From the avenues and boulevards of New York City to the hills of Hawaii, America’s national monuments comprise an eclectic group of statues, natural areas, prehistoric ruins, historic military fortifications, and fossil sites that attract millions of visitors each year. Each national monument offers something unique: hiking and animal watching for the nature lover, artifacts, reenactments, ruins, and demonstrations for the history buff, and thousands of fossils and formations for those curious about science.
![]() ©2007 National Park Service National monuments such as the Sunset Canyon celebrate our country's natural wonders. See more pictures of National Monuments. |
Agate Fossil Beds National Monument
Agate Fossil Beds National Monument, in western Nebraska, houses an amazing concentration of 19-million-year-old
fossils. Captain James Cook discovered the fossil beds in 1878 and acquired the
site, called Agate Springs Ranch. Since then, fossil bones from the site have
been exhibited around the world, and in 1965 the ranch was made a national
monument.
Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument
At the
Alibates Flint Quarries, in the red bluffs above the Canadian River, pre-Columbian Indians quarried
agatized dolomite, chipping and flaking it to make spear points, knives,
scrapers, and other tools. Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument, authorized in 1965, offers guided
tours of the quarries. The monument also contains the ruins of several Plains
Village Indian dwellings.
Aniakchak National Monument and Preserve
586,000
acres of unspoiled Alaska wilderness make up Aniakchak National
Monument and Preserve. It includes one of the world's great dry
calderas, as well as lava flows, cinder cones, and explosion pits.
Booker T.
Washington National Monument
Booker T.
Washington National Monument in Franklin, Virginia, is the former home of famous black
educator, philosopher, and civil rights leader Booker T. Washington. The site contains
a replica of the little kitchen cabin in which Washington was born. Other buildings on the
reconstructed 207-acre farm include the smokehouse, blacksmith shed, tobacco
barn, and horse barn.
Buck Island Reef National Monument
Buck Island Reef National Monument, one of the nation's few underwater
parks, combines a barrier island and one of the Caribbean's most beautiful barrier reefs. Part
of the Virgin
Islands,
the 19,000-acre monument, which lies just north of St. Croix, includes 176 acres of land and
18,839 acres of water, offering visitors an opportunity to explore two
fascinating worlds.
Cape Krusenstern National Monument
It has been a national monument since 1978, and Alaska's Cape Krusenstern
continues to sustain native Eskimos, who hunt, fish, and trap within
the monument's 660,000 acres, as they have done for thousands of years.
Cape Krusenstern's bluffs and 114 beach ridges along the Chukchi Sea
contain archaeological evidence of 6,000 years of prehistoric human use
of the coastline.
Capulin Volcano National Monument
Capulin Volcano National Monument in northeastern New Mexico is one of the few places in the
world where people can walk into a volcano. Capulin Volcano is part of a field
of volcanism that began about eight million years ago. Recent studies indicate
that Capulin Volcano is approximately 59,000 years old.
Casa Grande Ruins National Monument
Casa Grande Ruins National Monument in the Gila River Valley of southern Arizona preserves the remains of a village
once occupied by the Hohokam Indians. Visitors to Casa Grande can see ancient
pottery and tools at the visitor center, or they can wander the mysterious
ruins, contemplating why the Hohokam studied the heavens so carefully here.
Castle Clinton National Monument
Castle
Clinton, at the tip of Manhattan, has had a long and varied
existence. The circular fortress was built between 1808 and 1811 as one of a
series of forts to protect New York City from potential British aggression. The
walls of the original fort remain intact; inside, exhibits trace the evolution
of Castle Clinton.
Cedar Breaks National Monument
The Paiutes
called the natural amphitheater of Cedar Breaks National Monument in Utah un-cap-I-cun-ump, or "circle
of painted cliffs," for the colorful spires and columns of rock carved
into the mountain. Shaped like a huge coliseum, the amphitheater plunges more
than 2,000 feet, scooping away green alpine meadows.
Chiricahua National Monument
In the
northwest corner of the Chiricahua Mountains, massive boulders weighing hundreds
of tons balance easily on a forest of stone pedestals. Called the "Land of
the Standing-Up Rocks" by the local Chiricahua Apaches and the
"Wonderland of Rocks" by later pioneers, the area has been preserved
as Chiricahua National Monument since 1924.
Colorado National Monument
Colorado National Monument, located in the western part of the
state, is a tribute to both the land and the man who recognized its value. Like
the site’s numerous rock spires, domes, arches, windows, and sheer-walled
canyons, Independence Monument was carved by millions of years of
erosion. Equally beautiful is the area's wildlife. Mountain lions, desert
bighorns, and rattlesnakes blend in with the landscape, while colorful birds
and flowering cacti stand out boldly against the scenery.
