Grand Valley (Colorado–Utah): Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 39°11′N 108°43′W / 39.183°N 108.717°W / 39.183; -108.717
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{{Short description|Valley in Colorado and Utah, United States of America}}
{{for|the town formerly known as Grand Valley, Colorado|Parachute, Colorado}}
{{for|the town formerly known as Grand Valley, Colorado|Parachute, Colorado}}
{{For|the Colorado wine region|Grand Valley AVA}}

{{Infobox valley
{{Geobox|Valley
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| name = Grand Valley
| name = Grand Valley
| photo = Grand Valley at night with full moon.jpg
| native_name =
| photo_caption = A portion of the Grand Valley at dusk,<br>November 2013
| other_name =
| photo_size =
| category_hide = yes
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| etymology =
| nickname =
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| image = Grand Valley at night with full moon.jpg
| image_caption = A portion of the Grand Valley at dusk
| image_size =
<!-- *** Country *** -->
<!-- *** Country *** -->
| country = {{flag|United States}}
| country = United States
| state = {{flag|Colorado}}
| state = [[Colorado]]
| state1 = {{flag|Utah}}
| state1 = [[Utah]]
| district_type = County
| region = [[Mesa County, Colorado|Mesa County, CO]]
| region1 = [[Grand County, Utah|Grand County, UT]]
| district = [[Mesa County, Colorado|Mesa County, CO]]
| district1 = [[Grand County, Utah|Grand County, UT]]
| region_type = County
| district =
| municipality =
<!-- *** Family *** -->
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| coordinates = {{coord|39|11|N|108|43|W|region:US-CO_dim:50000|display=inline,title}}
| coordinates = {{coord|39|11|N|108|43|W|region:US-CO_dim:50000|display=inline,title}}
| capital_coordinates =
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| map = Colorado#USA
| source2_coordinates =
| map_caption = Grand Valley, on the [[Colorado]]&ndash;[[Utah]] border
| source_confluence_coordinates =
| mouth_coordinates =
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| government_coordinates =
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| lowest_location = [[Colorado River]] | lowest_region = | lowest_country =
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<!-- *** Population *** -->
| population = 147,083<ref>[[Grand Junction Metropolitan Statistical Area]]</ref> | population_date = 2011
| population_density_imperial =
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| geology =
| orogeny =
| period =
<!-- *** Access *** -->
| public =
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| free = | free_type =
<!-- *** Maps *** -->
| pushpin_map = USA Colorado
| pushpin_map_caption = Grand Valley, on the [[Colorado]]&ndash;[[Utah]] border
<!-- *** Website *** -->
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}}
}}


The '''Grand Valley''' is an extended populated valley, approximately 30 miles (48&nbsp;km) long and 5 miles (8&nbsp;km) wide, located along the [[Colorado River]] in [[Mesa County, Colorado]] and [[Grand County, Utah]] in the [[United States]]. The valley contains the city of [[Grand Junction, Colorado|Grand Junction]], as well as other smaller communities such as [[Fruita, Colorado|Fruita]], and [[Palisade, Colorado|Palisade]]. The valley is noted as a major [[fruit]] growing region, with a large number of [[orchard]]s. It takes its name from the "Grand River",<ref>{{cite book|last=Dawson|first=John Frank|title=Place names in Colorado: why 700 communities were so named, 150 of Spanish or Indian origin|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015051116740;view=1up;seq=31|publisher=The J. Frank Dawson Publishing Co.|location=Denver|page=25}}</ref> the historical name of the Colorado River upstream from its confluence with the [[Green River (Colorado River)|Green River]] that was used by locals in the late 19th and early 20th century. The valley is the most densely populated area on the [[Colorado Western Slope]], with Grand Junction serving as an unofficial capital of the region, as a counterpoint to [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]] on the eastern slope of the [[Rocky Mountains]] in the [[Colorado Front Range]]. [[Interstate 70 (Colorado)|Interstate 70]] and [[U.S. Route 6 in Colorado|U.S. Highway 6]] run through the valley from west-to-east. The Grand Valley is part of the larger [[Colorado Plateau]] desert lands.
The '''Grand Valley'''<ref>{{Cite GNIS|1435606|Grand Valley}}</ref> is an extended populated valley, approximately {{convert|30|mi|km}} long and {{convert|5|mi|km}} wide, located along the [[Colorado River]] in [[Mesa County, Colorado|Mesa County]] (and slightly into [[Garfield County, Colorado|Garfield County]]) in western [[Colorado]] and [[Grand County, Utah|Grand County]] in eastern [[Utah]] in the [[Western United States]]. The valley contains the city of [[Grand Junction, Colorado|Grand Junction]], as well as other smaller communities such as [[Fruita, Colorado|Fruita]] and [[Palisade, Colorado|Palisade]]. The valley is a major [[fruit]]-growing region that contains many [[orchard]]s and [[vineyard]]s, and is home to one of two designated [[American Viticultural Area]]s in Colorado: the [[Grand Valley AVA]]. It takes its name from the "Grand River",<ref>{{cite book|last=Dawson|first=John Frank|title=Place names in Colorado: why 700 communities were so named, 150 of Spanish or Indian origin|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015051116740;view=1up;seq=31|publisher=The J. Frank Dawson Publishing Co.|location=Denver|page=25}}</ref> the historical name of the Colorado River upstream from its confluence with the [[Green River (Colorado River)|Green River]] that was used by locals in the late 19th and early 20th century. The valley is the most densely populated area on the [[Colorado Western Slope]], with Grand Junction serving as an unofficial capital of the region, as a counterpoint to [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]] on the eastern slope of the [[Rocky Mountains]] in the [[Colorado Front Range]]. [[Interstate 70 (Colorado)|Interstate 70]] and [[U.S. Route 6 in Colorado|U.S. Highway 6]] run through the valley from west-to-east. The Grand Valley is part of the larger [[Colorado Plateau]] desert lands.


