Quick Summary: The Uintah Basin surrounding Vernal, Utah holds one of the densest concentrations of prehistoric rock art in the American West. Fremont and Ute petroglyphs, pictographs, and ancient ruins are scattered across canyon walls and ridgelines throughout the region โ€” many accessible only by off-road vehicle.

Why Vernal Is a Rock Art Destination

Most visitors come to Vernal for Dinosaur National Monument โ€” and they should. But the region's human history is just as remarkable. The Uintah Basin was continuously inhabited for thousands of years by Archaic hunter-gatherers, the Fremont culture, and later the Ute people. Each group left behind images carved and painted into the sandstone cliffs that line the canyons and ridges surrounding Vernal.

Unlike the heavily trafficked petroglyph sites in southern Utah, many of the rock art panels near Vernal sit on remote backcountry trails. They are not behind ropes or guardrails. You encounter them the way they were meant to be encountered โ€” in the landscape, in context, surrounded by the same desert silence that existed when they were created.

The Fremont Culture: Who Made the Rock Art?

The Fremont people lived throughout what is now Utah from roughly 200 AD to 1300 AD. They were farmers, hunters, and artists who built granaries in cliff alcoves and carved elaborate panels into canyon walls. Their art is distinctive: broad-shouldered human figures, often wearing elaborate headdresses and necklaces, alongside bighorn sheep, elk, snakes, and abstract geometric designs.

In the Vernal area, Fremont rock art ranges from small isolated figures to sprawling panels with dozens of images. Some of the largest and most complex panels in the entire Fremont range are found within a short drive โ€” or a guided UTV ride โ€” from downtown Vernal.

The Ute people, who have lived in the Uintah Basin for centuries and whose reservation borders Vernal, also created rock art in the region. Ute panels often include mounted horsemen, reflecting their post-contact way of life, and are sometimes found near or overlapping older Fremont images.

What You Will See on the Trails

Several of Adventure Tours Vernal's guided UTV trail tours pass through areas with petroglyphs, rock art, and structural ruins. Dave and Trudy Wilson โ€” your local guides โ€” know the locations of panels that most visitors never find on their own. These are not roadside pull-offs. They are remote backcountry sites reached by Kawasaki KRX 1000 side-by-side on trails that wind through the same canyons and ridges where the Fremont lived.

What you can expect to encounter on the trails includes petroglyphs (images pecked into rock surfaces), pictographs (images painted onto rock using mineral pigments), granary ruins tucked into cliff alcoves, and grinding stones used for processing seeds and grain. The specific sites you visit depend on the trail you choose and conditions on the day of your tour.

Trail Tip: Ask Dave or Trudy about the rock art when you book. They can recommend which of the five trail systems โ€” Doc's Beach, Moonshine Arch, Ashley Gorge, Outlaw Trail, or Asphalt Ridge โ€” has the best petroglyph access on any given day.

Protecting What You Find

Rock art is irreplaceable. The petroglyphs near Vernal have survived for centuries because the backcountry has kept them away from heavy foot traffic. As more people discover these sites, responsible behavior becomes essential.

Federal law under the Archaeological Resources Protection Act makes it illegal to touch, deface, or remove petroglyphs and archaeological artifacts from public land. Penalties include fines up to $100,000 and imprisonment. Beyond the legal consequences, even casual touching accelerates erosion โ€” oils from skin break down the desert varnish that protects the carved surfaces.

The best practice is simple: photograph from a respectful distance, stay on established trails, and leave everything exactly as you found it. Your guided tour with Adventure Tours Vernal ensures you experience these sites responsibly, with a guide who knows how to approach without damaging the surroundings.

Beyond Rock Art: Ruins and Archaeological Sites

The Uintah Basin is not just rock art. The Fremont built semi-permanent settlements throughout the area. Structural ruins โ€” including pit house depressions, storage granaries, and stone enclosures โ€” are found across the backcountry. Some are visible from the trail; others require a short hike from where you park the UTV.

The region also preserves evidence of more recent history. The canyons around Vernal served as hideouts for Butch Cassidy and the Wild Bunch in the late 1800s. The Outlaw Trail UTV tour follows routes through terrain that was used as an escape corridor by outlaws moving between robbing banks in Telluride and disappearing into the remote canyon country of eastern Utah.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I see petroglyphs near Vernal, Utah?

The Uintah Basin has dozens of petroglyph sites. Major concentrations are found along Dry Fork Canyon, within Dinosaur National Monument, and throughout backcountry trails accessible by UTV. Adventure Tours Vernal guides visitors to remote panels not found in most guidebooks.

How old are the petroglyphs near Vernal?

Most petroglyphs in the Vernal area date from roughly 1,000 to 4,000 years old. The Fremont culture created the majority of panels between 200 AD and 1300 AD. Some images may be older, made by Archaic period peoples who inhabited the basin before the Fremont.

Can I see petroglyphs on a UTV tour?

Yes. Several of Adventure Tours Vernal's guided trail tours pass through areas with petroglyphs, rock art, and ruins. Tours use Kawasaki KRX 1000 side-by-sides and are $299 per machine for a 3-hour guided ride. Call (435) 219-9447 to book.

Is it legal to touch petroglyphs?

No. Federal law prohibits touching, defacing, or removing petroglyphs and archaeological artifacts. Oils from skin contact accelerate deterioration. Photograph from a respectful distance and never touch the rock surface.

See Ancient Rock Art Up Close

Guided UTV tours through petroglyph sites and backcountry ruins. $299/machine, 3-hour tour, up to 2 riders.

๐Ÿ“… Book Your Tour ๐Ÿ“ž (435) 219-9447 ยท Open Daily 7amโ€“7pm