Devils Postpile National Monument
Sixty-foot
columns of basalt rise like organ pipes above pine forests on the western
slopes of the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California. Devils Postpile National Monument was established in 1911 to preserve
these volcanic remains, as well as 101-foot-high Rainbow Falls.
Dinosaur National Monument
Dinosaur National Monument in Colorado and Utah is not a typical dinosaur museum -- this site
contains a cliff face of jumbled fossil bones. The quarry site, which was
designated a national monument in 1915, is one of the largest known deposits of
dinosaur fossil bones in the world.
Effigy Mounds National Monument
Northeastern
Iowa's Effigy Mounds National Monument, proclaimed in 1949, preserves 206
known prehistoric mounds. A self-guiding walk leads visitors past major
features within the monument, including Little Bear Mound and scenic overlooks
of the Mississippi
River.
El Malpais
National Monument
The 115,000
acres of New Mexico's El Malpais National Monument contain many reminders of
its eruptive past: jagged spatter cones, fragile ice caves, and one of the
longest lava tube cave systems in North America, extending at least 17 miles. Hiking
trails and roads lead to many highlights of the monument, including the Cebolla
Wilderness, a forested rimrock area that features prehistoric rock art and historic
homesteads and the Zuni-Acoma Trail, an ancient Pueblo trade route.
El Morro
National Monument
El Morro
National Monument, located on an ancient
east-west trail in western New Mexico, preserves a timeless record of the people who have lived and
passed through this region. Self-guided trails with wayside exhibits lead from
the visitor center to Inscription Rock and the ancient pueblo ruins above.
Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument
Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument in Colorado is internationally known for its
collection of petrified insects. Even such delicate creatures as butterflies,
trapped in rock for millions of years, are almost perfectly preserved, complete
with antennae, legs, hairs, and wing patterns. The area also features petrified
trees and plant fossils, revealing in stone a picture of life long ago.
Fort Frederica National Monument
Fort Frederica National Monument, England's southernmost New World stronghold, preserves the
once-flourishing town of Frederica and the Bloody Marsh Battle Site.
Fort Matanzas National Monument
Visitors to
Florida's Fort Matanzas National Monument arrive by boat, just as Spanish
soldiers did in the eighteenth century. The island outpost was built in the
1740s to protect the city of St. Augustine. Self-guided nature walks reveal
the monument's various habitats: a tidal salt marsh, a coastal dune hammock,
and an open area of dunes and scrub. Free ferry service is available from
adjacent Anastasia Island.
Fort Stanwix National Monument
Fort Stanwix, a national monument since 1935, was
important for defense purposes. Located in Rome, New York, the site was carefully
reconstructed in time for the 1976 Bicentennial, with earthworks, a cannon
platform, barracks, and officers' quarters. Artifacts recovered during
excavations shed light on the garrison life of the time.
Fossil Butte National Monument
Several
short hiking trails through Fossil Butte National Monument, in southwestern Wyoming, allow
visitors to see the fossils in their natural condition and learn about
the history of fossil-collecting in the area. The Fossil Lake
Trail winds through the aspen groves and high desert landscape that
surround the butte.
George Washington Birthplace National Monument
George Washington Birthplace National Monument, located in Virginia, is the place where the leader
spent much of his childhood. Popes Creek Plantation is part of the George Washington Birthplace National Monument, which includes the working farm,
family cemetery, a picnic area, and more than 500 acres of grounds crossed by
hiking trails.
George Washington Carver National Monument
George Washington Carver National Monument was one of the first national park
sites to highlight the life and work of a black American. The Missouri site preserves the farm where the successful
educator, botanist, agronomist, and artist grew up, and includes a museum with
displays and films about Carver's boyhood.
Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument
At the edge
of the Gila Wilderness, the nation's first designated wilderness area, is the
small but intriguing Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument. Visitors can hike throughout the
high desert and pine forest of the New Mexico monument and up to the ruins
perched 180 feet above the canyon floor. The dwellings, built in the late 1200s
in natural caves, contain about 40 rooms.
Grand Portage National Monument
Centuries
ago, each July, hundreds of French-Canadian fur traders converged on the North
West Company's headquarters on the western shore of Lake Superior to trade, eat, brawl, and party.
The wooden buildings of the post, built in the late 1700s, have been
reconstructed by the National Park Service as part of Grand Portage National Monument in Northeastern Minnesota.
