grand canyon



grand canyon
 
grand canyon
Body, vehicle found in Grand Canyon 
AP via Yahoo! News - 44 minutes ago
A helicopter crew happened upon the wreckage of a vehicle about 500 feet below the rim of the Grand Canyon, and a body was found nearby, a park spokeswoman said Friday.



grand canyon national park
Body, Vehicle Found in Grand Canyon 
Los Angeles Times - 31 minutes ago
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. -- A helicopter crew happened upon the wreckage of a vehicle about 500 feet below the rim of the Grand Canyon, and a body was found nearby, a park spokeswoman said Friday.


grand theft auto
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories Game Guide [PSP] 
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It's time to take another trip to Vice City in this PSP-exclusive Grand Theft Auto game. GameSpot's Game Guide will show you all the hotspots!


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Rockstar Games Announces Partnership with Capcom Co., Ltd. for the Release of Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas in Japan 
[Press Release] Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance - Nov 14 5:00 AM
NEW YORK----Rockstar Games, the world-renowned publishing label of Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. , is pleased to announce a partnership agreement with Capcom Co., Ltd. to localize, publish and distribute the blockbuster title Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas for the PlayStation®2 computer entertainment system in Japan.


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Business: Cheat, cheat, always beat 
The Nashua Telegraph - Oct 01 1:09 AM
WASHINGTON – For every video game, there's a Steve Graves. ... - By JOSE ANTONIO VARGAS The Washington Post


grand theft auto vice city
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories Game Guide [PSP] 
GameSpot - Nov 16 6:11 PM
It's time to take another trip to Vice City in this PSP-exclusive Grand Theft Auto game. GameSpot's Game Guide will show you all the hotspots!


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For the Record Oct.10, 2006 
The Oxford Press - Oct 11 7:07 PM
A West Spring Street resident reported someone defaced her front door on Sept. 29. A South Campus Avenue resident reported someone stole his cell phone, iPod and 20 video games between Sept. 29-30.


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Just like grandma used to make it 
The Star-Ledger - 1 hour, 49 minutes ago
Barbara Pettiford's sisters, nieces, aunts, mother and son all have a hand in B's Southern Cuisine in East Orange, whether it's baking, waitressing or just providing support.


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Photo by Hillary Wundrow From left; Helen and Ed Esler stand in the first completed model of the Heritage View  
Beloit Daily News - Nov 16 3:17 PM
Model 230 made its debut, as more than 150 curious visitors flocked to the Heritage View open house held on Wednesday evening. With a French Florentine design on the walls and chic granite countertops, the first completed condominium was the life of the party.


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Santa Paula Times - Nov 15 3:18 PM
There was something for everyone at Saturday’s annual Women of First United Methodist Church’s Soup Kitchen & Bazaar, again featuring unexpected goodies inside the eclectic Granny’s Attic.


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Tehachapi News 
Tehachapi News - Nov 17 9:51 AM
I guess multi-tasking isn't all it's cracked up to be and it's probably not wise to be grant-writing, looking at a newsletter, and their website all at once while drafting an article about the United Pegasus Foundation.


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Zimbabwe: RBZ Adds New Chapter to Bank Soap Script 
AllAfrica.com - Nov 16 8:14 AM
TWO events that happened last week will shape investors' perception of the markets -- and indeed their perception of the central bank -- over the coming months.


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'Grape guy' catches 116 grapes in mouth 
AP via Yahoo! News - Nov 16 7:13 PM
An American man caught 116 tossed grapes in his mouth in three minutes in what he hopes will become a new Guinness World Record, his publicity team said Thursday.


graph paper
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Asheville Citizen-Times - Nov 16 10:23 PM
As an interior designer for "Trading Spaces," the Learning Channel show where friends renovate rooms in each others' homes, Laurie Smith has hopscotched the United States, creating stylish rooms on a $1,000 budget.


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Holt Launches Revised Expresate Spanish Language Program with New Resources and Pre-AP Ancillaries for Each Level 
SYS-CON Media - Nov 16 12:26 PM
Holt, Rinehart and Winston (http://www.hrw.com/) today launched a revised version of Expresate (C)2008, Holt's exciting Spanish program that immerses students in the Spanish language with stunning visuals, engaging audio and video components and new supplementary resources.


