Padre Bay
Padre Bay is a bay within Lake Powell, on the Colorado River in Kane County and San Juan County, Utah. Its waters reach an elevation of 3704 feet / 1129 meters.[1] Located 13.5 miles northeast of Glen Canyon Dam in Lake Powell, Padre Bay is the largest expanse of open water on the man made lake. Padre Bay is bounded by Alstrom Point and the island of Gunsight Butte on the west and Gooseneck Point on the east. Cookie Jar Butte lies between them on the north shore of the bay. At the southern mouth of the bay, north of Dominguez Butte on the south shore is Padres Butte, formerly an island, now with lower water in the lake the tip of Padre Point. Padres Butte marks the location of the Crossing of the Fathers, which is approximately a mile west of the butte. It currently lies under nearly four hundred feet of water.[1][2]
History
Padre Bay is named for the padres who first recorded and used the Crossing of the Fathers, a historical river crossing of the Colorado River in 1776. A group of ten men, the Dominguez–Escalante Expedition, led by the priests Silvestre Vélez de Escalante and his superior Francisco Atanasio Domínguez, were en route home from a failed attempt to find an overland trail to Monterey, California. They had first attempted to cross the Colorado River at Lee's Ferry in Arizona.[3]
Attractions
Nearby hiking attractions are the "weathering pits," perfectly round depressions that range between 10 and 50 feet (3 to 15 m) in diameter and are between 20 and 70 feet (6 to 21 m) deep.
References
- 1 2 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Padre Bay
- ↑ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Crossing of the Fathers (historical)
- ↑ de Escalante, Silvestre Vélez, Diary and Itinerary, "Dominguez–Escalante Expedition Journal (1776)", pp.224-225, from Bolton, Herbert E. (editor and translator). Pageant in the Wilderness: The Story of the Escalante Expedition to the Interior Basin, 1776. Including the Diary of Father Escalante Translated and Annotated by Herbert E. Bolton. (Salt Lake City: Utah State Historical Society, 1950). Pages 133-239, from American Journeys website americanjourneys.org accessed October 29, 2015.
Coordinates: 37°05′48″N 111°18′13″W / 37.09667°N 111.30361°W