Park Finder

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EXPLORE
Displaying 10 parks
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Agate National Park contains some of the most important and exciting fossils in the world, making it one of the crown jewels in the National Park System.

View through a stone doorway of more stone doorways

Explore ancient Aztec ruins in New Mexico enjoy a half-mile walk through an original Pueblo House and see how ancient people built their homes in the desert.

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While known for mesas, sheer-walled canyons, and several thousand ancestral Pueblo dwellings, this monument also has over 23,000 acres of designated wilderness.

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Although long extinct, Capulin Volcano National Monument is dramatic evidence of the volcanic processes that shaped northeastern New Mexico.

A large, orangey brown rock formation, shaped like a funnel or "chimney" reaches into the sky

Chimney Rock has become one of the most famous landmarks in the American West, largely due to its stop along the Oregon Trail.

Reenactors sitting on cart at Fort Union National Monument

Fort Union was established in 1851 as a protector of the Santa Fe Trail, and during its forty-year history, three different forts were constructed in total.

Homestead National Historical Park commemorates the westward expansion of the United States. These 160 acres represent freedom for every woman and man.

Pecos National HIstorical Park old brick ruin structure

Pecos National Historical Park preserves Indian pueblos and Pecos cultural remains. Visitors learn about the park's ancient cultural exchange and geography.

black rocks with white colored stick people and circles drawn long ago

Petroglyph National Monument protects one of the largest petroglyph sites and features volcanic rock carved by Native American and Spanish settlers.

covered wagons in front of mountain

Scotts Bluff National Monument, an essential landmark for those traversing the Oregon and Mormon trails, includes geological and paleontological history.