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The Grand Canyon: A True Wonder of the World

06 October 2009

VOICE ONE:

I'm Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Barbara Klein with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. 

Today, we take you to one of the most popular and beautiful places in the United States. It is the Grand Canyon in the southwestern state of Arizona.

(MUSIC: "Canyon Lullaby")

VOICE ONE:

A tribe member looks at the new Grand Canyon West Skywalk built by the Hualapai Indians. Critics say it harms the natural beauty of the canyon.
A tribe member looks at the new Grand Canyon West Skywalk built by the Hualapai Indians. Critics say it harms the natural beauty of the canyon.
The canyons of America's Southwest are deep, ancient openings in the earth. They look as if they formed as the earth split apart. But the canyons did not split. They were cut by rivers.

The rivers carried dirt and pieces of stone that slowly ate away at the surrounding rock. For millions of years, the rivers turned and pushed. They cut deeper and deeper into the earth. They left a pathway of great rocky openings in the earth that extend for hundreds of kilometers.

VOICE TWO:

The Grand Canyon in Arizona is one of the largest and most beautiful of all canyons. It extends four hundred fifty kilometers.

The surrounding area does not make you suspect the existence of such a great opening in the earth. You come upon the canyon suddenly, when you reach its edge. Then you are looking at a land like nothing else in the world.

VOICE ONE:

Walls of rock fall away sharply at your feet. In some places, the canyon walls are more than a kilometer deep. Far below is the dark, turning line of the Colorado River.

On the other side, sunshine lights up the naked rock walls in red, orange, and gold. The bright colors are the result of minerals in the rocks. Their appearance changes endlessly -- with the light, the time of year, and the weather. At sunset, when the sun has moved across the sky, the canyon walls give up their fiery reds and golds. They take on quieter colors of blue, purple, and green.

VOICE TWO:

Grand CanyonHundreds of rocky points rise from the bottom of the Grand Canyon. Some are very tall. Yet all are below the level of an observer on the edge, looking over.

Looking at the Grand Canyon is like looking back in time. Forty million years ago, the Colorado River began cutting through the area. At the same time, the surrounding land was pushed up by forces deep within the Earth. Rain, snow, ice, wind, and plant roots rubbed away at the top of the new canyon. Below, the flowing river continued to uncover more and more levels of ancient rock.

Some of Earth's oldest rocks are seen here. There are many levels of granite, schist, limestone, and sandstone.

VOICE ONE:

The Grand Canyon has several weather environments. The top is often much different from the bottom. On some winter days, for example, you may find cold winds and snow at the top. But at the bottom, you may find warm winds and flowers.

Several kinds of plants and animals are found in the canyon and nowhere else on Earth. Because the canyon's environments are so different, these species did not spread beyond the canyon, or even far within it.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

Native American Indians occupied the Grand Canyon three thousand years ago. Evidence of their existence has been found in more than two thousand five hundred places so far. Bones, hair, feathers, even the remains of plants have been found in deep, dry caves high in the rock walls.

The Hopi, the Paiute, the Navajo and other Native American tribes have all been in the area for at least seven centuries.  However, much of what we know today about the Grand Canyon was recorded by John Wesley Powell. In eighteen sixty-nine, he became the first white American to explore much of the canyon.

VOICE ONE:

A picture from one of Powell's trips down the Colorado River
A picture from one of Powell's trips down the Colorado River
John Wesley Powell and his group traveled in four boats. They knew very little about getting over the rapid, rocky waters of the Colorado River. In many areas of fast-flowing water, a boat could be turned over by a wave as high as a house.

Soon after starting, Powell's group lost some of its food and equipment. Then three members of the group left. As they walked up and out of the canyon, they were killed by Indians. The rest of the group was lucky to survive. Starving and tired, they reached the end of the canyon. They had traveled on the Colorado River for more than three months.  John Wesley Powell's reports and maps from the trip made him famous. They also greatly increased interest in the Grand Canyon. But visitors did not begin to go to there in large numbers until nineteen-oh-one. That was when a railroad reached the area.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:   

Today, the Grand Canyon is known as one of the seven wonders of the natural world. About five million people visit the canyon each year.  Most visitors walk along paths part way down into the canyon. It takes several hours to walk to the bottom. It takes two times as long to get back up. Some visitors ride mules to the bottom and back. The mules are strong animals that look like horses. They are known for their ability to walk slowly and safely on the paths.

