Place to see: Cathedral Gorge, Panaca, Nevada, United States

cathedral gorge

cathedral gorge

View across the beautiful Cathedral Gorge in Panaca, Nevada.

About this place:

The buff-colored cliffs and canyons of Cathedral Gorge, called the Panaca Formation, are remnants of a Pliocene-era lakebed. About one million years ago, much of Meadow Valley (the area along US 93 from Caliente to Panaca) was covered by a freshwater lake. Sediments and gravel settled on the lake floor. As the climate changed over centuries, the lake gradually drained, and erosion started working on the exposed sediments. Rainwater and melting snow carved rivulets in the siltstone and clay shale, working their way down and widening the cracks into gullies and canyons. The "caves" area designated on the east side of the Gorge are not true caves but the canyon walls narrow down so much that explorers feel like they are in caves.

Postcards about Cathedral Gorge:

  • Sloan Schang

    28 May 2008
    From:
    Sloan Schang

    I love camping here, especially in the off-season. I found this place some years ago completely by accident, because it just happened to be on my way to someplace else. It turns out to rarely be on anybody else's way, so it's usually just me, a couple of Canadians named Harvey and Joan, and that nightly symphony of coyote chatter beneath all of these gorgeous bluffs.

Panaca, Nevada, US
Telephone: (775) 728-4460
Visit website

Discovered by Sam Scholes
on 28 February 2008.
198 views.

Subscribe to Everywhere