Music Temple
Music Temple is a geological feature near the Colorado River in Glen Canyon, southern Utah, on the Navajo Nation, United States, which consists of a grotto with high, vaulting walls and a deep central pool of water.
It was named by John Wesley Powell in 1869 because of its unusual acoustic properties: reportedly, a one-second note would reverberate for eleven seconds. It was considered one of the more beautiful natural formations of the area in the late 19th century and into the mid-20th century.
Music Temple is within the area that was inundated by Lake Powell, formed by the construction of Glen Canyon Dam. It was submerged by the mid-1960s as the lake filled. As the lake declined in contents over due to a long term drought, the feature is partially exposed.
Sources
- University of Utah
37°09′46″N 110°55′25″W / 37.16278°N 110.92361°W / 37.16278; -110.92361
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- Coyote Gulch
- Horseshoe Bend
- Lake Powell
- Padre Bay
- Cataract Canyon
- Glen Canyon
- Gregory Natural Bridge
- Music Temple
- Rainbow Bridge National Monument
- Bullfrog Marina
- Glen Canyon Dam
- Hite Crossing Bridge
- Lee's Ferry and Lonely Dell Ranch
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