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SYS-CON Media - Nov 16 6:43 PM
PAS and User Centered Design Services (UCDS) are pleased to announce an exclusive partnership for the delivery of Operator Graphics products and services to the process industries.


graphs
Kent Conrad 
Washington Post - Nov 16 5:13 AM
A fierce opponent of budget deficits, Conrad, 58, has been a persistent critic of the Bush administration's fiscal policies. His Senate Web site features a chart library, containing scores of graphs and tables, some titled "The Wrong Priorities," that Conrad uses to illustrate his dim view of the...


grass seed
Albany to sell 100.2-acre property 
Albany Democrat-Herald - Nov 16 12:38 PM
For Sale: 100.2 acres with woodlands and grass seed field with a 2,845-square-foot, split-level house built in 1977, all overlooking the confluence of the North and South Santiam rivers. Make offer to the city of Albany.


grasshopper
5 kids, Grasshopper make Kolkata rock 
Yahoo! India News - Nov 13 11:21 PM
On children s day we bring you face to face with five kids and a Grasshopper - the first under 18 rock band from Kolkata.


grateful dead
ARTS: Grateful Dead-style band at Ridgefield Playhouse tonight, tomorrow 
Ridgefield Press - Nov 17 2:58 AM
What is your favorite Grateful Dead song? “Jack Straw,” “Eyes of the World” or how about “Saint of Circumstance?”


gravitation
Tech spending on the rise among students 
The Daily Targum - Nov 16 8:56 PM
College students may be facing a new, unexpected financial burden. In addition to college becoming more expensive because of increasing tuition, students are seeing fees go up due to increased demand for electronics. According to a National Retail Federation study, college students were projected to spend 27.


gray hair
Business calendar 
Tennessean - Nov 16 12:08 AM
Executive Level Networking breakfast event of Gray Hair Management of Nashville for executives and senior-level managers in career transition, 7:30-9:30 a.m., Pinnacle Bank, 7040 Carothers Parkway, Franklin. $15 preregistration, $20 at door.


great barrier reef
Australia turns to sunshades, water spray to save Great Barrier Reef 
AFP via Yahoo! News - Nov 03 11:28 AM
Australia is considering using vast sunshades to stop global climate change further damaging the Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest coral system, a government minister said.


great depression
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Detroit News - Nov 17 6:55 AM
A highly-regarded economic forecast to be released in Ann Arbor this morning compares Michigan's massive job loss in the past six years to the Great Depression and paints a bleak picture for the next two years.


great expectations
Great Expectations — with Chalfant and Campbell — Opens Nov. 16 
Playbill - Nov 16 11:17 AM
Theatreworks/USA's production of Great Expectations — starring Angels in America Tony nominee Kathleen Chalfant as Miss Havisham — officially opens at the Lucille Lortel Theatre Nov. 16. Previews began Nov. 8.


great wall of china
James Bond breaks the Great Wall of China 
Yahoo! India News - Nov 17 12:11 AM
Washington, Nov 17(ANI):'Casino Royale' has achieved a feat that no other James Bond film has done before, as it will be officially allowed to screen in Chinese movie theatres. The Daniel Craig starring 007 flick marks the first time that a Bond film has made it past the strict Chinese Film censor Board, as it has rejected almost every 007 movie before it's even considered for release. The film's


great white shark
Shark alarmed by attack of the shivers 
Sydney Morning Herald - Nov 16 4:47 AM
AFTER a brief interruption by unseasonable bitter winds and snowfalls, NSW is set to resume normal spring weather - which should bring a smile to the face of the Great White Shark.


great wolf lodge
Thank you notes 
Port Clinton News Herald - Nov 14 7:36 AM
A very heartfelt thank-you to all of the Ottawa County Police Departments, with a special thank-you to the Port Clinton police officers and the Ottawa County Sheriff's Deputies, for all the help they have given to us, and continue to give, the Ottawa County Humane officers.


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ERT.gr - 48 minutes ago
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HISTORY OF GIBSON COUNTY 
Tri-State Media - Nov 16 11:26 PM
In this section you will find an interesting historical account of the communities that make up Gibson County. Gibson County was once a wilderness situated in the Northwest Territory which, in 1784, was ceded to the United States of America by Virginia.


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The Green Bay Packers V the Minnesota Vikings 
Wisconsin State Journal - Nov 12 10:50 PM
The Green Bay Packers traveled to the Metrodome to play the Minnesota Vikings Sunday November 12 , 2006.


