Petrified Forest National Park | |
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IUCN category Ib (wilderness area)
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The Tepees
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Location | Arizona, United States |
Nearest city | Holbrook |
Coordinates | 35°05′17″N 109°48′23″WCoordinates: 35°05′17″N 109°48′23″W |
Area | 146,930 acres (594.6 km2) |
Elevation | 5,436 ft (1,657 m) |
Established | 1962 (national park) 1906 (national monument) |
Named for | Petrified wood found in the park |
Visitors | 644,922 (in 2018) |
Governing body | National Park Service |
Website | Official website |
Petrified Forest National Park is an American national park in Navajo and Apache counties in northeastern Arizona. Named for its large deposits of petrified wood, the fee (chargeable) area of the park covers about 230 square miles (600 square kilometers), encompassing semi-desert shrub steppe as well as highly eroded and colorful badlands. The park's headquarters is about 26 miles (42 km) east of Holbrook along Interstate 40 (I-40), which parallels the BNSF Railway's Southern Transcon, the Puerco River, and historic U.S. Route 66, all crossing the park roughly east–west. The site, the northern part of which extends into the Painted Desert, was declared a national monument in 1906 and a national park in 1962. The park received 644,922 recreational visitors in 2018. Typical visitor activities include sightseeing, photography, hiking, and backpacking.
Averaging about 5,400 feet (1,600 m) in elevation, the park has a dry windy climate with temperatures that vary from summer highs of about 100 °F (38 °C) to winter lows well below freezing. More than 400 species of plants, dominated by grasses such as bunchgrass, blue grama, and sacaton, are found in the park. Fauna include larger animals such as pronghorns, coyotes, and bobcats, many smaller animals, such as deer mice, snakes, lizards, seven kinds of amphibians, and more than 200 species of birds, some of which are permanent residents and many of which are migratory. About one third of the park is designated wilderness—50,260 acres (79 sq mi; 203 km2).
The Petrified Forest is known for its fossils, especially fallen trees that lived in the Late Triassic Epoch, about 225 million years ago. The sediments containing the fossil logs are part of the widespread and colorful Chinle Formation, from which the Painted Desert gets its name. Beginning about 60 million years ago, the Colorado Plateau, of which the park is part, was pushed upward by tectonic forces and exposed to increased erosion. All of the park's rock layers above the Chinle, except geologically recent ones found in parts of the park, have been removed by wind and water. In addition to petrified logs, fossils found in the park have included Late Triassic ferns, cycads, ginkgoes, and many other plants as well as fauna including giant reptiles called phytosaurs, large amphibians, and early dinosaurs. Paleontologists have been unearthing and studying the park's fossils since the early 20th century.
The park's earliest human inhabitants arrived at least 8,000 years ago. By about 2,000 years ago, they were growing corn in the area and shortly thereafter building pit houses in what would become the park. Later inhabitants built above-ground dwellings called pueblos. Although a changing climate caused the last of the park's pueblos to be abandoned by about 1400 CE, more than 600 archeological sites, including petroglyphs, have been discovered in the park. In the 16th century, Spanish explorers visited the area, and by the mid-19th century a U.S. team had surveyed an east–west route through the area where the park is now located and noted the petrified wood. Later, roads and a railway followed similar routes and gave rise to tourism and, before the park was protected, to large-scale removal of fossils. Theft of petrified wood remains a problem in the 21st century.
Geography
Petrified Forest National Park straddles the border between Apache County and Navajo County
in northeastern Arizona. The park is about 30 miles (50 km) long from
north to south, and its width varies from a maximum of about 12 miles
(20 km) in the north to a minimum of about 1 mile (1.6 km) along a
narrow corridor between the north and south, where the park widens again
to about 4 to 5 miles (6 to 8 km).
I-40, former U.S. Route 66, the BNSF Railway, and the Puerco River bisect the park generally east–west along a similar route. Adamana, a ghost town, is about 1 mile (1.6 km) west of the park along the BNSF tracks. Holbrook, about 26 miles (40 km) west of park headquarters along I-40, is the nearest city. Bisecting the park north–south is Park Road, which runs between I-40 near park headquarters on the north and U.S. Route 180
on the south. Historic Highway 180, an earlier alignment of the modern
route, crosses the southern edge of the park. Like Route 66, it has
deteriorated and is closed. Many unpaved maintenance roads, closed to
the public, intersect Park Road at various points.
