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Shelf
Road - Attractions/Sights
Shelf
Road // Communities // Back
to the Road Map
Lower
Shelf Road
Arkansas
River Walk
This trail offers a relaxing
walk through several miles of cottonwood bottonlands.
Garden
Park Fossil Area
Othniel Lucas, a Garden
Park school teacher, discovered massive bones here in 1876. Subsequent
excavations discovered such well known dinosaurs as Diplodocus, Stegosaurus,
and Allosaurus. Specimens from this area are on display at the Smithsonian,
Denver Museum of Natural History and other museums across the nation and
around the world. Visit the Dinosaur Depot in Cañon City to learn
more about the fossils of Garden Park.
Red
Canyon Park
This 500 acre park contains
unusual eroded red rock formations with spires up to 100 feet high. Facilities
include picnic sites, restrooms and hiking trails.
Rock
Climbing |
Shelf
Road Recreation Area
Climbers come from around
the world to scale these limestone walls. The climbs are short but very
difficult with few handholds and many overhangs. Several back roads near
the climbing area provide opportunities for hiking and mountain biking.
The
Shelf
This section of road perched
high above Fourmile Creek has made for a memorable ride since its construction
in 1892. Look for the lower tollkeeper's cabin in the canyon bottom. The
tollkeeper climbed up the hill to collect tolls every time a wagon or stagecoach
passed. Drivers were charged tolls at both the upper and lower toll gates. |
Window
Rock
This landmark rock, eroded
by wind and water, is made up of 1.7 billion year old granodiorite. The
stream paralleling this portion of the Shelf Road is Cripple Creek. Watch
for Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep in this area.
Carlton
Tunnel
The rock here was excavated
during construction of the Canton Drainage Tunnel. Built in 1941, the tunnel
stretches for over six miles to Squaw Mountain north of Victor. It drains
water from mines down to an elevation of 6,893 feet, over 3,000 feet below
most of the mine entrances. The portal of an older tunnel, the Roosevelt
Tunnel, is three miles to the north. It was rendered obsolete with the
Canton Tunnel's completion. Both sites are on private property |
Window
Rock |
Calrton
Tunnel Dedication
Historic
photos courtesy of Lowell Thomas Museum |