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Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan, the Mo-Ark | |
Regional Railroad Museum at Poplar Bluff, Missouri and the | |
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net | |
Titan of Chasms | |
The Grand Canyon of Arizona | |
THE TITAN OF CHASMS | |
By C. A. HIGGINS | |
THE SCIENTIFIC EXPLORER | |
By J. W. POWELL | |
THE GREATEST THING IN THE WORLD | |
By CHAS. F. LUMMIS | |
INFORMATION FOR TOURISTS | |
[Illustration: Sante Fe] | |
Fortieth Thousand | |
PASSENGER DEPARTMENT | |
THE SANTA FE | |
CHICAGO, 1903. | |
[Illustration: Copyright, 1899, by H. G. Peabody. | |
Bright Angel Creek and North Wall of the Canyon.] | |
[Illustration: Uncaptioned vista] | |
THE TITAN OF CHASMS | |
BY C. A. HIGGINS | |
Its History | |
The Colorado is one of the great rivers of North America. Formed in | |
Southern Utah by the confluence of the Green and Grand, it intersects | |
the northwestern corner of Arizona, and, becoming the eastern boundary | |
of Nevada and California, flows southward until it reaches tidewater in | |
the Gulf of California, Mexico. It drains a territory of 300,000 square | |
miles, and, traced back to the rise of its principal source, is 2,000 | |
miles long. At two points, Needles and Yuma on the California boundary, | |
it is crossed by a railroad. Elsewhere its course lies far from | |
Caucasian settlements and far from the routes of common travel, in the | |
heart of a vast region fenced on the one hand by arid plains or deep | |
forests and on the other by formidable mountains. | |
The early Spanish explorers first reported it to the civilized world in | |
1540, two separate expeditions becoming acquainted with the river for a | |
comparatively short distance above its mouth, and another, journeying | |
from the Moki Pueblos northwestward across the desert, obtaining the | |
first view of the Big Canyon, failing in every effort to descend the | |
canyon wall, and spying the river only from afar. | |
Again, in 1776, a Spanish priest traveling southward through Utah struck | |
off from the Virgin River to the southeast and found a practicable | |
crossing at a point that still bears the name “Vado de los Padres.” | |
For more than eighty years thereafter the Big Canyon remained unvisited | |
except by the Indian, the Mormon herdsman, and the trapper, although the | |
Sitgreaves expedition of 1851, journeying westward, struck the river | |
about 150 miles above Yuma, and Lieutenant Whipple in 1854 made a survey | |
for a practicable railroad route along the thirty-fifth parallel, where | |
the Santa Fe Pacific has since been constructed. | |
The establishment of military posts in New Mexico and Utah having made | |
desirable the use of a waterway for the cheap transportation of | |
supplies, in 1857 the War Department dispatched an expedition in charge | |
of Lieutenant Ives to explore the Colorado as far from its mouth as | |
navigation should be found practicable. Ives ascended the river in a | |
specially constructed steamboat to the head of Black Canyon, a few miles | |
below the confluence of the Virgin River in Nevada, where further | |
navigation became impossible; then, returning to the Needles, he set off | |
across the country toward the northeast. He reached the Big Canyon at | |
Diamond Creek and at Cataract Creek in the spring of 1858, and from the | |
latter point made a wide southward detour around the San Francisco | |
Peaks, thence northeastward to the Moki Pueblos, thence eastward to Fort | |
Defiance, and so back to civilization. | |
That is the history of the explorations of the Colorado up to forty | |
years ago. Its exact course was unknown for many hundred miles, even its | |
origin being a matter of conjecture. It was difficult to approach within | |
a distance of two or three miles from the channel, while descent to the | |
river’s edge could be hazarded only at wide intervals, inasmuch as it | |
lay in an appalling fissure at the foot of seemingly impassable cliff | |
terraces that led down from the bordering plateau; and to attempt its | |
navigation was to court death. It was known in a general way that the | |
entire channel between Nevada and Utah was of the same titanic | |
character, reaching its culmination nearly midway in its course through | |
Arizona. | |
[Illustration: The Colorado, Foot of Bright Angel Trail.] | |
In 1869 Maj. J. W. Powell undertook the exploration of the river with | |
nine men and four boats, starting from Green River City, on the Green | |
River, in Utah. The project met with the most urgent remonstrance from | |
those who were best acquainted with the region, including the Indians, | |
who maintained that boats could not possibly live in any one of a score | |
of rapids and falls known to them, to say nothing of the vast unknown | |
stretches in which at any moment a Niagara might be disclosed. It was | |
also currently believed that for hundreds of miles the river disappeared | |
wholly beneath the surface of the earth. Powell launched his flotilla on | |
May 24th, and on August 30th landed at the mouth of the Virgin River, | |
