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Bluejohn Canyon

Coordinates: 38°22′42″N 110°16′41″W / 38.37833°N 110.27806°W / 38.37833; -110.27806
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Bluejohn Canyon
Main Fork Bluejohn Canyon, October 2011
Bluejohn Canyon is located in Utah
Bluejohn Canyon
Bluejohn Canyon
Location of Bluejohn Canyon within the
State of Utah
Floor elevation4,839 ft (1,475 m)
Geography
LocationCanyonlands National Park
Wayne County, Utah
United States
Coordinates38°22′42″N 110°16′41″W / 38.37833°N 110.27806°W / 38.37833; -110.27806

Bluejohn Canyon (often mistakenly referred to as "Blue John Canyon") is a slot canyon in eastern Wayne County, Utah, United States. It is on BLM land just south of the boundary of the Horseshoe Canyon Unit of Canyonlands National Park.[1][2]

Description

Bluejohn Canyon is probably named for a 19th-century outlaw by the name of John Griffith, who reportedly kept stolen horses in the area. He had one blue eye and one brown eye and was known by the nickname "Blue John".[3]

Though often mistakenly believed to be within Canyonlands National Park, Bluejohn Canyon is actually on BLM land southwest of the Horseshoe Canyon Unit of the park and 42 miles (68 km) south of the town of Green River. The main fork of the canyon, approximately 11 miles (18 km) in length, runs north-northeast from the Robbers Roost Flats, and is a tributary of Horseshoe Canyon. The main fork also has several tributary canyons of its own.[4] Traversing the entire length of Bluejohn Canyon requires technical canyoneering skills and equipment.

Bluejohn Canyon came to international attention in 2003 as the place where outdoorsman Aron Ralston was forced to amputate his own right forearm with a multi-tool after it became trapped by a boulder. Ralston's five-day ordeal was described in his autobiography Between a Rock and a Hard Place[5] and was depicted in the 2010 film 127 Hours.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Bluejohn Canyon
  2. ^ "MyTopo Maps - Bluejohn Canyon, Wayne County, UT, United States" (Map). mytopo.com. Trimble Navigation, Ltd. Retrieved 5 Mar 2018.
  3. ^ "Bluejohn Canyon - Robbers Roost - Technical Canyoneering". Climb-Utah.com. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  4. ^ "Blue John Canyon". utah.com. Utah.com. 18 Nov 2010. Archived from the original on 2015-09-06. Retrieved 22 Jan 2017 – via web.archive.org.
  5. ^ Kopp, Megan. "Between a Rock and a Hard Place, Reviewed". curledup.com. Retrieved 22 Jan 2017.
  6. ^ "127 Hours". foxsearchlight.com. Los Angeles: Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. Retrieved 22 Jan 2017.

Media related to Bluejohn Canyon at Wikimedia Commons