Tuesday, November 27, 2007

The Grand Canyon

Would you like to visit the Grand Canyon that has overwhelming size and a colorful landscape? You should hop on the next flight to the Grand Canyon located in Arizona. This park is one of the first national parks to be discovered. It has fantastic landscape and is made up of rocks, valleys, cliffs, and hills. The rocks in the park were built millions of years ago by water, ice, and wind, which is all apart of erosion and is the biggest impact on the Grand Canyon. The fantastic site is 5,000 feet deep and is 227 miles long. The national park has 75 different species living in the park. Its weather varies all the time, cold winters, the humidity, and mild peaceful summers.

Today scientists still don’t understand how the Grand Canyon was created. The area around has become a national monument on January 11, 1908. The national park was carved by the Colorado River over 6 million years ago. The first Europeans to spot the Grand Canyon were the Spanish Conquistadors. Also, long ago Native Americans lived in this area. These people then built settlements within the Canyon. In the late 19 century their was interest in the Grand Canyon because of its mineral resources, but pretty soon people discovered tourism would make more money than mining. The first luxury hotel was the El Tovar and it was located on the south rim in 1995. Today the Grand Canyon National Park has about five million each year. Back in 1919 the park received only about 4,4oo a year. The first train ride that brought paying passengers to the Grand Canyon was one the Santa Fe Railroad. The cost for the long 64 mile trip was $3.95. The first automobile to drive to the Grand Canyon was in 1902.

There was an extremely large part of the Grand Canyon that was unexplored. Then, after the civil war, in 1869 Major John Wesley Powell, a one- armed civil war veteran, who loved adventure, made the first record journey through the Canyon, the Colorado River. He was able to accomplish this 'journey" with a men in four small wooden boats, but only six completed the journey.

There are around several historical buildings located around the South rim, but most of them are in the Grand Canyon village. * Buckey O'Neil Cabin was built by a man named William Owen O'Neil. The cabin was obviously built because of a copper deposit nearby. This man had a wide variety of occupations. The cabin was the longest continually standing structure in the South Rim. Also, * Kalb Studio - This studio was built in 1904 by two brothers. They were addressed by the names of Ellsworth and Emery Kalb. They filmed their journey down the Colorado River. This movie showed in the studio until 1976, when Emery died at the age of 95 years old.

A major effect of force on the Grand Canyon is the Colorado River, which is most of the Grand Canyon's water ends up. Since, the national park has a very shallow root system, when it does rain all of the soil and plants wash away into the Colorado River. What happens? Flash flood, these floods move rapidly down the Grand Canyon's side moving and taking what’s ever on the ground with it including rocks, soil, and plants.

The Grand Canyon isn't the largest or deepest canyon in the world but, it is valued for its spectacular size, depth, and the exposed layering of colorful rocks dating back to the Precambrian times. It was created through the incision of the Colorado River and it's tributaries after the Colorado Plateau was uplifted and the Colorado River system developed along its present past.

In conclusion the Grand Canyon is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the United States. It is considered to be one of the major natural wonders of the world!!!

1 comment:

ChristinaL said...

I'd like for you to work on word choice and fluency with this script. For example, you say "Grand Canyon" seven times in the first paragraph alone, and your topics bounce from one to another.
There is much more history to the Canyon than is being told here. Focus on one issue and add detail to your research.
You can always talk about the conflict that has arisen between the government and the American Indian tribes throughout the years.