PALO DURO CANYON
Visit the website for Palo Duro Canyon at
www.palodurocanyon.com
Palo Duro Canyon is the most spectacular and scenic landscape feature
in the Panhandle of Texas. The Spanish name Palo Duro means "hardwood"
and refers to the hardwood shrubs and trees found in the canyon. Palo
Duro Canyon was carved into the eastern Caprock escarpment of the High
Plains during the past ninety million years by the headwaters of the
Prairie Dog Town Fork of the Red River and by attendant weathering.
The head of the canyon lies fifteen miles southeast of Amarillo in
Randall County, and the canyon extends sixty miles southeast through
Armstrong County and into Briscoe County. It reaches depths of 800
feet from rim to floor (approximately 3,500 feet to 2,400 feet above
sea level) and average widths of more than six miles. The steep sides
of Palo Duro Canyon consist of bright, banded layers of orange, red,
brown, yellow, grey, maroon, and white rocks that represent four
different geologic periods and a time span of more than 240 million
years. Fossils of long-extinct animals and plants have been found
embedded in the rock layers. Adding to the canyon's scenic grandeur
are numerous pinnacles, buttes, and mesas, each protected by a cap of
erosion-resistant sandstone or other rock. The natural vegetation of
the canyon consists of a variety of grasses and other xerophytic
vegetation such as prickly pear, yucca, mesquite, and juniper.
Cottonwood, willow, and salt cedar grow along the banks of Prairie Dog
Town Fork of the Red River.
Because of the availability of wood, water, game, edible wild plants,
raw materials for weapons and tools, and shelter from harsh winter
winds, Palo Duro Canyon was a favorite camp site for both prehistoric
peoples and later Indian tribes. The first known inhabitants, who date
from the period between 10,000 and 5,000 B.C. were big-game hunters of
now-extinct giant bison and mammoths. Archeologists have found
projectile points, stone tools, mortar holes, paintings, carvings, and
other artifacts of these and later prehistoric people at numerous
sites throughout the canyon.
The first Europeans to see Palo Duro Canyon were probably the members
of the Coronado expedition, who may have camped and rested there in
the late spring of 1541 while searching for Quivira and the treasures
it reputedly contained. The region was occupied at that time by bands
of pre-horse-culture Apache Indians who depended heavily on buffalo
for food, clothing, and shelter. In the eighteenth century, after the
Plains Indians had acquired horses, the canyon became a major
campground of the Comanches and Kiowas. Traders from New Mexico called
Comancheros frequently came to Palo Duro to trade with the Indians.
The first Anglo-Americans to explore Palo Duro Canyon were members of
Capt. Randolph B. Marcy's 1852 expedition in search of the sources of
the Red River. The Comanches and their allies continued to camp there
until 1874, when United States Cavalry troops under Col. Ranald S.
Mackenzie made a surprise dawn attack on a large encampment of
Comanches, Kiowas, and Cheyennes, forcing them to return to their
reservations in Indian Territory. In 1876 a group of army engineers,
teamsters, and civilian draftsman was in the area to explore the
headwaters of the Red River and conduct a topographic and scientific
survey. Their report was the most detailed report compiled up to that
time on the central Panhandle region, including Palo Duro Canyon. That
same year, Charles Goodnight drove a herd of cattle into Palo Duro
Canyon to begin the first commercial ranch in the Panhandle, the JA.
Although the canyon remained the domain of the cattlemen for the next
half century, it also became a popular picnicking and camping place
for residents in the surrounding area. In 1933 the state of Texas
purchased land in the upper canyon to establish Palo Duro Canyon State
Scenic Park. Initial improvements, including construction of a road to
the floor of the canyon, were made by the Civilian Conservation Corps
under the direction of the National Park Service. Today the park,
which includes more than 15,000 acres, annually receives over half a
million visitors. A summer musical pageant, Texas, is presented
annually in the outdoor amphitheater. The lower part of the canyon
remains private ranchland.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Duane F. Guy, ed., The Story of Palo Duro Canyon
(Canyon, Texas: Panhandle-Plains Historical Society, 1979). William H.
Matthews III, The Geologic Story of Palo Duro Canyon (Bureau of
Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin, 1969).
Panhandle-Plains Historical Review, 1978. Frederick W. Rathjen, The
Texas Panhandle Frontier (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1973).
Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at
Austin.
by William Conroy
Recommended citation:
"PALO DURO CANYON."
The Handbook of Texas Online.
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