Place

An Ever-changing Landscape wayside

A panoramic photograph spans the panel to highlight the variety of colors found here.
Bryce Canyon is ever-changing.

NPS

Quick Facts
Location:
Rainbow Point Shelter Building

Historical/Interpretive Information/Exhibits

Colorful Layers Pure limestone is white, but here, iron deposits have oxidized, or rusted, producing the yellows, oranges, reds, and browns. Oxidized manganese creates the pale blue and purple hues. Changing weather and light also affect the canyon’s colors. Bryce Canyon is ever-changing. About 50 million years ago (mya), a large freshwater lake began filling the low basin of southern Utah. Over millions of years, rivers and streams gradually filled this lake with clays, silts, and sands. Calcium carbonate cemented these sediments together, forming Bryce Canyon’s colorful, sedimentary rock layers. Meanwhile, tectonic forces deep within the Earth, were moving, cracking, and lifting, transforming the surface.

Bryce Canyon National Park

Last updated: January 8, 2024