Hohokam Pima National Monument
In the
mesquite-studded desert valley southeast of Phoenix, excavations have revealed a
surprisingly developed ancient farming culture that lasted from several
centuries before the birth of Christ to A.D. 1400 or 1500. Designated Hohokam Pima National Monument in 1972, the site but it remains
closed to the public. Tourists are welcome to visit other areas of the
reservation, however, including the Gila River Indian Arts and Crafts Center, a source of income for local
artisans.
Homestead National Monument
Tucked away
in a grassy corner of southeastern Nebraska is Homestead National Monument of
America, a tribute to those who settled the Great Plains. The site is one of the first
claims staked under the Homestead Act of 1862. The quiet, 160-acre site
preserves a small remnant of the streamside woods and tall-grass prairie that
pioneers encountered on the Great Plains.
Hovenweep National Monument
At
Hovenweep, on what is now the Colorado-Utah border, the Anasazi Indians built
elegant towers that rose from the rocks. Hovenweep National Monument, proclaimed in 1923, contains the
ruins of six clusters of multi-story towers located at the heads of canyons. A
self-guided tour lets visitors explore the prehistoric sites of Square Tower
Group.
Jewel Cave National Monument
Hidden
beneath the Black Hills of South Dakota is the subterranean world of Jewel Cave, where countless crystal formations
sparkle with the brilliance of gems. When Jewel Cave National Monument was proclaimed in 1908, less than
a half-mile of cave had been discovered. Explorations in the past 40 years have
revealed more than 135 miles of twisting and turning passages, making it the
second-longest known cave in the world.
John Day Fossil Beds National Monument
A
tour through John Day Fossil Beds National Monument in Oregon is like taking a
trip back in time. While fossil beds that extend over five million
years are considered rare, the three units of this monument preserve a
65-million-year record of plant and animal life.
Lava Beds National Monument
Evidence
of geologic violence can be seen everywhere at Lava Beds National Monument, in the form
of spatter and cinder cones, lava flows, and chimneys. Perhaps the most
spectacular remnants are the lava tubes, formed when the cooler surface layer
of a lava flow solidified while the lava beneath remained fluid, eventually
draining out when the eruption stopped.
Montezuma Castle National Monument
Tucked into
a cliff recess high above the Verde Valley in New Mexico is a multi-story dwelling built by
the Sinagua more than 800 years ago. The Sinagua were not as skilled at masonry
as the Anasazi, yet this prehistoric structure is one of the best- preserved in
the Southwest. The monument also contains Montezuma Well, a natural limestone
sink fed by artesian springs.
Natural Bridges National Monument
Three
massive natural bridges of stone -- the largest and most impressive collection
of such formations in the world -- can be found at this site in southeastern Utah. In addition to these impressive
formations created by erosion, the monument contains fascinating plant and
animal life, as well as prehistoric ruins.
Ocmulgee National Monument
The Ocmulgee National Monument, located east of Macon, Georgia, contains traces of more than
10,000 years of continuous human occupation, from Ice Age hunters to the Creeks
of historic times. The 700-acre site includes an ancient burial mound, prehistoric
trenches, and a visitor center featuring exhibits and a major archaeological
museum.
Oregon Caves National Monument
Few
caves in the National Park System offer a more stunning array of
geological formations than Oregon Caves. Known as the "marble halls of
Oregon," the rare marble cave was proclaimed a national monument in
1909. All six of the world's major rock types are found in the cave,
along with a crystalline substance called "moonmilk."
Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument
Visitors to Arizona's Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument can see proof of nature's resourcefulness everywhere, from the kangaroo rat, which drinks no water yet thrives in one of the world's most arid climates, to the creosote bush, which manufactures its own natural herbicide to prevent competition for water by encroaching plant life.
Petroglyph National Monument
Ancient depictions of humpbacked flute players and human-like "star beings" decorate the volcanic cliffs of New Mexico's Petroglyph National Monument. Many of the images at Petroglyph National Monument are recognizable as people, animals, brands and crosses, while others are much more complex.
Pinnacles National Monument
The russet spires and crags of Pinnacles National Monument, south of the San Francisco Bay area, provide an ideal sanctuary, both for people and birds of prey. The more than 26,000-acre monument has two separate entrances, Bear Gulch on the east and Chaparral on the west. No roads link the two, but more than 30 miles of hiking trails do. Visitors can enjoy good views of the area's contrasting geology and jagged, volcanic Balconies Cliffs.
