The Colorado River has been carving the Grand Canyon for a few million years now, such that the canyon floor is around 6000 feet lower in elevation than the surrounding area, at about 2400 feet above sea level.
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Those who take trips to visit the Grand Canyon have three popular alternatives for reaching the bottom. The options are hiking, using a mule, or rafting through the Colorado River. Hiking and rafting are two popular activities in the Grand Canyon for gaining access to the bottom.
Incredibly, the Grand Canyon never passes below sea level.In a rather tricky way, the Grand Canyon is incredibly deep, but it doesn't ever pass below sea level. Still, even with all the impressive stats, like being 277 miles long and 18 miles wide, the Grand Canyon doesn't actually dip below sea level.
The Paleozoic Strata contain many fossils that help scientists learn about the geologic history of North America. Most of the fossils are ocean-dwelling creatures, telling us that the area now in the middle of Arizona was once a sea.
Encompassing an estimated 1,218.37 acres (1,904 square miles), the Canyon is capable of holding 1 – 2 quadrillion gallons of water. Really. If you poured all the river water on Earth into the Grand Canyon, it would still only be about half full.
Phantom Ranch is a historic oasis nestled at the bottom of Grand Canyon. It is on the north side of the Colorado River tucked in beside Bright Angel Creek. Phantom Ranch is the only lodging below the canyon rim, and can only be reached by mule, on foot, or by rafting the Colorado River.
The canyon is 446 kilometres long by an average of 16 kilometres wide and 1.6 kilometres deep, which gives a volume of about 10 million billion (1016) litres. So by simple division Daisy would take about 1.8 million million (1.8 × 1012) years to fill the canyon.
Only a mile a deep, Grand Canyon is not the deepest in the world. For example, the Washington's Colombia River Gorge measures over a mile and a half in depth. Though not the deepest, Grand Canyon remains an incredibly impressive natural landform.
Well, yes, you can get to Africa from the Grand Canyon. You cannot walk to Africa from the Grand Canyon though unless you go up through Alaska then into Russia and all the way through Central Asia and into Africa.
Roughly 5.5 million tourists visit the Grand Canyon each year, but few realise that this vast abyss is home to a tiny village hidden 3,000ft in its depths: Supai, Arizona.
The Havasupai people (Havasupai: Havsuw' Baaja) are an American Indian tribe who have lived in the Grand Canyon for at least the past 800 years. Havasu means blue-green water and pai people.