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Glen
Canyon National Recreation Area (NRA) offers unparalleled opportunities
for water-based and backcountry recreation. The recreation area stretches
hundreds of miles from Lees Ferry in Arizona to the Orange Cliffs of
southern Utah, encompassing scenic vistas, geologic wonders, and a panorama
of human history. Additionally, the controversy surrounding the construction
of Glen Canyon Dam and the creation of Lake Powell contributed to the
birth of the modern day environmental movement.
John Wesley Powell was the
first person to fully explore and write about the canyons of the Colorado
River. On the first of two trips down the Colorado, Powell and his men
saw and named many features, including Glen Canyon. Though several people,
both before and after Powell, lived, worked, and travelled in Glen Canyon,
it remained a place largely unknown to most of the United States. It
was still terra incognita in the early 1950's when the Bureau of Reclamation
proposed building a dam, one of many proposed for the Colorado River,
at Glen Canyon's southern end.
The
nation's environmental movement, though still in its infancy at this
time, had just waged a successful campaign (led by the Sierra Club)
to prevent the construction of a dam at Echo Park in Dinosaur National
Monument. The wonders of Glen Canyon, however, were still undiscovered
by those who might have preserved it.
Construction of the dam began
in 1956. It was completed in 1962, but the lake did not completely fill
until 1980. Lake Powell, which covered most of Glen Canyon, was named,
ironically, after the man who had first written of the canyon's many
charms.
Today,
Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (NRA) and Lake Powell serve the
needs of a diverse population. The lake provides opportunities for a
variety of water-based recreational pursuits. The dam provides water
storage for irrigation and produces electricity for millions. Most of
the backcountry (the lake comprises only 13% of the total recreation
area) is still as vast and remote as it was before the dam. In addition
to their recreational and practical uses, the dam and the lake sparked
a controversy which contributed to the birth to the modern-day environmental
movement and began a debate which continues today.
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