Parks & Monuments
:: GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK
The
Grand Canyon is in the northwest corner of Arizona, close
to the borders of Utah and Nevada. The Colorado River, which
flows through the canyon, drains water from seven states,
but the feature we know as Grand Canyon is entirely in Arizona.
Most of the Grand Canyon lies within Grand Canyon National
Park and is managed by the National Park Service. Adjacent
lands are administered by other units of the National Park
Service (Lake Mead National Recreation Area and Glen Canyon
National Recreation Area), other federal agencies (the Bureau
of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service) or neighboring
Indian tribes (the Havasupai, Hualapai, and Navajo Indian
Reservations).
How Big Is The Grand Canyon?
The park includes over a million acres of land: 1,218,376
acres/493,077 hectares, or 1,904 square miles/4931 square
km. Most people measure the canyon in Colorado River miles.
By that standard, Grand Canyon is 277 miles/446 km long.
It begins at Lees Ferry and ends at Grand Wash Cliffs.
The Colorado River is longer than Grand Canyon, flowing
1450 miles/2333 km from the Rocky Mountains of Colorado
to the Gulf of California in Mexico. Grand Canyon is only
one of many beautiful canyons carved by the river. Others
include Cataract Canyon and Glen Canyon, the latter now
lying beneath the waters of Lake Powell. Most people agree,
however, that Grand Canyon is the most spectacular. No other
place in the world looks quite like it.
Width and depth of the canyon vary from place to place.
At the South Rim, near Grand Canyon Village, it's a vertical
mile (about 5000 feet/1524 m) from rim to river, or 7 miles/11.3
km by trail. At its deepest, it is 6000 vertical feet/1829
m from rim to river.
The width of the canyon at Grand Canyon Village is 10 miles/16
km (rim to rim), though in places it is as much as 18 miles/29
km wide.