==Description and history==
==Description==
The valley begins where the Colorado River widens at the mouth of [[De Beque Canyon]] to the east of Palisade, then follows a wide arc bending to the west/southwest. The Colorado receives the [[Gunnison River]], one of its major tributaries, just south of Grand Junction near the midpoint of the valley. The valley is surrounded by large plateau formations, including the Bookcliffs along the north side, the [[Grand Mesa]] along the southeast side, and the [[Uncompahgre Plateau]] to the southwest. [[Colorado National Monument]] sits on a ridge on the southwest side of the valley west of Grand Junction. Much of the surrounding table land areas rimming the valley are public lands controlled by the Bureau of Land Management.
Grand Valley begins where the Colorado River widens at the mouth of [[De Beque Canyon]] to the east of Palisade, then follows a wide arc bending to the west. The Colorado receives the [[Gunnison River]], one of its major tributaries, just south of Grand Junction near the midpoint of the valley. The valley is surrounded by large plateau formations, including the [[Book Cliffs]] along the north side, the [[Grand Mesa]] along the southeast side, and the [[Uncompahgre Plateau]] to the southwest. [[Colorado National Monument]] sits on a ridge on the southwest side of the valley west of Grand Junction. Much of the surrounding table land areas rimming the valley are public lands controlled by the [[Bureau of Land Management]].


==History==
[[Image:Grand valley-sand stone rocks.jpg|thumb|left|Sandstone rocks and formations are common on the Colorado Plateau desert lands]]
The name "Grand Valley" has been associated with the area since the mid-nineteenth century. The present Colorado River above Grand Junction was known as the Grand River as early as 1842. The city of Grand Junction was so named because of its position at the junction of the [[Gunnison River|Gunnison]] and Grand Rivers. The [[Green River (Colorado River tributary)|Green]] and Grand Rivers united in eastern Utah to become the Colorado River. The [[Colorado River#Controversy over the name of the upper Colorado River| Grand River was renamed]] Colorado River by act of the [[Colorado General Assembly |Colorado State Legislature]], approved March 24, 1921, and made official July 25, 1921 in House Joint Resolution 460 of the [[66th United States Congress|66th Congress]].<ref name="66_Congress">{{cite book |author= |title=Renaming the Grand River, Colo.
The valley was an area historically occupied by the [[Ute Tribe|Ute]] people ([[Parianuche]] band). White settlers began to arrive in the 1880s, farming the valley for a variety of grains and fruits. In the 1890s, it was discovered that sugar beets grown in the valley had a high sugar content, leading to widespread cultivation of that crop. At the turn of the 20th century, evaporation techniques allowed fruit growers to ship their products more efficiently to distant markets, yielding an expansion of fruit growing in the valley. In 1918, the [[Government Highline Canal]] was completed to provide water to cultivate 50,000 acres (20.0&nbsp;km²) in the valley. The project included a [[roller dam]] in De Beque Canyon, the largest of three such dams of this type in the nation.<ref>"[http://www.gjhistory.org/cat/agriculture.htm Grand Junction, Colorado History in Pictures] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050409095353/http://www.gjhistory.org/cat/agriculture.htm |date=2005-04-09 }}".</ref>
|url=http://www.riversimulator.org/Resources/LawOfTheRiver/HearingToRenameGrandRiverColorado1921.pdf
|format=Hearing Before the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce of the House of Representatives, Sixty Sixth Congress, Third Session, on H.J. RES 460 |date=1921 |page=19}}</ref> In addition to Grand Junction, the name "Grand" still remains in the Grand Valley between [[Palisade, Colorado|Palisade]] and [[Mack, Colorado| Mack]]; in [[Grand Mesa]], which stands more than a mile above the Grand and Gunnison Valleys and in [[Grand County, Colorado]].<ref name="Establish">{{cite web |url=https://www.ttb.gov/images/pdfs/Grand_Valley_final_rule.pdf | website= Federal Register | title=The Grand Valley Viticultural Area (89F197P) | publisher=Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives Bureau, [[United States Department of the Treasury |Treasury Department]] |format=27 CFR Part 9 [T.D. ATF-317; RE: Notice No. 714] Final rule | pages=59213–59217 |date=1991-11-25}}{{PD-notice}}</ref>
According to local legend, the valley was cursed by the native Utes upon their forced exodus to federal reservation grounds in Utah. The legend states, among other things, that no person born in the valley may leave permanently unless a small amount of sand is collected from the Grand Mesa, Bookcliffs, Colorado National Monument, and/or the junction of the Gunnison and Colorado rivers. The sand is supposed to alleviate the curse's effects of a supernatural and metaphysical attraction by the valley's soil to the native individual. Although this is a myth and therefore cannot be confirmed, many exiting locals, native and non-native alike, prefer not to take their chances with the alleged curse and keep the sand long after emigrating from the valley.