The fee area of the park covers about 230 square miles (600 km2). The Navajo Nation borders the park on the north and northeast. State-owned land, federal land controlled by the Bureau of Land Management,
and private land, much of it used for cattle ranching, adjoin the other
borders. The park’s elevation above sea level varies from a low of
5,340 feet (1,630 m) along the Puerco River to a high of 6,230 feet
(1,900 m) at Pilot Rock; the average elevation is about 5,400 feet
(1,650 m). The terrain varies from gentle hills and major petrified wood
deposits in the south to eroded badlands in the north. Most of the
park's intermittent streams—including Lithodendron Wash, Dead Wash,
Ninemile Wash, and Dry Wash—empty into the Puerco River. In the southern
part of the park, Cottonwood Wash and Jim Camp Wash flow into the Little Colorado River.
Geology
Petrified Forest National Park is known for its fossils, especially of fallen trees that lived in the Late Triassic Epoch of the Mesozoic
era, about 225 million years ago. During this period, the region that
is now the park was near the equator on the southwestern edge of the
supercontinent Pangaea, and its climate was humid and sub-tropical.
What later became northeastern Arizona was a low plain flanked by
mountains to the south and southeast and a sea to the west. Streams
flowing across the plain from the highlands deposited inorganic sediment
and organic matter, including trees as well as other plants and animals
that had entered or fallen into the water. Although most organic matter
decays rapidly or is eaten by other organisms, some is buried so
quickly that it remains intact and may become fossilized. Within the park, the sediments containing the fossil logs for which the park is named are part of the Chinle Formation.
The colorful Chinle, which appears on the surface in many parts of the southwestern United States and from which the Painted Desert gets its name, is up to 800 feet (240 m) thick in the park. It consists of a variety of sedimentary rocks including beds of soft, fine-grained mudstone, siltstone, and claystone—much of which is bentonite—as well as harder sandstone and conglomerate, and limestone. Exposed to wind and water, the Chinle usually erodes differentially into badlands made up of cliffs, gullies, mesas, buttes, and rounded hills.
Its bentonite clay, which swells when wet and shrinks while drying,
causes surface movement and cracking that discourages plant growth. Lack
of plant cover makes the Chinle especially susceptible to weathering.
About 60 million years ago, tectonic movements of the Earth's crust began to uplift the Colorado Plateau, of which the Painted Desert is part. Eventually parts of the plateau rose to 10,000 feet (3,000 m) above sea level. This warping of the Earth's surface led to the gradual and continuing destruction of the plateau by erosion. An unconformity
(break in the rock record) of about 200 million years occurs within the
park, where erosion has removed all the rock layers above the Chinle
except geologically recent ones. The Bidahochi Formation, laid down only 4 to 8 million years ago, rests directly atop the Chinle, and rocks laid down in the Jurassic, Cretaceous, and much of the Tertiary are absent.
During the period of the Bidahochi deposition, a large lake basin covered much of northeastern Arizona. The older (lower) layers of the formation consist of fluvial and lacustrine (lake-related) deposits of silt, sand, and clay. The younger (upper) Bidahochi contains ash and lava from volcanoes that erupted nearby and as far away as southwestern Nevada.
Although much of the Bidahochi has since eroded, a small part of it
outcrops in the northern part of the park—on Pilot Rock in the park’s
wilderness section and along the rim of the Painted Desert between
Pintado and Tawa points. Exposed by erosion of the Bidahochi are volcanic landforms called maars (flat-bottomed, roughly circular volcanic craters of explosive origin). A maar vent can be seen from the Pintado Point lookout.
During the Quaternary Period (2.6 million years ago up to today), deposits of windblown sand and alluvium
covered much of the Chinle and Bidahochi. Older dunes range in age from
500,000 years at higher elevations in the northern part of the park to
about 10,000 years in sandy drainage areas such as Lithodendron Wash.
Stabilized by grasses and other vegetation, young dunes of about 1,000
years old are found throughout the park.
Fossils
During the Late Triassic, downed trees accumulating in river channels
in what became the park were buried periodically by sediment containing
volcanic ash. Groundwater dissolved silica (silicon dioxide) from the ash and carried it into the logs, where it formed quartz crystals that gradually replaced the organic matter. Traces of iron oxide and other substances combined with the silica to create varied colors in the petrified wood.
