Bryce Canyon National Park is located along a high plateau at the top of Utah’s Grand Staircase geographic region. It represents the world’s largest concentration of hoodoos (irregular columns of rock) anywhere in the world, enabling outdoor adventurers the opportunity to hike among and explore the otherworldly and fantastical shapes and formations of orange, pink, coral, and other colors of rock. The pillars are composed of sandstone and other fine-grained sedimentary rocks that were sculpted into their bizarre shapes by the processes of uneven chemical and physical weathering over long periods of time; turning the amphitheater-shaped area into a wonderland.