KINGS CANYON NATIONAL PARK


:''This article is about Kings Canyon National Park, USA. For Kings Canyon, Australia, see Kings Canyon (Northern Territory).''
'Kings Canyon National Park' is a U.S. National Park in the southern Sierra Nevada, east of Fresno, California. The park was established in 1940 and covers 462,901 acres (1,869.25 km²).
The park is contiguous to Sequoia National Park; the two are administered by the National Park Service as one unit, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks.

Contents
Geography
History
See also
References
External links

Geography


Kings Canyon National Park consists of two sections. The small, detached General Grant Grove section of Kings Canyon National Park preserves several groves of giant sequoia including the General Grant Grove, with the famous General Grant Tree, and the Redwood Mountain Grove, which is the largest remaining natural Giant Sequoia grove in the world (covering 3,100 acres (13 km²) and with 15,800 sequoia trees over one foot (0.30 m) in diameter at their bases). This section of the park is mostly mixed conifer forest, and is readily accessible via paved highways.[1]
Paradise Valley in Kings Canyon National Park

The remainder of Kings Canyon National Park, which comprises over 90% of the total area of the park, is located to the east of General Grant Grove and forms the headwaters of the South and Middle Forks of the Kings River and the South Fork of the San Joaquin River. Both the South and Middle Forks of the Kings Rivers have extensive glacial canyons. One
portion of the South Fork canyon, known as the Kings Canyon, gives the entire park its name. According to the Guinness book of world records, Kings Canyon is the deepest canyon in the United States with a maximum depth of 8,200 feet (2,4 km). The canyon was carved by glaciers out of granite. The Kings Canyon, and its developed area, Cedar Grove, is the only portion of the main part of
the park that is accessible by motor vehicle. Both the Kings Canyon, and its Middle Fork twin,
Tehipite Valley, are glacial “Yosemites” – deeply incised glacial gorges with relatively flat floors
and towering granite cliffs thousands of feet high. 1
To the east of the canyons are the high peaks of the Sierra Crest culminating in 14,242 foot (4,341 m) high North Palisade, the highest point in the park. This is classic high Sierra country – barren alpine ridges and glacially scoured lake-filled basins. Usually snow free only from late June until late October, the high country is accessible only via
foot and horse trails1. The Sierran crest forms the eastern boundary of the park, from the Mount Goethe in the north, down to Junction Peak, at the boundary with Sequoia National Park. Several well-travelled passes cross the crest into the park, including Bishop Pass, Taboose Pass, Sawmill Pass, and Kearsarge Pass. All of these passes are above 11,000 feet (3,400 m) elevation.

History


Kings Canyon had been known to white settlers since the mid-1800s, but it was not until John Muir first visited in 1873 that the canyon began receiving attention. Muir was delighted at the canyon's similarity to Yosemite Valley, as it reinforced his theory regarding the origin of both valleys, which, though competing with Josiah Whitney's then-accepted theory, later proved true: that both valleys were carved by massive glaciers during the last Ice Age.
Kings Canyon's future was in doubt for nearly fifty years. Some wanted to build a dam at the western end of the valley, while others wanted to preserve it as a park. The debate was settled in 1965, when the valley along with Tehipite Valley, was added to the already existing Grant Grove National Park. Kings Canyon preserves many Sequoia trees in the Cedar Grove

See also



Ecology of the Sierra Nevada

List of guidebooks about the Sierra Nevada

References


1. Description of the Parks

External links



★ Official site: Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park

Panoramic photos of North Kings Canyon NP

Panoramic photos of South Kings Canyon NP

Panoramic photo of Kearsarge Pass, Kings Canyon NP

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