In Petrified Forest National Park, most of the logs in the park retained their original external form during petrification but lost their internal structure. However, a small fraction of the logs and most of the park's petrified animal bones have cells and other spaces that are mineral-filled but still retain much of their original organic structure. With these permineralized
fossils, it is possible to study the cellular make-up of the original
organisms with the aid of a microscope. Other organic matter—typically
leaves, seeds, pine-cones, pollen grains, spores, small stems, and fish, insect, and animal remains—have been preserved in the park as compression fossils, flattened by the weight of the sediments above until only a thin film remains in the rock.
Much of the park’s petrified wood is from Araucarioxylon arizonicum, an extinct conifer tree, while some found in the northern part of the park is from Woodworthia arizonica and Schilderia adamanica
trees. At least nine species of fossil trees from the park have been
identified; all are extinct. The park has many other kinds of fossils
besides trees. The Chinle, considered to be one of the richest Late
Triassic fossil-plant deposits in the world, contains more than 200
fossil plant taxa. Plant groups represented in the park include lycophytes, ferns, cycads, conifers, ginkgoes, as well as unclassified forms. The park has also produced many fossil vertebrates—including giant crocodile-like reptiles called phytosaurs, large salamander-like amphibians called Koskinonodon, and early dinosaurs. Fossil invertebrates include freshwater snails and clams.
Climate
According to the Köppen climate classification system, Petrified Forest National Park has a hot semi-arid climate (BSh). According to the United States Department of Agriculture, the plant hardiness zone
at the Painted Desert Visitor Center 5,764 feet (1,757 m) is 7a with an
average annual extreme minimum temperature of 3.1 °F (−16.1 °C).
Winter winds can reach 60 miles per hour (97 km/h). Summer breezes are lighter, but the 10-mile-per-hour (16 km/h) average wind causes frequent sandstorms and dust devils, some of which reach altitudes of several thousand feet.
Rain is heaviest from July through September, when 41 percent of
the park's annual average precipitation falls during short, violent
thunderstorms. August is generally the wettest month. At an elevation of more than 5,000 feet (1,500 m), Petrified Forest National Park has a chance of light snow from October through March, although snow cover rarely persists. The annual average relative humidity of the area is below 50 percent and at times less than 15 percent.
History
Pre-U.S.
More than 600 archeological sites have been found inside the
boundaries of Petrified Forest National Park. Evidence suggests that the
earliest inhabitants of the park arrived at least 8,000 years ago. Two Folsom-type spear points, the earliest artifacts of Paleo-Indians found in the park, are at least that old. Between 6000 BCE and 1 CE, the Archaic–Early Basketmaker Era, nomadic groups established seasonal camps in the Petrified Forest from which they hunted small game such as rabbits, pronghorn antelope, and deer and harvested seeds from Indian ricegrass
and other wild plants. Around 150 BCE, they began to grow corn in the
area. By 1 CE, as their farming techniques improved, some built houses
in the Petrified Forest and began to stay there year-round.
The early farmers from the Early Basketmaker II Era lived in the Petrified Forest from about 1 CE to about 800 CE. They occupied pit houses at fewer than 100 sites, at first on mesas or other vantage points and later at the base of bluffs
and in lowlands, where the soil was better. As climatic conditions
worsened for farming between 750 and 900 CE, the settlements changed
with the Pueblo I Era.
Rather than below-ground pits, the Pueblo Builders constructed
above-ground houses and storerooms that may have been capable of storing
food for more than one year. At the same time, climatic conditions
changed again, this time for the better, between 900 and 1275 CE. More
than 200 pueblo-builder sites have been identified in the park at a wide
variety of locations—at the mouths of washes, near seeps, and on moisture-holding sand dunes.
During the Pueblo I Era, most sites were single-family homes, but as
soils became exhausted many sites were abandoned by 1250 CE in favor of
very large multi-room pueblos close to more dependable sources of water.
The Pueblo Builders constructed two of these large pueblos, one called
Stone Axe, about 0.5 miles (0.8 km) east of the park, and the other at
Puerco Pueblo, which overlooks the Puerco River near the middle of the
park. There they built about 100 one-story rooms around an open plaza.
The rooms had no windows or doors but each could be entered by climbing
a ladder and descending through a hole in the roof. At its peak,
perhaps 200 people lived in this pueblo.[26]
Over time, however, a persistently dry climate led to out-migration,
and the last residents abandoned Puerco Pueblo in about 1380 CE.
At Puerco Pueblo and many other sites within the park, petroglyphs—images, symbols, or designs—have been scratched, pecked, carved, or incised on rock surfaces, often on a patina known as desert varnish. Most of the petroglyphs in Petrified Forest National Park are thought to be between 650 and 2,000 years old.