Pipe Spring National Monument
On the grounds of Pipe Spring National Monument in Arizona, visitors can tour re-created gardens and orchards, the blacksmith shop, harness room, corral, and other historic buildings, including the cabin where explorer John Wesley Powell's survey crew stayed in 1871.
Pipestone National Monument
In the
western slope of the Coteau des Prairie in southwestern Minnesota are quarries of a unique soft
stone, ranging in color from mottled pink to brick red, that is considered sacred to the Plains
Indians. Pipestone National Monument, created in 1937, is open to the public,
though only Indians are allowed to mine the sacred stone. A three-quarter-mile
self-guiding trail loops past the exposed red rock of the quarries and through
the tall grasses of the virgin prairie, still used by Indians for cultural and
religious activities.
Poverty Point National Monument
Designated
a national monument in 1988, Poverty Point National Monument is the homeland of an ancient
Indian culture. The visitor center has many artifacts on display, including
beads and small stone tools unique to this culture. The Louisiana monument also offers
self-guided interpretive trails, special guided tours, and the opportunity to
observe archaeologists at work.
Rainbow Bridge National Monument
Rainbow Bridge is the world's largest natural bridge, standing 290 feet tall and spanning 275 feet; the top of the bridge is 42 feet thick and 33 feet wide. The span of the bridge, composed of Navajo Sandstone, was formed as wave after wave of sand was deposited, forming dunes up to 1,000 feet high. Located in the canyon-lands of southeastern Utah, the 160-acre monument allows visitors to experience some of the spectacular scenery of the Colorado Plateau.
Russell Cave National Monument
Russell Cave National Monument in the hill country of northern Alabama contains one of the richest
archaeological deposits in the United States, representing more than 9,000 years
of continuous use. The visitor center museum has a sampling of the treasure-trove
of artifacts unearthed at Russell Cave, and Nature and hiking trails let
visitors explore the more than 300-acre monument on the side of Montague Mountain.
Scotts Bluff National Monument
Rising 800
feet above the plains in the Nebraska panhandle, Scotts Bluff served as a
prominent landmark for early travelers. The massive promontory is a
cross-section of high plains that formed in the continent's interior after the
uplifting of the Rocky Mountains. The 2,998-acre monument includes a visitor center, museum
complex, and a short segment of the actual Oregon Trail.
Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument
The peaks, cinder cones, and lava flows of Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument represent a long period of volcanic activity. The volcano's cinder rim now seems to glow as if lit by a perpetual sunset. The 3,000-acre Arizona monument was proclaimed in 1930 to protect the area's volcanic treasures.
Timpanogos Cave National Monument
High on the steep slopes of Utah's Wasatch Range, three limestone caves pierce 11,750-foot Mt. Timpanogos. Timpanogos Cave National Monument features a unique arrangement of fragile formations. Though the caverns are millions of years old, they are still changing. Drop by drop, water continues to work its magic.
Tonto National Monument
The hidden cliff dwellings of the Salado Indians can be found at Tonto National Monument in Arizona. The monument includes two cliff dwellings built by the Salado more than 600 years ago, which visitors can walk through. A steep trail leads to the Upper Ruin on a nearby ledge, a large dwelling with 32 rooms on the ground floor. When peering into these rooms, visitors can see handprints on the walls and smoke stains on the ceilings, powerful reminders that these ruins were once full of life.
Tuzigoot National Monument
Tuzigoot National Monument, located above Arizona's Verde Valley, offers a glimpse at life in a Sinagua community. The prehistoric dwellings at Tuzigoot, like those at nearby Montezuma Castle, were built by Sinagua farmers, yet their different styles of architecture are striking.
Walnut Canyon National Monument
A rugged trail in Walnut Canyon National Monument leads to the ruins of 24 cliff dwellings, offering intimate views of the rooms. Visitors who look closely can see an 800-year-old fingerprint left in plaster by one of the builders. From the trail it is possible to see 100 other dwellings across the northern Arizona canyon, and a short walk around the rim provides views of even more.
Wupatki National Monument
Wupatki National Monument, proclaimed in 1924, has more than 35,000 acres of archaeological ruins. Archaeologists believe Wupatki, located in Arizona, was part of a major prehistoric trading network between the Indians of North America and those of Mexico and Central America. The visitor center has exhibits detailing the history of the Walnut Canyon area and is the starting point for the Wupatki Ruins Trail. Other trails provide access to panoramic views and some of the monument's other pueblo ruins.
To learn more about national memorials and historic sites, and other travel destinations in North America, visit:
- National Memorials: Discover national memorials in the U.S.
- National Historic Sites: Read about American national historic sites.