Visitors can travel down the Colorado River by boat in the Grand Canyon
Visitors can travel down the Colorado River by boat in the Grand Canyon
America's National Park Service is responsible for protecting the Grand Canyon from the effects of so many visitors. All waste material must be carried out of the canyon. All rocks, historical objects, plants, and wildlife must be left untouched. As the National Park Service tells visitors: "Take only photographs. Leave only footprints. "

VOICE ONE:

There are several other ways to visit the Grand Canyon. Hundreds of thousands of people see the canyon by air each year. They pay a helicopter or airplane pilot to fly them above and around the canyon.

About twenty thousand people a year see the Grand Canyon from the Colorado River itself. They ride boats over the rapid, rocky water. These trips last from one week to three weeks.

VOICE TWO:

Visitors walk on the Skywalk on the Hualapai Indian Reservation
Visitors walk on the Skywalk on the Hualapai Indian Reservation
Visitors can see the Grand Canyon in still another way. A huge glass walkway, called the Skywalk, extends twenty-one meters from the edge of the Grand Canyon. The Skywalk is suspended more than one thousand two hundred meters above the bottom of the canyon. It is shaped like a giant horseshoe.  Visitors pay twenty-five dollars each to walk beyond the canyon walls, surrounded by the canyon, while standing at the edge of the glass bridge.

The Hualapai Indian Tribe built the Skywalk at a cost of more than forty million dollars.  The tribe owns almost four hundred thousand hectares of land in the canyon.  The Hualapai built the Skywalk to gain money by getting more people to visit its reservation.  The tribe says the area, called Grand Canyon West, will include a large visitors' center, restaurants, and possibly hotels in the future.

Some people say the Skywalk is an engineering wonder. However, other people have criticized the Skywalk and future development.  They say it harms a national treasure and reduces the enjoyment of nature in the Grand Canyon.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Many writers have tried to describe the wonder of the Grand Canyon. They use words like mysterious, overpowering, strange. Yet writers recognize that it is impossible to put human meaning in such a place. The Grand Canyon exists in its own space and time.

Some visitors say they feel so small when measured against the canyon's great size. One writer who has spent a lot of time in the Grand Canyon finds it a peaceful place. He says the almost overpowering silence and deepness of the Grand Canyon shakes people -- at least briefly -- out of their self-importance. He says it makes us remember our place in the natural world.

VOICE TWO:

We close our program with music from a record called "Canyon Lullaby" written by Paul Winter. Mister Winter said it was his first attempt to translate the spirit of the canyon into sound.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This program was written by Shelley Gollust. It was produced by Mario Ritter. I'm Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Barbara Klein. You can find scripts and download audio at our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week for EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. 



Comments:

1. The Grand Canyon

You guys you are lucky you are gifted with all sorts of world wonders.
Submitted by: peter mpanga (uganda)
10-27-2009 - 13:53:35

2. Thank you very much.

Hi. I really thank you for all great news that i and my students need it to learn more about english via great and wonderful topics including Grand Canyon.
Submitted by: Muhaemin (Indonesia)
10-26-2009 - 23:12:09

3. GRAND CANYON

ı visited the grand canyon in 2006. What a beautiful place. I advice to visit the grand canyon to everyone. especially I advice to see the dawn. Supeeeeeerrrrr...
Submitted by: ibrahim (TURKEY)
10-20-2009 - 17:06:03

4. Great!.

It's great!. I really want to make my trip to visit Grand Canyon one day. Thank you VOA for showing me such a wonderful spot-Grand Canyon.
Submitted by: Dang Xuan Vu (Viet Nam)
10-18-2009 - 07:09:50

5. Canyon and Canyon Lullaby

I listen to this program over and over again and can't get enough of it. Wonderful.
Submitted by: Victoria (Italy)
10-14-2009 - 10:35:01

6. A FANTASTIC PROGRAMME

Thank you Mr Steve and Barbra,your programmes are very educative,how i wish one day You will visit Nigeria for YOUR EXPLORATION.more grease to your elbows
Submitted by: AMINU MAGAJI IDRIS (NIGERIA)
10-13-2009 - 20:00:00

7.

hi,l want to learn ENGLİSH and can you help me?l have already heard about the Grand Canyon and it's very wonderful.
Submitted by: ayça (turkey)
10-13-2009 - 18:43:43

8. I just to say wow!!!

Hello and thanks a lot for this wonderful story and show me this beautiful place. This article is also good to me 'cause it's a good way to learn English. Thank you very much VOA!
Submitted by: Ligia (Costa Rica, America Central.)
10-13-2009 - 16:23:48

9.

