Grand Canyon
Immense gorge cut by the
Colorado River into the high plateaus of northwestern Arizona,
U.S.,
noted for its fantastic shapes and coloration.
The broad, intricately
sculptured chasm of the Grand Canyon contains
between its outer walls a multitude of imposing peaks, buttes, canyons, and
ravines. It ranges in width from about 0.1 to 18 miles (0.2 to 29 km) and
extends in a winding course from the mouth of the Paria River, near the
northern boundary of Arizona, to Grand Wash Cliffs, near the Nevada line, a
distance of about 277 miles (446
km). The canyon includes many tributary side canyons and surrounding plateaus.
The deepest and most impressively beautiful section, 56 miles (90 km) long, is
within Grand Canyon National Park, which encompasses the river's length
from Lake Powell
to Lake Mead. In its general colour, the
canyon is red, but each stratum or group of strata has a distinctive hue--buff
and gray, delicate green and pink, and, in its depths, brown, slate-gray, and
violet. At 8,200 feet (2,500 m) above sea level, the North Rim is 1,200 feet
(350 m) higher than the South Rim.
The first sighting of the Grand Canyon by a European is credited to the Francisco
Coronado expedition of 1540 and subsequent discovery to two Spanish priests,
Francisco Garcés and Silvestre Vélez de Escalante, in 1776. In the early 1800s
trappers examined it, and sundry government expeditions exploring and mapping
the West began to record information about the canyon. By the 1870s, following
the exploration of John Wesley Powell and others, extensive reports on the
geography, geology, botany, and ethnology of the area were being published.
Grand Canyon National Park, now containing 1,904
square miles (4,931 square km), was created in 1919. Its area was greatly
enlarged in 1975 by the addition of the former Grand
Canyon National Monument
and Marble Canyon National Monument
and by portions of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, as well as other
adjoining lands. The North and South rims are connected by a 215-mile- (346-kilometre-)
long paved road and by a transcanyon trail. Scenic drives and trails lead to
all important features. Mule-pack trips down the canyon and rides down the
river in rafts and power-driven craft are intensively sought-after ways of
viewing and experiencing the vast beauty of the canyon. Many pueblo and
cliff-dweller ruins, with accompanying artifacts, indicate prehistoric
occupation. There are five Indian tribes living on nearby reservations.
Geologic history
Although its
awesome grandeur and beauty are the major attractions of the Grand
Canyon, perhaps its most vital and valuable aspect lies in the
time scale of Earth history that is revealed in the exposed rocks of the canyon
walls. No other place on Earth compares with the Grand
Canyon for its extensive and profound
record of geologic events. The canyon's record, however, is far from continuous
and complete. There are immense time gaps; many millions of years are
unaccounted for by gaps in the strata in which either vast quantities of Earth
materials were removed by erosion or there was little or no deposition of Earth
materials. Thus rock formations of vastly different ages are separated only by
a thin, distinct surface that reveals the vast unconformity in time.
Briefly summarized, the
geologic history of the canyon strata is as follows. The crystallized, twisted,
and contorted unstratified rocks of the inner gorge at the bottom of the canyon
are granite and schist about two billion years old. Overlying these very
ancient rocks is a layer of limestones, sandstones, and shales that are more
than 500 million years old. On top of these are rock strata composed of more
limestones, freshwater shales, and cemented sandstones that form much of the
canyon's walls and represent a depositional period stretching over 300 million
years. Overlying these canyon rocks is a thick sequence of Mesozoic Era rocks
(245 to 66.4 million years old) that form precipitous butte remnants and the
vermilion, white, and pink cliff terraces of southern Utah
but which have been entirely eroded away in the area of the Grand
Canyon proper. Of relatively recent origin are overlying sheets of
black lava and volcanic cones that occur a few miles southeast of the canyon
and in the western Grand Canyon proper, some estimated to have been active
within the past 1,000 years.
