UTAH - Officials with the National Park Service say a frequently-visited geological feature at the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Utah has collapsed. In a statement released on Aug. 9, NPS ...
The collapse of Double Arch, one of Utah's majestic geologic arches, stunned park visitors and deprived the state of a popular natural landmark forever. But geologists say its demise was inevitable.
One of Utah’s natural wonders will never be the same following an arch collapse at Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. Double Arch, a frequently visited geologic feature in Glen Canyon’s Rock Creek ...
PAGE, Arizona (KUTV) — A frequently visited arch in Rock Creek Bay in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area has collapsed. The "Double Arch," also referred to as the "Toilet Bowl," "Crescent Pool," and ...
PAGE, Ariz. — A large geological feature in southern Utah known as the “Double Arch,” the “Hole in the Roof” and sometimes the “Toilet Bowl” has collapsed, National Park Service officials said Friday.
A popular natural phenomenon in the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in southern Utah collapsed last week, the National Park Service said. According to NPS Rangers, the so-called “Double Arch” in ...
Changing water levels and erosion are believed to have contributed to the collapse of the geologic feature, which was formed from 190 million-year-old Navajo sandstone, the National Park Service said.