From the 16th through the 18th centuries, explorers looking for routes between Spanish colonies along the Rio Grande
to the southeast and other Spanish colonies on the Pacific coast to the
west passed near or through the area, which they called El Desierto Pintado,
the Painted Desert. However, the park's oldest Spanish inscriptions,
left by descendants of the region's early Spanish colonists, date only
to the late 19th century.
U.S.
After the Southwest became part of the U.S., explorers continued to look for good east–west routes along the 35th parallel. In 1853, a crew led by U.S. Army Lieutenant Amiel Whipple
surveyed along a sandy wash in the northern part of the Petrified
Forest. So impressed was Whipple by the petrified wood along the banks
of the arroyo that he named it Lithodendron Creek (Stone Tree Creek). Geologist Jules Marcou, a member of the Whipple expedition, observed that the petrified trees were from the Triassic.
A slightly later route along the parallel was a wagon road, built
between 1857 and 1860, that involved experimental use of camels as
transport. In the late 19th century, settlers and private stagecoach companies followed similar east–west routes. Homesteaders
who stayed in the area developed cattle ranches on the grasslands, and
cattle grazed in the Petrified Forest until the mid-20th century.
Also close to the 35th parallel was the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad.
Its opening in the early 1880s led to the founding of towns like
Holbrook and Adamana. Visitors could stop at the Adamana train station,
book a hotel room, and take a tour of what was then called the Chalcedony Forest. Over the years, the line changed hands, becoming the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway,
and then the BNSF. More than 60 BNSF trains, mostly carrying freight,
pass through the park every day. U.S. Route 66, a former
transcontinental auto highway developed in 1926 from part of the National Old Trails Road,
ran parallel to the railroad tracks until it was decommissioned in
1985. The park has preserved within its boundaries a small grassy
section of the road. Interstate 40, which crosses the park, replaced the older highway.
Increasing tourist and commercial interest in petrified wood during
the late 19th century began to alarm residents of the region. In 1895,
the Arizona Territorial Legislature asked the U.S. Congress to create a petrified forest national park. Although this first attempt failed, in 1906 the Antiquities Act signed by President Theodore Roosevelt was used to create the Petrified Forest National Monument. Between 1934 and 1942, the federal Civilian Conservation Corps
built road, trails, and structures in the monument, and the government
acquired additional land in the Painted Desert section. The monument
became a national park in 1962. Six years after the signing of the Wilderness Act in 1964 by President Lyndon B. Johnson, wilderness areas (where human activity is limited), were designated in the park. In 2004, President George W. Bush signed a bill authorizing the eventual expansion of the park from 93,353 acres (about 146 mi2 or 378 km2) to 218,533 acres (about 341 mi2 or 884 km2). Theft of petrified wood is still a problem. Despite a guard force of seven National Park Service rangers, fences, warning signs, and the threat of a $325 fine, an estimated 12 short tons (11,000 kg) of the fossil wood is stolen from the Petrified Forest every year.
Jessee Walter Fewkes, the first archeologist to visit Puerco Ruin, predicted in the late 19th century that it would yield many artifacts. Conservationist John Muir
conducted the first excavations of the ruin in 1905–06. Although he did
not publish his findings, he urged the federal government to preserve
Petrified Forest. Professional archeological work in the park began in the early 20th century when Walter Hough conducted excavations at Puerco Ruin and other sites. In 1919, a phytosaur skull was discovered near Blue Mesa in the Petrified Forest and sent to the Museum of Paleontology in Berkeley, California. In 1921, Annie Alexander,
founder of the museum, visited Blue Mesa to collect more of the
phytosaur and other specimens; this led to further excavations by
paleontologist Charles Camp. Since then, more than 250 fossil sites have been documented in the park. In the 1930s, the Civil Works Administration funded research in the park by archeologists H.P. Mera and C.B. Cosgrove.
A National Park Service resurvey of the Petrified Forest in the early
1940s identified most of the large sites with stone ruins, and
subsequent surveys since 1978 have identified a total of more than 600
artifact sites, many of them small. Research in paleontology and archeology continues at the park in the 21st century.
Biology
Flora
According to the A. W. Kuchler U.S. Potential natural vegetation Types, Petrified Forest National Park encompasses two classifications; a Grama Bouteloua/Galleta Hilaria (plant) Steppe (53) potential vegetation type with a Desert Grassland (12) vegetation form and a Juniper/Pinyon pine (23) vegetation type with a Great Basin montane forest/Southwest Forest (4) vegetation form.