The cutting of the mile-deep
Grand Canyon by the Colorado River is an event
of relatively recent geologic history that began not more than six million
years ago, when the river began following its present course. The Colorado River's rapid velocity and large volume and the
great amounts of mud, sand, and gravel it carries swiftly downstream account
for the incredible cutting capacity of the river. Prior to the building of the
Glen Canyon Dam, the sediments carried by the Colorado River weremeasured at an
average of 500,000 tons per day. Conditions favourable to vigorous erosion were
brought about by the uplift of the region, which steepened the river's path and
allowed deep entrenchment. The depth of the Grand Canyon
is due to the cutting action of the river, but its great width is explained by
rain, wind, temperature, and chemical erosion, helped by the rapid wear of soft
rocks, all of which steadily widened it. Amazingly, the canyon was cut by a
reverse process, for the river remained in place and cut through the rocks as
the land moved slowly upward against it. Only thus can be explained the
canyon's east-to-west course across a south-facing slope and the presence of
plateaus that stand across the river's course without having deflected it.
The most significant aspect
of the environment that is responsible for the canyon is frequently overlooked
or not recognized. Were it not for the arid climate in the surrounding area,
there would be no Grand Canyon. Slope wash
from rainfall would have removed the canyon walls, the stairstep topography
would long ago have been excavated, the distinctive sculpturing and the
multicoloured rock structures could not exist, the Painted Desert would be
gone, and the picturesque Monument
Valley would have only a
few rounded hillocks.
Biological past
and present
Plant and animal fossils are
not abundant in the Grand Canyon's sedimentary
rocks and are confined mostly to primitive algae and mollusks, corals,
trilobites, and other invertebrates. Animal life in the Grand
Canyon area today is varied and abundant, however. The common
animals are the many varieties of squirrels, coyotes, foxes, deer, badgers,
bobcats, rabbits, chipmunks, and kangaroo rats. Plant life is also varied. In
the bottom of the canyons are willows and cottonwoods, which require abundant
water during the growing season. At the other end of the moisture scale are
drought-resistant plants such as the yucca, agave, and numerous species of
cactus.
On the canyon rims, north and south, there is a wide
assortment of plant life. Typical of the South Rim is a well-developed
ponderosa pine forest, with scattered stands of piñon pine and juniper. Bush
vegetation consists mainly of scrub oak, mountain mahogany, and large
sagebrush. On the North Rim are magnificent forest communities of ponderosa
pine, white and Douglas fir, blue spruce, and aspen. Under less optimum
conditions the plant life reverts to the desert varieties.
Grand
Canyon Series
Major
division of rocks in northern Arizona
dating from Precambrian time (about 3.8 billion to 540 million years ago). The rocks of the Grand
Canyon Series consist of about 3,400 m (about 10,600 feet) of quartz
sandstones, shales, and thick sequences of carbonate rocks. Spectacular
exposures of these rocks occur in the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River in
northwestern Arizona,
where they overlie the strongly deformed and contorted Vishnu Schist, the
angularity of which stands in bold contrast to the almost horizontal bedding of
the Grand Canyon Series. The Grand Canyon Series actually dips slightly
eastward and is separated from the overlying Cambrian sandstones by a major
erosion surface unconformity. A conglomerate was deposited on the eroded
surface of the Vishnu Schist. Limestones, shales, and sandstones occur over the
conglomerate and are thought to represent shallow water deposits. The area of
deposition was probably a large deltaic region that was slowly subsiding,
allowing great thicknesses of sediment to accumulate near sea level . The presence of Precambrian organisms is indicated
by calcareous algaelike structures in the carbonate rocks, as well as by tracks
and trails of wormlike creatures in other rocks. Initially, in a generalized
outline of the Precambrian history of the region, the Vishnu Schist was
upraised, folded, and metamorphosed and then slowly eroded and worn down to a
flat surface. The Grand Canyon Series was deposited perhaps as part of a slowly
subsiding geosynclinal trough. The region was then subjected to uplift and tilting, and a Precambrian period of erosion for the Grand
Canyon Series began. This action was later followed by a long period of
deposition during the Paleozoic Era (540 to 245 million years ago) and then
further erosion during the Cenozoic Era (beginning 66.4 million years ago)
until the region assumed its modern configuration.