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grand canyon

This article is about the canyon in the southwestern United States. For other Grand Canyons, see Grand Canyon (disambiguation).

Coordinates: 36°13′38″N, 112°20′7″W

Grand Canyon from the South Rim, 2006.
Grand Canyon from the Kaibab Trail.
The Grand Canyon, as seen from river-level.
Grand Canyon South Rim at Sunset
Looking down Bright Angel trail to the Grand Canyon. The green area is Indian Gardens and the trail continues to Phantom Ranch at the river where a suspension bridge allows access to the North Rim.

The Grand Canyon is a very colorful, steep-sided gorge, carved by the Colorado River, in the U.S. state of Arizona. It is largely contained within the Grand Canyon National Park — one of the first national parks in the United States. President Theodore Roosevelt was a major proponent of the Grand Canyon area, visiting on numerous occasions to hunt mountain lions and enjoy the scenery.

The canyon, created by the Colorado River cutting a channel over millions of years, is about 277 miles (446 km) long, ranges in width from 0.25 to 15 miles (0.4 to 24 kilometers) and attains a depth of more than a mile (1,600 m). Nearly two billion years of the Earth's history has been exposed as the Colorado River and its tributaries cut through layer after layer of sediment as the Colorado Plateaus have uplifted.

The first recorded sighting of the Grand Canyon by a European was in 1540, García López de Cárdenas from Spain.[1] The first scientific expedition to the canyon was led by U.S. Major John Wesley Powell in the late 1860s. Powell referred to the sedimentary rock units exposed in the canyon as "leaves in a great story book." Long before that, the area was inhabited by Native Americans who built settlements within the canyon walls.

Contents

  • 1 Geography
  • 2 Geology
  • 3 Human history
    • 3.1 The Ancestral Puebloans (The Ancient Ones, or Anasazi)
    • 3.2 The Modern Hopi (see also Pueblo people)
    • 3.3 Other cultures
    • 3.4 European discovery and settlement
      • 3.4.1 The Spanish Explorers
      • 3.4.2 American Exploration
      • 3.4.3 Settlement on the rim
  • 4 Recent history
  • 5 Activities
  • 6 Grand Canyon Visitors
  • 7 Grand Canyon Fatalities
  • 8 See also
  • 9 References
  • 10 External links

Geography

The Grand Canyon is a very deep - in places over a mile (1 600 m) deep - 277 mile (446 km) long cut in the Colorado Plateau that exposes uplifted Proterozoic and Paleozoic strata. The canyon appears on many versions of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World list, although none of these lists is by any means authoritative. The exposed strata are gradually revealed by the gentle incline beginning at Lee's Ferry and continuing to Hance Rapid. At the point where the river crosses the Grand Wash Fault (near Lake Mead) the Canyon ends.

Uplift associated with plate tectonics-caused mountain building events later moved these sediments thousands of feet upward and created the Colorado Plateau. The higher elevation has also resulted in greater precipitation in the Colorado River drainage area, but not enough to change the Grand Canyon area from being semi-arid. Landslides and other mass wasting events then caused headward erosion and stream capture - all of which tend to increase the depth and width of canyons in arid environments.

The uplift of the Colorado Plateau is uneven, resulting in the North rim of the Grand Canyon being over a thousand feet (about 300 meters) higher than the South rim. The fact that the Colorado River flows closer to the South rim is also explained by this asymmetrical uplift. Almost all runoff from the plateau behind the North rim (which also gets more rain and snow) flows toward the Grand Canyon, while much of the runoff on the plateau behind the South rim flows away from the canyon (following the general tilt). The result is much greater erosion and thus faster widening of the canyon and its tributary canyons north of the Colorado River.

Temperatures on the North rim are generally lower than the South rim because of the greater elevation (8000 feet/2438 meters above sea level). Heavy snowfall is common during the winter months. Views from the North rim tend to give a better impression of the expanse of the canyon rather than the views from the South Rim.

Geology

Main article: Geology of the Grand Canyon area

The principal consensus among geologists is that the Colorado River basin (of which the Grand Canyon is a part) has developed in the past 40 million years and that the Grand Canyon itself is probably less than five to six million years old (with most of the downcutting occurring in the last two million years). The result of all this erosion is one of the most complete geologic columns on the planet.