more than one thousand miles by the river channel from the place of | |
starting, minus two boats and four men. One of the men had left the | |
expedition by way of an Indian reservation agency before reaching | |
Arizona, and three, after holding out against unprecedented terrors for | |
many weeks, had finally become daunted, choosing to encounter the perils | |
of an unknown desert rather than to brave any longer the frightful | |
menaces of that Stygian torrent. These three, unfortunately making their | |
appearance on the plateau at a time when a recent depredation was | |
colorably chargeable upon them, were killed by Indians, their story of | |
having come thus far down the river in boats being wholly discredited by | |
their captors. | |
Powell’s journal of the trip is a fascinating tale, written in a compact | |
and modest style, which, in spite of its reticence, tells an epic story | |
of purest heroism. It definitely established the scene of his | |
exploration as the most wonderful geological and spectacular phenomenon | |
known to mankind, and justified the name which had been bestowed upon | |
it—The Grand Canyon—sublimest of gorges; Titan of chasms. Many | |
scientists have since visited it, and, in the aggregate, a large number | |
of unprofessional lovers of nature; but until a few years ago no | |
adequate facilities were provided for the general sight-seer, and the | |
world’s most stupendous panorama was known principally through report, | |
by reason of the discomforts and difficulties, of the trip, which | |
deterred all except the most indefatigable enthusiasts. Even its | |
geographical location is the subject of widespread misapprehension. | |
Its title has been pirated for application to relatively insignificant | |
canyons in distant parts of the country, and thousands of tourists have | |
been led to believe that they saw the Grand Canyon, when, in fact, they | |
looked upon a totally different scene, between which and the real Grand | |
Canyon there is no more comparison “than there is between the | |
Alleghanies or Trosachs and the Himalayas.” | |
There is but one Grand Canyon. Nowhere in the world has its like been | |
found. | |
As Seen From the Rim | |
Stolid, indeed, is he who can front the awful scene and view its | |
unearthly splendor of color and form without quaking knee or tremulous | |
breath. An inferno, swathed in soft celestial fires; a whole chaotic | |
under-world, just emptied of primeval floods and waiting for a new | |
creative word; eluding all sense of perspective or dimension, | |
outstretching the faculty of measurement, overlapping the confines of | |
definite apprehension; a boding, terrible thing, unflinchingly real, yet | |
spectral as a dream. The beholder is at first unimpressed by any detail; | |
he is overwhelmed by the _ensemble_ of a stupendous panorama, a thousand | |
square miles in extent, that lies wholly beneath the eye, as if he stood | |
upon a mountain peak instead of the level brink of a fearful chasm in | |
the plateau, whose opposite shore is thirteen miles away. A labyrinth of | |
huge architectural forms, endlessly varied in design, fretted with | |
ornamental devices, festooned with lace-like webs formed of talus from | |
the upper cliffs and painted with every color known to the palette in | |
pure transparent tones of marvelous delicacy. Never was picture more | |
harmonious, never flower more exquisitely beautiful. It flashes instant | |
communication of all that architecture and painting and music for a | |
thousand years have gropingly striven to express. It is the soul of | |
Michael Angelo and of Beethoven. | |
[Illustration: Copyright, 1899, by H. G. Peabody. | |
The River and the Canyon Wall.] | |
A canyon, truly, but not after the accepted type. An intricate system of | |
canyons, rather, each subordinate to the river channel in the midst, | |
which in its turn is subordinate to the whole effect. That river | |
channel, the profoundest depth, and actually more than 6,000 feet below | |
the point of view, is in seeming a rather insignificant trench, | |
attracting the eye more by reason of its somber tone and mysterious | |
suggestion than by any appreciable characteristic of a chasm. It is | |
perhaps five miles distant in a straight line, and its uppermost rims | |
are nearly 4,000 feet beneath the observer, whose measuring capacity is | |
entirely inadequate to the demand made by such magnitudes. One can not | |
believe the distance to be more than a mile as the crow flies, before | |
descending the wall or attempting some other form of actual measurement. | |
Mere brain knowledge counts for little against the illusion under which | |
the organ of vision is here doomed to labor. Yonder cliff, darkening | |
from white to gray, yellow, and brown as your glance descends, is taller | |
than the Washington Monument. The Auditorium in Chicago would not cover | |
one-half its perpendicular span. Yet it does not greatly impress you. | |
You idly toss a pebble toward it, and are surprised to note how far the | |
missile falls short. By and by you will learn that it is a good half | |
