tenth of a mile from the start. To the right, a steep slope of Navajo is topped by the nearly indistinguishable Page and capped by the much more obvious yellow Carmel. After a pleasant and well vegetated stretch, the wash again cuts through the Navajo to the west. A series of finely grouped perpendicular cracks are displayed on a slope on the right side of the wash. Exfoliation of thin layers of sandstone is occurring here, exposing solid, uncracked rock. The wash meanders to the south, before bending to the west and entering the Kayenta Formation with its alternating light-colored sandstones and red shales. At about the 2-mile mark, the solid red Wingate Sandstone makes its appearance. Interesting rock layers at this location are evidence of its origin as dune sand.

Given the steep angle of the Wingate, it only takes another 3 or 4 minutes to run right through its 350-foot thickness, emerging into the soft blue-gray and lavender Chinle Formation. The wash narrows and becomes wet, and reeds and tamarisk begin to appear. This is a good place to turn around, but the wash does continue. Before returning to the trailhead, note the Wingate to the west and how much higher it is than at the outcrop just to the north (right), indicating the true scale and form of the Waterpocket Fold. So is the power of erosion, since all the formations the route travels past were once in place here above the Chinle and have been removed, probably in only 10 to 20 million years. In running back from the Chinle and looking across the Notom-Bullfrog Road to the east, almost the entire span of dinosaur history is laid out in the space of just four miles.

This content was contributed by author Rick Stinchfield. For a comprehensive running guide to Capitol Reef National Park and to see more by Rick, click here.

Contacts

Shared By:

Hunter R

Trail Ratings

  3.7 from 3 votes

#24126

Overall
  3.7 from 3 votes
5 Star
0%
4 Star
67%
3 Star
33%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%
Trail Rankings

#733

in Utah

#24,126

Overall
2 Views Last Month
209 Since Aug 18, 2016
Easy/Intermediate Easy/Intermediate

33%
33%
33%
0%
0%
0%

Photos

The Red Canyon creek carved this rock over millions of years
Sep 23, 2018 near Escalante, UT
Red Canyon
Sep 23, 2018 near Escalante, UT
Rocks towering above the Red Canyon creek bed
Sep 23, 2018 near Escalante, UT
Dry creek bed of Red Canyon
Sep 23, 2018 near Escalante, UT
Different hues of red, orange, and yellow right next to the Red Canyon creek bed
Sep 23, 2018 near Escalante, UT

0 Comments

Weather


Current Trail Conditions

Unknown
Add Your Check-In

Check-Ins

none

Join the Community

Create your FREE account today!
Already have an account? Login to close this notice.

Get Started.