The major geologic exposures in Grand Canyon range in age from the 2 billion year old Vishnu Schist at the bottom of the Inner Gorge to the 230 million year old Kaibab Limestone on the Rim. Many of the formations were deposited in warm shallow seas, near-shore environments (such as beaches), and swamps as the seashore repeatedly advanced and retreated over the edge of a proto-North America. Major exceptions include the Permian Coconino Sandstone which was laid down as sand dunes in a desert and several parts of the Supai Group.

The great depth of the Grand Canyon and especially the height of its strata (most of which formed below sea level) can be attributed to 5,000 to 10,000 feet (1500 to 3000 m) of uplift of the Colorado Plateaus, starting about 65 million years ago (during the Laramide Orogeny). This uplift has steepened the stream gradient of the Colorado River and its tributaries, which in turn has increased their speed and thus their ability to cut through rock (see the elevation summary of the Colorado River for present conditions).

Wetter conditions during the ice ages also increased the amount of water in the Colorado River drainage system. The ancestral Colorado River responded by cutting its channel faster and deeper.

The base level and course of the Colorado River (or its ancestral equivalent) changed 5.3 million years ago when the Gulf of California opened and lowered the river's base level (its lowest point). This increased the rate of erosion and cut nearly all of the Grand Canyon's current depth by 1.2 million years ago. The terraced walls of the canyon were created by differential erosion[2].

About one million years ago, volcanic activity (mostly near the western canyon area) deposited ash and lava over the area, which at times completely obstructed the river. These volcanic rocks are the youngest in the canyon.

Human history

Main article: History of the Grand Canyon area

The Ancestral Puebloans (The Ancient Ones, or Anasazi)

  • The Basketmakers
  • The Pueblo Anasazi
  • Ancient Puebloan Occupation of the Grand Canyon
    • Nankoweap Canyon
    • The Unkar Delta
    • The Bright Angel Site
  • Ancient Pueblo peoples leave the Canyon
    • Beamer's Cabin
      • The Beamers back windo

The Modern Hopi (see also Pueblo people)

Other cultures

  • The Cohonina [3]
  • The Sinagua
  • The Pai (The People)
  • The Hualapai (The People of the Pine Trees)
  • The Havasupai (The People of the blue-green water)
  • The Paiutes (The Water People)
  • The Dineh (The People)

European discovery and settlement

The Spanish Explorers

View from the South Rim
View from the South Rim on the Kaibab Trail.
View from the North Rim at sunset

In September 1540, under orders from the conquistador Francisco Vasquez de Coronado to search for the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola, Captain Garcia Lopez de Cardenas, along with Hopi guides and a small group of Spanish soldiers, traveled to the South Rim of the Grand Canyon between Desert View and Moran Point.citation needed] Pablo de Melgrossa, Juan Galeras and a third soldier descended some one third of the way into the Canyon until they were forced to return because of lack of water. It is speculated that their Hopi guides must have been reluctant to lead them to the river, since they must have known routes to the canyon floor. No Europeans visited the canyon for over two hundred years.

  • Fathers Francisco Atanasio Domínguez and Silvestre Vélez de Escalante were two Spanish Priests who, with a group of Spanish soldiers, explored southern Utah and traveled along the North Rim of the Canyon in Glen and Marble Canyons in search of a route from Santa Fe to California in 1776.citation needed]

American Exploration

James Ohio Pattie, along with a group of American trappers and mountain men, was probably the next European to reach the Canyon in 1826, although there is little documentation to support this [4].

Jacob Hamblin (a Mormon missionary) was sent by Brigham Young in the 1850's to locate easy river crossing sites in the Canyon. Building good relations with local Native Americans and white settlers, he discovered Lee's Ferry in 1858 and Pierce Ferry (later operated by, and named for, Harrison Pierce) - the only two sites suitable for ferry operation.citation needed]

In 1857, the U.S. War Department asked Lieutenant Joseph Ives to lead an expedition to assess the feasibility of an up-river navigation from the Gulf of California. Also in a stern wheeler steamboat "Explorer", after two months and 350 miles (560 km) of difficult navigation, his party reached Black Canyon some two months after George Johnson.citation needed] The "Explorer" struck a rock and was abandoned. Ives led his party east into the Canyon - they were the first Europeans to travel the Diamond Creek drainage and traveled eastwards along the South Rim.