mile distant, and when you go down the trail you will gain an abiding | |
sense of its real proportions. Yet, relatively, it is an unimportant | |
detail of the scene. Were Vulcan to cast it bodily into the chasm | |
directly beneath your feet, it would pass for a bowlder, if, indeed, it | |
were discoverable to the unaided eye. | |
Yet the immediate chasm itself is only the first step of a long terrace | |
that leads down to the innermost gorge and the river. Roll a heavy stone | |
to the rim and let it go. It falls sheer the height of a church or an | |
Eiffel Tower, according to the point selected for such pastime, and | |
explodes like a bomb on a projecting ledge. If, happily, any | |
considerable fragments remain, they bound onward like elastic balls, | |
leaping in wild parabola from point to point, snapping trees like | |
straws; bursting, crashing, thundering down the declivities until they | |
make a last plunge over the brink of a void; and then there comes | |
languidly up the cliff sides a faint, distant roar, and your bowlder | |
that had withstood the buffets of centuries lies scattered as wide as | |
Wycliffe’s ashes, although the final fragment has lodged only a little | |
way, so to speak, below the rim. Such performances are frequently given | |
in these amphitheaters without human aid, by the mere undermining of the | |
rain, or perhaps it is here that Sisyphus rehearses his unending task. | |
Often in the silence of night some tremendous fragment has been heard | |
crashing from terrace to terrace with shocks like thunder peal. | |
The spectacle is so symmetrical, and so completely excludes the outside | |
world and its accustomed standards, it is with difficulty one can | |
acquire any notion of its immensity. Were it half as deep, half as | |
broad, it would be no less bewildering, so utterly does it baffle human | |
grasp. | |
The Trip to the River | |
Only by descending into the canyon may one arrive at anything like | |
comprehension of its proportions, and the descent can not be too | |
urgently commended to every visitor who is sufficiently robust to bear a | |
reasonable amount of fatigue. There are four paths down the southern | |
wall of the canyon in the granite gorge district—Mystic Spring, Bright | |
Angel, Berry’s and Hance’s trails. The following account of a descent of | |
the old Hance trail will serve to indicate the nature of such an | |
experience to-day, except that the trip may now be safely made with | |
greater comfort. | |
For the first two miles it is a sort of Jacob’s ladder, zigzagging at an | |
unrelenting pitch. At the end of two miles a comparatively gentle <DW72> | |
is reached, known as the blue limestone level, some 2,500 feet below the | |
rim, that is to say—for such figures have to be impressed objectively | |
upon the mind—five times the height of St. Peter’s, the Pyramid of | |
Cheops, or the Strasburg Cathedral; eight times the height of the | |
Bartholdi Statue of Liberty; eleven times the height of Bunker Hill | |
Monument. Looking back from this level the huge picturesque towers that | |
border the rim shrink to pigmies and seem to crown a perpendicular wall, | |
unattainably far in the sky. Yet less than one-half the descent has been | |
made. | |
Overshadowed by sandstone of chocolate hue the way grows gloomy and | |
foreboding, and the gorge narrows. The traveler stops a moment beneath a | |
slanting cliff 500 feet high, where there is an Indian grave and pottery | |
scattered about. A gigantic niche has been worn in the face of this | |
cavernous cliff, which, in recognition of its fancied Egyptian | |
character, was named the Temple of Sett by the painter, Thomas Moran. | |
A little beyond this temple it becomes necessary to abandon the animals. | |
The river is still a mile and a half distant. The way narrows now to a | |
mere notch, where two wagons could barely pass, and the granite begins | |
to tower gloomily overhead, for we have dropped below the sandstone and | |
have entered the archæan—a frowning black rock, streaked, veined, and | |
swirled with vivid red and white, smoothed and polished by the rivulet | |
and beautiful as a mosaic. Obstacles are encountered in the form of | |
steep, interposing crags, past which the brook has found a way, but over | |
which the pedestrian must clamber. After these lesser difficulties come | |
sheer descents, which at present are passed by the aid of ropes. | |
The last considerable drop is a 40-foot bit by the side of a pretty | |
cascade, where there are just enough irregularities in the wall to give | |
toe-hold. The narrowed cleft becomes exceedingly wayward in its course, | |
turning abruptly to right and left, and working down into twilight | |
depth. It is very still. At every turn one looks to see the embouchure | |
upon the river, anticipating the sudden shock of the unintercepted roar | |
of waters. When at last this is reached, over a final downward clamber, | |
the traveler stands upon a sandy rift confronted by nearly vertical | |
walls many hundred feet high, at whose base a black torrent pitches in a | |
