The Gates of Lodore is the scenic entrance to the Canyon of Lodore, a canyon on the Green River in northwestern Colorado, United States.[1] The name Gates of Lodore has become synonymous with the canyon itself and the two names are used interchangeably. The Canyon commences as the Green River departs Browns Park and cuts through the Uinta Mountains meandering eighteen miles until its end at Echo Park (Colorado), the confluence of the Green and Yampa River.[2] It was named by the Powell Expedition after the English poem Cataract of Lodore.[3] It is located in Dinosaur National Monument.
^RiverMaps Guide to the Green and Yampa Rivers in Dinosaur National Monument - 2009 Whitis & Vinson - Map 1 - Map 4
^Dawson, John Frank. Place names in Colorado: why 700 communities were so named, 150 of Spanish or Indian origin. Denver, CO: The J. Frank Dawson Publishing Co. p. 30. Archived from the original on 2016-08-20.
Dam, and follows the river downstream into Colorado, ending at the GatesofLodore in Dinosaur National Monument. Known as a haven for outlaws such as...
Powell and nine men – none of whom had prior whitewater experience – set out in May. After braving the rapids of the GatesofLodore, Cataract Canyon and other...
Hampshire Franklin Gorge, West Virginia Fremont River Canyon, Utah GatesofLodore, Colorado Genesee River Gorge, New York Glen Canyon, Utah and Arizona...
Grant was most likely America's best foldboat pilot. Grant kayaked the GatesofLodore on the Green River (Colorado River tributary) in Dinosaur National...
tributary of the Green River. It flows south from Sweetwater County, Wyoming to a confluence with the Green River just north of the GatesofLodore in Moffat...
through the Canyon of Lodore in Dinosaur National Monument is subdued to the point that the sound no longer conveys a sense of the power that created...
(1/2): 23–26. Gates, Payson G. (1948). "Leigh Hunt's Review of Shelley's 'Posthumous Poems'". The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. 42 (1):...
office was renamed La Veta in 1876. The Ladore post office was renamed Lodore in 1924. The Laird post office was renamed Seebarsee on February 17, 1892...