[[Image:Grand valley-sand stone rocks.jpg|thumb|right|Sandstone rocks and formations are common on the Colorado Plateau desert lands, November 2013]]
The valley was an area historically occupied by the [[Ute Tribe|Ute]] people ([[Parianuche]] band). Settlers began to arrive in the 1880s, farming the valley for a variety of grains and fruits. In the 1890s, it was discovered that sugar beets were found to have a high sugar content and they became a major crop along with other fruits, grains and vegetables. Also in 1890, State Governor [[George A. Crawford]] planted a {{convert|60|acre|ha}} wine vineyard in the Grand Valley. By 1900, there were over 1,000 farms in the Grand Valley growing wine grapes and local sales tax records showed that 1,744 gallons of wine were sold that year.<ref name="AspenTimes">{{cite news |url= https://www.aspentimes.com/news/colorados-wine-industry-green-and-growing/ | title= Colorado's wine industry green and growing |work=[[The Aspen Times]] | date= 2005-09-20 | author1= Havlen, Naomi| publisher=Swift Communications, Inc.}}</ref> At the turn of the 20th century, evaporation techniques allowed fruit-growers to ship their products more efficiently to distant markets, yielding an expansion of fruit growing in the valley.In 1918, the [[Government Highline Canal]] was completed to provide water to cultivate 50,000 acres (20.0&nbsp;km²) in the valley. The project included a [[roller dam]] in De Beque Canyon, the largest of three such dams of this type in the nation.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gjhistory.org/cat/agriculture.htm |title=Grand Junction, Colorado History in Pictures| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050409095353/http://www.gjhistory.org/cat/agriculture.htm |archive-date=2005-04-09 }}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
{{portal|Colorado|Utah}}
* [[List of valleys of Utah]]
* [[Grand Valley AVA]]
* [[Grand Valley AVA]]
* [[Plateau Creek (Colorado)|Plateau Valley]]
* [[Plateau Creek (Colorado)|Plateau Valley]]
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{{reflist|22em}}
{{reflist|22em}}


==External links==
{{commons category-inline|Grand Valley (Colorado-Utah)}}


[[Category:Landforms of Mesa County, Colorado]]
[[Category:Valleys of Colorado]]
[[Category:Valleys of Colorado]]
[[Category:Regions of Colorado]]
[[Category:Regions of Colorado]]
[[Category:Valleys of Utah]]
[[Category:Valleys of Utah]]
[[Category:Landforms of Garfield County, Colorado]]
[[Category:Landforms of Mesa County, Colorado]]
[[Category:Landforms of Grand County, Utah]]
[[Category:Landforms of Grand County, Utah]]
[[Category:Colorado River]]
[[Category:Colorado River]]

