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Here are more than sixty peaks over 12,000'. Here are the headwaters of the Colorado and other rivers, as well as dozens of magnificent alpine lakes. Here are permanent small glaciers overlaying rock that is often granite more than a billion years old. Rocky Mountain is the highest national park in the US, with elevations from 7860' to 14,259'. More than one-fourth of the park is above treeline (11,200-11,500'), and tundra is a primary protected resource of the park. Forest range from relatively moist subalpine spruce and fir through open ponderosa and aspen stands. Great meadows lie adjacent to moraines on broad valley floors. Some valleys, like that of the Fall River, are classic glacial shapes. To find out more about the spectacular features of this rugged national park, please visit Rocky Mountain's expanded website.

Related Information
More on Rocky's environment and landscape
go to the In-Depth pages to learn more
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