  • The John Wesley Powell River Expeditions
  • The Brown-Stanton River Expedition
  • Other expeditions

Settlement on the rim

  • Miners
    • "Captain" John Hance
    • William W. Bass
    • Louis Boucher "The Hermit"
    • Seth Tanner
    • Charles Spencer
    • D. W. "James" Mooney
  • Lees Ferry
    • John Doyle Lee
    • Emma Lee (17th of John Lee's 19 wives)
    • J. S. Emmett
    • Charles Spencer
  • Phantom Ranch
    • David Rust
    • Mary Colter
  • Grand Canyon Village
    • Ralph H. Cameron
  • Federal protection

Many challenges face the federal government administrators who manage park resources. These include issues related to: the recent reintroduction into the wild of the highly endangered California Condor, air tour overflight noise levels, water rights disputes with various tribal reservations that border the park, and forest fire management. The Grand Canyon National Park superintendent is Mr. Joe Alston who was previously the superintendent of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (Lake Powell. Glen Canyon lies to the North and East of Grand Canyon on the Arizona/Utah Border.

Recent history

In 1956 the Grand Canyon was the site of America's worst commercial aviation disaster at the time.

On the morning of June 30, 1956, a TWA Lockheed Super Constellation and a United Airlines Douglas DC-7 departed Los Angeles International Airport within three minutes of one another on eastbound transcontinental flights. Approximately 90 minutes later, the two propeller-driven airliners collided above the canyon while both were flying in unmonitored airspace.

The wreckage of both planes fell into the eastern portion of the canyon, on Temple and Chuar buttes, near the confluence of the Colorado and Little Colorado rivers. The disaster killed all 128 passengers and crew members aboard both planes.

This accident lead to the institution of high-altitude flightways and positive control by en route ground controllers.

Activities

Aside from casual sightseeing from the South Rim (averaging 7000 feet/2134 m above sea level), whitewater rafting and hiking are especially popular.citation needed] The floor of the valley is accessible by hiking, muleback, or by boat or raft from upriver. Hiking down to the river and back up to the rim in one day is highly discouraged by park officials, due to the distance, effort required, and danger of heat exhaustion from the much higher temperatures at the bottom. Even hiking along the rim must be done with care in spots, and there are frequent warning signs posted along rim trails.

The National Park Service provides wheelchairs for temporary day use by park visitors. No rental fee is charged.



Grand Canyon Visitors

Grand Canyon National Park is one of the world’s premier natural attractions, attracting about five million visitors per year arriving from all 50 U.S. states and Puerto Rico and internationally. Overall, 83% were from the United States: California (12.2%), Arizona (8.9%), Texas (4.8%), Florida (3.4%) and New York (3.2%) represented the top domestic visitors. Seventeen percent of visitors were of foreign origins; the most prominently represented nations were the United Kingdom (3.8%), Canada (3.5%), Japan (2.1%), Germany (1.9%) and The Netherlands (1.2%) [5].

Grand Canyon Fatalities

About 600 deaths have occurred in the Grand Canyon since the 1870s. Some of these deaths occurred as the result of overly zealous photographic endeavors, some were the result of airplane collisions within the canyon, and some visitors drowned in the Colorado River. Many hikers overestimate their fitness level, become dehydrated and confused, and must be rescued. The Park Service now posts a picture of an attractive and fit young man at several trailheads with the caption "Many of them look like him", in an attempt to discourage hikers from feats which are beyond their abilities.

According to Over the Edge: Death in the Grand Canyon, 50 fatalities have resulted from falls; 65 deaths were attributable to environmental causes, including heat stroke, cardiac arrest, dehydration, and hypothermia; 7 were caught in flash floods; 79 were drowned in the Colorado River; 242 perished in airplane and helicopter crashes; 25 died in freak errors and accidents, including lightning strikes and rock falls; 47 committed suicide; and 23 were the victims of homicides.