A 2005 survey found that 447 species of flora, of which 57 species are invasive, occur in the park. Although the park is known for its fossils and eroded badlands, its main environment is semi-desert shrub steppe. Protected from development and overgrazing for many years, the park has some of the best grassland in northeastern Arizona.
In the northern part of the park, the volcanic soils of the Bidahochi
Formation support abundant plant life along the Painted Desert rim. In contrast to the relatively bare badlands below, the rim is covered with shrubs, small trees, grasses, and herbs.
The dominant plants in the park include more than 100 grass
species, many native to the region. Growing among the grasses are
flowering species such as evening primrose, mariposa lily, and blue flax, and shrubs such as sagebrush, saltbush, and rabbitbrush. Among the wide variety of grasses are native perennial bunchgrass, blue grama, sacaton, sideoats grama, bearded sprangletop, and bush muhly. Invasive species that crowd out slower-spreading natives include annual lovegrass and brome (cheat grass).
Trees and shrubs grow in riparian zones
along the park's washes. Willows and cottonwoods are the larger plants,
joined by rushes and sedges. Here the invasive Eurasian tamarisk, also known as saltcedar, threatens native plants by crowding, using most of the available water, and increasing soil salinity by exuding salt through its leaves.
Fauna
Some of the larger animals roaming the grasslands include pronghorns, black-tailed jackrabbits (hares), Gunnison's prairie dogs, coyotes, bobcats and foxes. Pronghorns, the fastest land animals in North America, are capable of 60-mile-per-hour (97 km/h) sprints.
They are the second fastest land animal on Earth. The blood vessels in
the huge, thin-walled ears of the jackrabbits act as heat exchangers.
These hares are known for their bursts of speed, long leaps, and zigzag
routes, all of which protect them from being eaten by golden eagles and other predators. The prairie dogs live in large colonies or "towns", near which many other species find food and shelter. Coyotes dine largely on rodents but also eat fruits, reptiles, insects, small mammals, birds, and carrion.
Bobcats and bullsnakes hunt smaller animals, such as deer mice and white-tailed antelope squirrels in the park's riparian zones. Western pipistrelle bats feast on insects, and pallid bats eat beetles, centipedes, cicadas, praying mantises, scorpions, and other arthropods. On the Painted Desert rim, small animals find food and shelter among the denser foliage, and mule deer sometimes frequent the area.
More than 16 kinds of lizards and snakes live in various habitats in the
park and consume large quantities of insects, spiders, scorpions, other
reptiles, and small mammals. The collared lizard, which occurs in every habitat, is the largest and most often seen.
Plateau striped whiptails, a species consisting entirely of females, prefer grasslands and developed areas. Side-blotched lizards live in rocky areas of the park but are seldom seen. Gopher snakes, which sometimes imitate rattlesnakes when disturbed, are among the most common snakes in the park. The Western rattlesnake, the only venomous snake found in the park, prefers grasslands and shrub areas.
Seven kinds of amphibians, which drink no water but absorb it through their permeable skins, have been identified in Petrified Forest National Park. Tiger salamanders, found in grassland and near major drainages, are the only salamander species known in Arizona. Woodhouse’s toads, which are seldom seen, are the largest toads in the park. They like grasslands, riparian corridors, and developed areas. Red-spotted toads, most active in the rainy season, July through September, are found in rocky areas near streams and in canyons. The Great Plains toad, the most common toad in the park, prefers grasslands. Resident spadefoot toads include the New Mexico, plains, and Couch's varieties.
A survey conducted in 2006 identified 216 species of birds known to
have occurred in Petrified Forest National Park since the park became a
protected area in 1906. Of those, 33 species breed within the park, 6
other species probably do, and 18 species live in the park year-round.
Thirty-five species live in the park only during the summer and 11
species only during the winter. The greatest diversity of birds occurs
during fall and winter migrations.
Raptors,
songbirds, and ground birds are found in the park's grassland, while
the Puerco River's riparian corridor is a good place for year-round
residents as well as migrants such as warblers, vireos, avocets, and killdeer. Developed areas around the visitor center and museum attract western tanagers, hermit warblers, house finches, and others. Occasional shorebirds and eastern birds also visit the park.
Birds commonly seen in the park include the common raven and the western meadowlark, known for its charming song. Anna's hummingbird, which can hover and fly backwards as well as forwards, is among the smallest birds in the park. The largest is the golden eagle, with a wingspan of up to 7 feet (2 m).
