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Central Oregon is dotted with small and large buttes. I'm standing on Kelsey Butte, with Luna Butte in the foreground, Lava Butte midway and Bachelor Butte (renamed Mt. Bachelor when they put a ski area in) in the background.
Monument Valley (Navajo: Tsé Biiʼ Ndzisgaii, meaning valley of the rocks) is a region of the Colorado Plateau characterized by a cluster of vast sandstone buttes, the largest reaching 1,000 ft (300 m) above the valley floor. It is located on the southern border of Utah with northern Arizona (around 36°59′N 110°6′W / 36.983°N 110.1°W / 36.983; -110.1), near the Four Corners area. The valley lies within the range of the Navajo Nation Reservation, and is accessible from U.S. Highway 163.
The area is part of the Colorado Plateau. The floor is largely Cutler Red siltstone or its sand deposited by the meandering rivers that carved the valley. The valley's vivid red color comes from iron oxide exposed in the weathered siltstone. The darker, blue-gray rocks in the valley get their color from manganese oxide.
The buttes are clearly stratified, with three principal layers. The lowest layer is Organ Rock shale, the middle de Chelly sandstone and the top layer is Moenkopi shale capped by Shinarump siltstone. The valley includes large stone structures including the famed Eye of the Sun.
Between 1948 and 1967, the southern extent of the Monument Upwarp was mined for uranium, which occurs in scattered areas of the Shinarump siltstone; vanadium and copper are associated with uranium in some deposits (see Uranium mining in Arizona).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The most northerly point of Lewis. Designed and built by David and Thomas Stevenson in 1862.
© Andrew Bradford
Coyote Buttes is a section of the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), spanning extreme South Central Utah and North Central Arizona, just south of US 89 halfway between Kanab, Utah and Page, Arizona. It is divided into two areas: Coyote Buttes North and Coyote Buttes South. Visiting either of the Coyote Buttes areas requires purchasing a hiking permit in advance. Only 20 people per day are allowed to hike in.
One of the highlights of Coyote Buttes North Area is the rock formation known as The Wave, a swirling sandstone formation.
The Wave and Buckskin Gulch share the Wire Pass Trailhead on House Rock Valley Road.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evening light on the beautiful and bizarre Paw Hole Teepees in the Coyote Buttes Wilderness - Paria Plateau, Vermillion Cliffs National Monument, Arizona
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Even though you can't see her face, something about this screams "puppy"! I miss those stubby little legs and discoordination. Photo taken last May.
I would have called it "butt shot", but then figured I might start getting overlapping google hits from people looking for Rhianna's instagram page.
I assume who know this character, should be parent with a little child.
Some character in story for kids, may be an animal, so that it can attract kids more easily. Earlier, my wife introduce this Butt Detective to me and I never think a main character of a book series for kids, can be a butt! And this book series is extremely popular! My kid likes this book very much and I read the book with him every night, and now...I started to like this book as well...
Toni's butt-pillow brings about strange reactions from some people...and this is me, so strange reactions are pretty much standard.
A panorama of the Butt of Lewis, the most northerly point of the island of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides off Scotland
This local cemetery in Clark, Wyoming is located in the shadow of Bennett Buttes shown in this photo. The buttes are named for Captain Andrew Bennett who was killed in a fight with Bannock Tribe members who had left the reservation in Fort Hall, Idaho. The battle led by General Nelson A. Miles was fought in September 1878 near the buttes along Little Rock Creek near the Clark's Fork of the Yellowstone River. The creek was named after a Crow scout and interpreter ialso killed in the battle.
The Bennett Buttes Cemetery had it’s beginnings with the arrival of Clark’s first homesteader residents. It’s first burial is believed to be Miranda Weathermon in 1909, although two earlier burials in the area were later moved here.
In 1910 the Cody Enterprise suggested the Clark residents “fence the graveyard so cows don’t trample over the graves". This was accomplished with donated posts and local labor. In 1913 fourteen residents formed the Bennett Buttes Cemetery Association, and on May 3, 1915 the former government land was deeded over to them to be used as a cemetery.