See also

  • List of Colorado River rapids and features
  • Grand Canyon National Park
  • List of trails in Grand Canyon National Park
  • Colca Canyon
  • Grand Canyon Dories

References

  1. ^ http://www.media.utah.edu/UHE/c/COLORADOPLATEU.html History of the Colorad Plateau
  2. ^ http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/geology/leveson/core/graphics/nyc_mins2/hyp_test_diff_erode.html Definition and examples of differential erosion
  3. ^ http://www.fs.fed.us/r3/kai/recreation/historic/tusayan.shtml
  4. ^ http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/publications/journals/shq/online/v026/n4/contrib_DIVL2994.html
  5. ^ http://www.nau.edu/hrm/ahrrc/reports/G_C_EXEC_SUMMARY.pdf#search=%22%22grand%20canyon%22%20visitors%20germany%22 Executive Summary of Grand Canyon Tourism by Northern Arizona University; accessed September 2006
  • Grand Canyon: A Visitor's Companion, George Wuerthner (Stackpole Books, 1998)
  • Grand Canyon: Today and All Its Yesterdays, Joseph Wood Krutch (1957)
  • How the Canyon Became Grand, Stephen J. Pyne (Penguin, 1998)
  • An introduction to Grand Canyon Geology, by L. Greer Price (Grand Canyon Association, 1999, ISSN 0-938216-68-6)
  • Along the Rim, by Michael F. Anderson (Grand Canyon Association, 2001, ISSN 0-938216-75-9)
  • Life in Stone, by Christa Sadler (Grand Canyon Association, 2006, ISSN 0-938216-81-3)
  • Over the Edge: Death in Grand Canyon, by Thomas M. Myers and Michael P. Ghiglieri (Puma Press, 2001), ISBN 0-970097-31-X
  • Air Disaster Volume 4: The Propeller Era, by Macarthur Job (Aerospace Publications, 2001), ISBN 1-875671-48-X
  • Down the Great Unknown : John Wesley Powell's 1869 Journey of Discovery and Tragedy Through the Grand Canyon, Edward Dolnick (HarperCollins, 2001)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Grand Canyon
  • Grand Canyon National Park Service
  • Grand Canyon travel guide from Wikitravel
State of Arizona
Phoenix (Capital)
Regions

Grand Canyon | Mojave Desert | North Central Arizona | Northeast Arizona | Northern Arizona | Phoenix Metropolitan Area | Southern Arizona | Arizona Strip

Counties

Apache | Cochise | Coconino | Gila | Graham | Greenlee | La Paz | Maricopa | Mohave | Navajo | Pima | Pinal | Santa Cruz | Yavapai | Yuma

Cities

Chandler | Gilbert | Glendale | Mesa | Peoria | Phoenix | Scottsdale | Tempe | Tucson

Colorado River system
Dams and aqueducts (see US Bureau of Reclamation)
Shadow Mountain Dam | Granby Dam | Glen Canyon Dam | Hoover Dam | Davis Dam | Parker Dam | Palo Verde Diversion Dam | Imperial Dam | Laguna Dam | Morelos Dam | Colorado River Aqueduct | San Diego Aqueduct | Central Arizona Project Aqueduct | All-American Canal | Coachella Canal | Redwall Dam
Natural features
Colorado River | Rocky Mountains | Colorado River Basin | Grand Lake | Sonoran desert | Mojave desert | Imperial Valley | Colorado Plateau | Grand Canyon | Glen Canyon | Marble Canyon | Paria Canyon | Gulf of California/Sea of Cortez | Salton Sea
Tributaries
Dirty Devil River | Dolores River | Escalante River | Gila River | Green River | Gunnison River | Kanab River | Little Colorado River | Paria River | San Juan River | Virgin River
Major reservoirs
Fontenelle Reservoir | Flaming Gorge Reservoir | Taylor Park Reservoir | Navajo Reservoir | Lake Powell | Lake Mead | Lake Havasu
Dependent states
Arizona | California | Colorado | Nevada | New Mexico | Utah (See: Colorado River Compact)
Designated areas
Glen Canyon National Recreation Area | Lake Mead National Recreation Area
Search Term: "Grand_Canyon"

Body, vehicle found in Grand Canyon 

AP via Yahoo! News - 44 minutes ago
A helicopter crew happened upon the wreckage of a vehicle about 500 feet below the rim of the Grand Canyon, and a body was found nearby, a park spokeswoman said Friday.

Body found in vehicle wreckage in Grand Canyon 
The Arizona Republic - 1 hour, 47 minutes ago
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK - One person was found dead after the wreckage of a vehicle that had plunged into the Grand Canyon was spotted by a helicopter crew late Thursday, the National Park Service reported.

Grand Canyon University Launching First-Of-Its-Kind College Of Entrepreneurship 
SYS-CON Media - Nov 15 10:27 AM
In its latest step toward a higher profile in higher education, little-known Grand Canyon University (GCU) today announced that this January it will open the first College of Entrepreneurship of its kind in the U.S.