This is the first time I have read about Canyons. This make me amazing! These beautiful rocks prove the combine all charm of sky and land! Thanks VOA to inform this for every friends of VOA
Submitted by: Star (Vietnam)
10-12-2009 - 07:08:49

10. The Great Grand Canyon

wow ! that place would be really phenomena and i like to visit there .If i can get a chance to .
Submitted by: Zaw Win Tun (Singapore)
10-11-2009 - 02:49:31

11. The Grand Canyon is amazing

I've heard a lot about the Grand Canyon before,but after this report I became much more interested in this amazing place!!!thanks a lot for the information about the wonderful and mysterious Grand Canyon!!!
Submitted by: Natalie (Russia)
10-09-2009 - 17:30:29

12. I like your programe

I like this programe ,it's very beautiful music,i'am in France,but i want to know more things about history and culture of american.thanks .
Submitted by: xiaoning (CHINA)
10-09-2009 - 10:59:01

13. Exploration of a continent

It was really very nice to know in a deeper way this marvelous things of our Mother Nature. Go ahead with that ineteresting proyect.
Submitted by: Hector Jose Garcia Fierro (Colombia ( S.A.))
10-08-2009 - 22:49:51

14. I am really like natural place in the world

Hi, This is wonderful story from the Grand Caryon. I want to visit this place that it is place in the natural world. I like to read and listen this article. Thanks
Submitted by: Bora Ngauv (Cambodia)
10-08-2009 - 15:41:16

15. Attraction

This article make me travel in "Grand Canyon" I wish I could, thanks
Submitted by: Chang W. Lee (R.O.KOREA)
10-08-2009 - 12:32:42

16. I would like to visit it

I would like to visit to the Grand Canyon reading today's story. I have not been to the United States. However, the Grand Canyon is the best place to which I want to go.
Submitted by: ta-chan (Japan)
10-08-2009 - 12:31:57

17. The Grand Canyon

Thanks for describing such a wonderful and beau- tiful place.Nature makes wonderful works and I - think Grand Canyon is one example. A work of God,a wonder of Nature,a gift to mankind.
Submitted by: Alvaro León Mera (Colombia)
10-08-2009 - 01:55:56

18. Grand Canyon

What a wonderful article!!!! I´ve already heard about the Grand Canyon ,but now i know much more about it.I hope one day visit this very interesting place with my wife...I´m sure when i get there my english skills will be much better than now.All the best for all.
Submitted by: Fernando Fonsêca (Brazil)
10-07-2009 - 23:46:52

19. The Grand Canyon

I really want to go the Grand Canyon. That place is one of the most popular and beautiful place to visit. This article is also good to me because i can learn english and gather the information of visiting places
Submitted by: NH KIM (Korea)
10-07-2009 - 20:53:37

20. Thank you very much!

This is a wonderful article - a little bit history, geography, future plans, magnificent pictures, and amazing music! It looks like you are proud of the Grand Canyon. Well done!
Submitted by: Julia (Russia)
10-07-2009 - 20:32:34

21. It's good article!

It's really good and beautuful an article about the Grand canyon. I like to read and listen VOA, especial exploration. I'm know more about the nature of USA. Thanks to VOA!
Submitted by: Evgeny (Russia)
10-07-2009 - 18:52:42

22. Learning English

Hi,I want To learn English from Special English,Please Send me Your reports to my Email.Thanks.
Submitted by: Mohammad Gudarzi (Iran)
10-07-2009 - 17:37:31

23. Thanks to voa tell me about canyons.

I really have been suprised about beaty natural of canyons and process to take shape it. I never have gone to visited canyons in your country but through this program i have had many knowledge about canyons in your country. Ameria is a nation have many things me want to discover and learn about... Let's help me learn more than about things me don't know about your country Thanks!
Submitted by: van nguyen (viet nam)
10-07-2009 - 13:55:09

24. It can be a symbol of American nature

I think Grand Canyon should be introduced as an American National Culture, Not just for touring and making money.
Submitted by: Alireza (Iran)
10-07-2009 - 07:03:45

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