Access denied for user 'kiosa.com'@'localhost' (using password: YES) St. George ut real estate, St. George real estate, Utah real estate, Hurricane Utah real estate, Southern Utah real estate, real estate in St George Utah, Hurricane ut real estate for sale, Southern Utah houses, St George Utah homes for sale, Hurricane Utah real estate, real, estate, residential real estate, Southern Utah homes, home, homes, houses, property, properties, St. George ut homes for sale, St. George realtor, realtors, real estate agent, real estate agents, Southern Utah Real Estate, Hurricane homes for sale, for sale, new homes, new home communities, relocation, homes for sale St. George Utah Real Estate, Advanced Realty
Trent Leavitt St. George Utah
Trent Leavitt
Owner/Broker
Life Member Million Dollar Club
19 yrs. Experience in Southern Utah
Advanced Realty St. George Utah Real Estate Specialist
Phone: 435-674-4343
Fax: 435-674-1084
E-mail advanced@infowest.com
1156 E 700 SOUTH, #1
ST. GEORGE, UT 84790

Galen VanSickel St. George Utah Real Estate Agent
Galen VanSickel
Million Dollar Producer
1-800-901-7175

Monument Valley National Monument Information:

Monument Valley is a scenic region encompassing approximately 5,180 sq km (2,000 sq mi) in northeastern Arizona and southeastern Utah. The landscape is characterized by tall, red sandstone buttes, mesas, and arches created by erosion, rising up to 300 m (1,000 ft) from a sandy plain. Monument Valley is part of the Navajo Indian Reservation; the Navajos have occupied the valley since the 1860s. Rainbow Bridge and Natural Bridges national monuments are nearby.

Tall, red sandstone buttes and mesas rise up from the sandy plain of Monument Valley in northeastern Arizona and southeastern Utah. The scene of countless western movies, the valley has come to symbolize the open spaces and rugged landscape of the American West.

Monument Valley is part of the Colorado Plateau. During the Eocene epoch of the Cenozoic era, huge quantities of these rocky mountain sediments were deposited in the section of land that now contains Monument Valley. At the same time, a regional uplift occurred on the Colorado Plateau. The plateau was pushed upward by pressure from below. It broke and cracked, thus creating a new cycle of erosion. Most of the breaking was done underground long before the rocks were revealed.

   
 


To learn more about tax liens or find tax lien certificates visit www.taxlienschool.com