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Arizona
- More than Just a Desert (cont)
Arizona has many State Parks and numerous natural wonders that provide access to a wide variety of activities, fauna and flora, and landscapes. The Sonoran Desert and Sagauro National Park feature typical desert scenery, with canyons, red cliffs and sandstone pinnacles, coyotes and rattlesnakes, and the giant multi-armed cacti that epitomise the Arizonian landscape. The Painted Desert and the magnificent sandstone spires of Monument Valley in the northeast, the spectacular Red Rock Country of Sedona, and the mountains and forests of Flagstaff are just some of Arizona’s other natural attractions.
The desert is also home of the Wild West, the land of cowboys and Indians, prospectors, gamblers and dusty towns. The character of the Old West is epitomised in the old mining town of Tombstone, the site of the famous shootout at the OK Corral where staged gunfights, swinging saloon doors and old wooden buildings are reminders of the harsh past that respected the ‘law of the gun’.
Arizona is not only about deserts, history
and natural wonders. Two of the state’s
biggest metropolises are in the desert, the
cities of Phoenix and Tucson, offering 21st-century
comforts such as luxurious resorts, shopping
plazas and golf courses. The region’s
continuous sunshine and dry desert air have
attracted thousands of people to its restorative
properties and expensive health spas.
Outside the cities, the Native Americans
who have lived in Arizona for centuries make
up the majority of the population, and more
than a third of the land is encompassed within
Indian Reservations. Northeast Arizona is
known as Indian country, where the Navajo
and the traditional Hopi tribal groups reside,
and is where the beautiful Canyon de Chelly,
and numerous Ancestral Puebloan sites are
to be found in the cliff walls and valleys.
The Apache live in the southeastern mountains
and were the last tribal group to concede
to the white American aggressors.
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