The Grand Canyon: Reading Two Billion Years of Earth's History in Colored Rock
March 28, 2026 · 4 min read
The Fact
The Grand Canyon is 446 km long, up to 29 km wide, and over 1.8 km deep, carved by the Colorado River over millions of years.
A River's Work Over Millions of Years
The Colorado River began carving the Grand Canyon approximately five to six million years ago, as the Colorado Plateau gradually uplifted and the river found itself cutting downward through rock rather than flowing across a level plain. The process is ongoing — the river continues to erode its bed today, though the rate has been dramatically reduced by the construction of the Hoover and Glen Canyon dams upstream, which trap the sediment that once gave the river much of its cutting power.
The resulting chasm — 446 kilometers long, up to 29 kilometers wide, and over 1.8 kilometers deep at its maximum — exposes rock layers that tell the history of the region's geology with extraordinary clarity. Standing at the south rim, the oldest visible rock at the canyon's inner gorge, the Vishnu Schist, is approximately 1.7 to 1.8 billion years old — formed when two continental plates collided and the rock of one was buried, metamorphosed by heat and pressure, and later exposed by erosion. That is not only older than the canyon but older than most multicellular life on Earth.
Reading the Rock Layers
Above the Vishnu Schist, the canyon walls rise through a series of distinct sedimentary layers, each representing a different period and environment. The Great Unconformity — a gap in the geological record visible as a sharp contact between the ancient metamorphic basement and the overlying sedimentary layers — represents roughly one billion years of missing time, a period of erosion so complete that no rock record survives.
The familiar reddish-tan horizontal bands visible in photographs of the canyon represent different environmental episodes: limestone layers formed when shallow seas covered the region, sandstone layers formed from desert dunes, shale layers formed in coastal swamps. Each transition in color and rock type marks a change in the conditions that existed at this location hundreds of millions of years ago.
The Kaibab Limestone at the canyon's rim — the rock you stand on when you look over the edge — was formed from a shallow tropical sea approximately 270 million years ago. The fossils of marine creatures visible in this rock are evidence that what is now a 2,000-meter-high plateau was once submerged beneath an ancient ocean.
A Landscape That Defies Comprehension
The Grand Canyon's scale presents a specific challenge to human perception: it is simply too large for the visual system to process as a coherent object. Visitors frequently report that looking into the canyon produces a curious flatness of perception — the brain, unable to find familiar reference points for depth at this scale, initially registers the far walls as close rather than distant, and the floor, visible but 1.8 kilometers below, does not feel like 1.8 kilometers.
This perceptual difficulty is part of what makes the canyon so repeatedly compelling. Photographers have been attempting to capture it since the earliest days of American landscape photography, and the challenge remains instructive: no single image captures the scale, because scale requires a reference point and the canyon swallows all reference points whole.
Five Million Visitors and a Fragile Ecosystem
Grand Canyon National Park receives approximately five to six million visitors annually, making it one of the most-visited parks in the United States. The park encompasses both the south and north rims, the canyon interior accessible by trail and river, and a complex desert ecosystem that includes 1,500 plant species, over 350 bird species, and 90 mammal species.
The canyon's isolation — particularly the north rim, accessible by a long drive on a single road — has allowed populations of animals to evolve independently on opposite sides. The Kaibab squirrel on the north rim and the Abert's squirrel on the south rim are the same species geographically separated for so long that they have developed into distinct subspecies — an example of evolution in slow, observable progress.
FactOTD Editorial Team
Published March 28, 2026 · 4 min read
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