Revision as of 22:15, 30 November 2023

Grand Valley
A portion of the Grand Valley at dusk,
November 2013
Grand Valley is located in Colorado
Grand Valley
Grand Valley
Grand Valley, on the ColoradoUtah border
Grand Valley is located in the United States
Grand Valley
Grand Valley
Grand Valley (the United States)
Geography
CountryUnited States
States
County
Coordinates39°11′N 108°43′W / 39.183°N 108.717°W / 39.183; -108.717

The Grand Valley[1] is an extended populated valley, approximately 30 miles (48 km) long and 5 miles (8.0 km) wide, located along the Colorado River in Mesa County (and slightly into Garfield County) in western Colorado and Grand County in eastern Utah in the Western United States. The valley contains the city of Grand Junction, as well as other smaller communities such as Fruita and Palisade. The valley is a major fruit-growing region that contains many orchards and vineyards, and is home to one of two designated American Viticultural Areas in Colorado: the Grand Valley AVA. It takes its name from the "Grand River",[2] the historical name of the Colorado River upstream from its confluence with the Green River that was used by locals in the late 19th and early 20th century. The valley is the most densely populated area on the Colorado Western Slope, with Grand Junction serving as an unofficial capital of the region, as a counterpoint to Denver on the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains in the Colorado Front Range. Interstate 70 and U.S. Highway 6 run through the valley from west-to-east. The Grand Valley is part of the larger Colorado Plateau desert lands.

Description

Grand Valley begins where the Colorado River widens at the mouth of De Beque Canyon to the east of Palisade, then follows a wide arc bending to the west. The Colorado receives the Gunnison River, one of its major tributaries, just south of Grand Junction near the midpoint of the valley. The valley is surrounded by large plateau formations, including the Book Cliffs along the north side, the Grand Mesa along the southeast side, and the Uncompahgre Plateau to the southwest. Colorado National Monument sits on a ridge on the southwest side of the valley west of Grand Junction. Much of the surrounding table land areas rimming the valley are public lands controlled by the Bureau of Land Management.

History

The name "Grand Valley" has been associated with the area since the mid-nineteenth century. The present Colorado River above Grand Junction was known as the Grand River as early as 1842. The city of Grand Junction was so named because of its position at the junction of the Gunnison and Grand Rivers. The Green and Grand Rivers united in eastern Utah to become the Colorado River. The Grand River was renamed Colorado River by act of the Colorado State Legislature, approved March 24, 1921, and made official July 25, 1921 in House Joint Resolution 460 of the 66th Congress.[3] In addition to Grand Junction, the name "Grand" still remains in the Grand Valley between Palisade and Mack; in Grand Mesa, which stands more than a mile above the Grand and Gunnison Valleys and in Grand County, Colorado.[4]

Sandstone rocks and formations are common on the Colorado Plateau desert lands, November 2013

The valley was an area historically occupied by the Ute people (Parianuche band). Settlers began to arrive in the 1880s, farming the valley for a variety of grains and fruits. In the 1890s, it was discovered that sugar beets were found to have a high sugar content and they became a major crop along with other fruits, grains and vegetables. Also in 1890, State Governor George A. Crawford planted a 60 acres (24 ha) wine vineyard in the Grand Valley. By 1900, there were over 1,000 farms in the Grand Valley growing wine grapes and local sales tax records showed that 1,744 gallons of wine were sold that year.[5] At the turn of the 20th century, evaporation techniques allowed fruit-growers to ship their products more efficiently to distant markets, yielding an expansion of fruit growing in the valley.In 1918, the Government Highline Canal was completed to provide water to cultivate 50,000 acres (20.0 km²) in the valley. The project included a roller dam in De Beque Canyon, the largest of three such dams of this type in the nation.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Grand Valley". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  2. ^ Dawson, John Frank. Place names in Colorado: why 700 communities were so named, 150 of Spanish or Indian origin. Denver: The J. Frank Dawson Publishing Co. p. 25.
  3. ^ Renaming the Grand River, Colo (Hearing Before the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce of the House of Representatives, Sixty Sixth Congress, Third Session, on H.J. RES 460). 1921. p. 19.
  4. ^ "The Grand Valley Viticultural Area (89F197P)" (27 CFR Part 9 [T.D. ATF-317; RE: Notice No. 714] Final rule). Federal Register. Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives Bureau, Treasury Department. 1991-11-25. pp. 59213–59217.Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ Havlen, Naomi (2005-09-20). "Colorado's wine industry green and growing". The Aspen Times. Swift Communications, Inc.
  6. ^ "Grand Junction, Colorado History in Pictures". Archived from the original on 2005-04-09.

External links

Media related to Grand Valley (Colorado-Utah) at Wikimedia Commons