
Antelope Canyon is located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona. Actually there is two antelope Canyon’s Upper Antelope Canyon and Lower Antelope Canyon located on either side of route 98. Antelope Canyon looks more like an oil painting than a rock formation. It is on of the most visited canyon in the southwest America.
Upper Antelope Canyon
The upper canyon also known as Corkscrew Canyon. The entrance is a narrow curved only a few feet wide. Once you enter inside, the temperature drops as
much as 20 degrees as the visitor enters one of the most beautiful of all natural formations. The sunlight filtering down the curved sandstone walls makes magical environment, constantly changing patterns and shadows in many subtle shades of color. Some sections of the canyon are wide and bright, while others are narrower and more cave-like, with no light reaching the sandy floor
Lowe Antelope Canyon
Lower Antelope Canyon, called Hasdeztwazi, or “spiral rock arches” by the Navajo.The lower canyon is longer and deeper than the upper section, but also more challenging, requiring climbing down ladders in some places to
descend several sheer drops. Lighting is better in the early hours and late afternoon.
Antelope Canyon is not visited without of guided tours, in part because rains during monsoon season can quickly flood the canyon. On August 12, 1997 eleven tourists were killed in Lower Antelope Canyon by a flash flood.
Fee Description
Both Antelope Canyon are charge separate entry fees of about $18 per person.