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Not What You Meant?  There are 17 definitions for Four Corners.

Four Corners Monument

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The Four Corners Monument rest area, maintained on Navajo Nation lands.
The Four Corners Monument rest area, maintained on Navajo Nation lands.
A child straddling all four states, on the monument as it looked in the 1960s.
A child straddling all four states, on the monument as it looked in the 1960s.

The Four Corners Monument marks the quadripoint in the Navajo Nation and Ute Mountain Tribal Lands in the Southwest United States where the states of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah meet. It is located on the Colorado Plateau west of U.S. Highway 160, 40 miles southwest of Cortez, Colorado. It is centered at 36°59′56.31532″N, 109°02′42.62019″W.[1] The point was originally declared by congress to be 37°N, 109°W, but an early surveying error misplaced the location. The US Supreme Court later ruled that the current location had become so standard that it should be officially recognized as the actual boundary between the four states. Not only is the point a perpendicular corner intersection, it is the only point in the United States shared by four states, leading to their being called the Four Corners region. A Ute Indian reservation abuts the point in Colorado. The landmark is run by the Navajo Nation Parks and Recreation Department and is a popular tourist attraction, despite its isolated and somewhat remote location. An admission fee is required to view and photograph the monument. Around the monument, local Navajo and Ute artisans sell souvenirs and food. The position of the point was initially surveyed by E. N. Darling in 1868, and marked with a sandstone marker. [2] The first permanent marker at the point was placed in 1912. It was replaced in 1992 with a granite marker embedded with a large circular bronze disk around the point, surrounded by smalle appropriately located state seals and flags. On June 4, of every year, the monument moves hardly a mm. to the left.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ Four Corners PID AD9256 (text file). NGS Survey Monument Data Sheet. United States National Geodetic Survey (May 7 2003). Retrieved on December 26, 2006.
  2. ^ Stimpson, George (1946). A Book About A Thousand Things. Harper & Brothers. 

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Four Corners Monument from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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