Utah’s mountains and canyons form a diverse and rugged landscape. The Wasatch Range, including Mount Timpanogos (11,752 ft), dominates northern Utah with steep, forested peaks. The Uinta Mountains, home to Kings Peak (13,528 ft), the state’s highest, stretch across the northeast with expansive wilderness and lakes. In the south, Zion’s towering cliffs, Bryce Canyon’s unique hoodoos, and Canyonlands’ vast gorges showcase a stunning array of desert geology, shaped by millions of years of erosion and tectonic activity.














