Activities
The park is open every day except Christmas (December 25) on a
schedule that varies slightly with the seasons. In 2010, it and its
Painted Desert Visitor Center and Rainbow Forest Museum were open from
7 a.m. to 7 p.m. from May 9 through September 6 but opened as early as
8 a.m. and closed as late as 5 p.m. during other parts of the year. The Painted Desert Inn (a historic museum and bookstore) is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. year-round except Christmas. Park clocks are always set to Mountain Standard Time, as Arizona does not observe Daylight Saving Time.
The Painted Desert Visitor Center, designed by modernist architect Richard Neutra, is part of the Painted Desert Community Complex Historic District and is on the National Register of Historic Places.
Eight other sites within the park are also on the National Register,
including the Painted Desert Inn and associated cabins, the Agate House Pueblo, the Painted Desert Petroglyphs and Ruins Archeological District, Newspaper Rock Petroglyphs Archeological District, Puerco Ruin and Petroglyphs, the Flattop Site (an archeological site), the Twin Buttes Archeological District, and the 35th Parallel Route (also known as the Beale Camel Trail). The Painted Desert Inn was upgraded to a National Historic Landmark in 1987.
The visitor center, which is near the north entrance to the park,
offers visitor information and shows a 20-minute orientation movie,
"Timeless Impressions", once every half-hour. It has a bookstore,
exhibits, a restaurant open from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., a gift shop, a gas
station, a post office open from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through
Friday, a postal drop box, and public restrooms. The Rainbow Forest
Museum complex 2 miles (3.2 km) north of the park's south entrance
offers services including information and "Timeless Impressions"
showings once every half-hour. It has a bookstore, fossil exhibits, an
interactive Triassic Virtual Tour, limited food service, a gift shop,
and public restrooms. The Painted Desert Inn, 2 miles (3.2 km) north of
the Painted Desert Visitor Center, offers visitor information. It has a
bookstore, museum exhibits (including the building itself), and public
restrooms.
No campgrounds or overnight lodging are available in the park,
although nearby communities such as Holbrook offer motels and other
accommodations. Overnight parking is not allowed except in the case of backpackers with wilderness hiking permits.
Sightseeing is available by private automobile, motorcycle, commercial
tour, bicycle, and hiking. The park road, parking lots, and turn-outs
are big enough to accommodate large recreational vehicles. Off-road
vehicle travel, including by mountain bike, is not allowed.
With a few exceptions such as unpaved Old Highway 66, bicycles must
stay on paved roads such as the 28-mile (45 km) main park road and stay
off trails and unpaved surfaces.
The park's seven maintained hiking trails, some paved, vary in
length from less than 0.5 miles (0.8 km) to nearly 3 miles (4.8 km).
Pets are allowed on these trails if kept on a leash, but bicycles are
not. These named trails are Painted Desert Rim, Puerco Pueblo, Blue
Mesa, Crystal Forest, Giant Logs, Long Logs, and Agate House.
Hikers and backpackers may also visit the park's wilderness areas. Free
permits are required for overnight stays; they are issued from the
Painted Desert Visitor Center, Painted Desert Inn, and Rainbow Forest
Museum. Most backpackers enter the wilderness at the north end of the
park, where parking and an access trail are available at Painted Desert
Inn. Group camping is limited to eight people.
Horseback riding is allowed in the wilderness areas; water for horses
is available at the service station near the Painted Desert Visitor
Center. Riders and hikers are asked to travel along dry washes as much
as possible to reduce the impact on fragile desert soils.
Rangers offer a variety of programs about the park. Regularly
scheduled events include a Painted Desert Inn tour, a Triassic program
at the Rainbow Forest Museum sunroom, a talk or walk along the Giant
Logs Trail behind the museum, and a Puerco Pueblo guided walk. The park hosts special events related to Earth Science Week and National American Indian Heritage Month. On Saturdays from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day
at the Painted Desert Inn, artisans from the region give cultural
demonstrations related to ancient peoples, intertribal relationships,
and European-descent cultures. For students and teachers, the rangers offer educational materials and field-trip talks. In some years during the summer months, artists-in-residence work in the park.
In popular culture
- The 1936 film The Petrified Forest, with Leslie Howard, Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart, and the 1935 Broadway play by Robert E. Sherwood on which the film is based, are set at a diner and gas station near the Petrified Forest National Monument.