giddying onward slide that gives him momentarily the sensation of | |
slipping into an abyss. | |
[Illustration: A Party on Bright Angel Trail.] | |
With so little labor may one come to the Colorado River in the heart of | |
its most tremendous channel, and gaze upon a sight that heretofore has | |
had fewer witnesses than have the wilds of Africa. Dwarfed by such | |
prodigious mountain shores, which rise immediately from the water at an | |
angle that would deny footing to a mountain sheep, it is not easy to | |
estimate confidently the width and volume of the river. Choked by the | |
stubborn granite at this point, its width is probably between 250 and | |
300 feet, its velocity fifteen miles an hour, and its volume and turmoil | |
equal to the Whirlpool Rapids of Niagara. Its rise in time of heavy rain | |
is rapid and appalling, for the walls shed almost instantly all the | |
water that falls upon them. Drift is lodged in the crevices thirty feet | |
overhead. | |
For only a few hundred yards is the tortuous stream visible, but its | |
effect upon the senses is perhaps the greater for that reason. Issuing | |
as from a mountain side, it slides with oily smoothness for a space and | |
suddenly breaks into violent waves that comb back against the current | |
and shoot unexpectedly here and there, while the volume sways tide-like | |
from side to side, and long curling breakers form and hold their outline | |
lengthwise of the shore, despite the seemingly irresistible velocity of | |
the water. The river is laden with drift (huge tree trunks), which it | |
tosses like chips in its terrible play. | |
Standing upon that shore one can barely credit Powell’s achievement, in | |
spite of its absolute authenticity. Never was a more magnificent | |
self-reliance displayed than by the man who not only undertook the | |
passage of Colorado River but won his way. And after viewing a fraction | |
of the scene at close range, one can not hold it to the discredit of | |
three of his companions that they abandoned the undertaking not far | |
below this point. The fact that those who persisted got through alive is | |
hardly more astonishing than that any should have had the hardihood to | |
persist. For it could not have been alone the privation, the infinite | |
toil, the unending suspense in constant menace of death that assaulted | |
their courage; these they had looked for; it was rather the unlifted | |
gloom of those tartarean depths, the unspeakable horrors of an endless | |
valley of the shadow of death, in which every step was irrevocable. | |
Returning to the spot where the animals were abandoned, camp is made for | |
the night. Next morning the way is retraced. Not the most fervid | |
pictures of a poet’s fancy could transcend the glories then revealed in | |
the depths of the canyon; inky shadows, pale gildings of lofty spires, | |
golden splendors of sun beating full on façades of red and yellow, | |
obscurations of distant peaks by veils of transient shower, glimpses of | |
white towers half drowned in purple haze, suffusions of rosy light | |
blended in reflection from a hundred tinted walls. Caught up to exalted | |
emotional heights the beholder becomes unmindful of fatigue. He mounts | |
on wings. He drives the chariot of the sun. | |
[Illustration: Uncaptioned vista] | |
Having returned to the plateau, it will be found that the descent into | |
the canyon has bestowed a sense of intimacy that almost amounts to a | |
mental grasp of the scene. The terrific deeps that part the walls of | |
hundreds of castles and turrets of mountainous bulk may be approximately | |
located in barely discernible pen-strokes of detail, and will be | |
apprehended mainly through the memory of upward looks from the bottom, | |
while towers and obstructions and yawning fissures that were deemed | |
events of the trail will be wholly indistinguishable, although they are | |
known to lie somewhere flat beneath the eye. The comparative | |
insignificance of what are termed grand sights in other parts of the | |
world is now clearly revealed. Twenty Yosemites might lie unperceived | |
anywhere below. Niagara, that Mecca of marvel seekers, would not here | |
possess the dignity of a trout stream. Your companion, standing at a | |
short distance on the verge, is an insect to the eye. | |
Still, such particulars can not long hold the attention, for the | |
panorama is the real overmastering charm. It is never twice the same. | |
Although you think you have spelt out every temple and peak and | |
escarpment, as the angle of sunlight changes there begins a ghostly | |
advance of colossal forms from the farther side, and what you had taken | |
to be the ultimate wall is seen to be made up of still other isolated | |
sculptures, revealed now for the first time by silhouetting shadows. The | |
scene incessantly changes, flushing and fading, advancing into | |
crystalline clearness, retiring into slumberous haze. | |
Should it chance to have rained heavily in the night, next morning the | |
canyon is completely filled with fog. As the sun mounts, the curtain of | |
mist suddenly breaks into cloud fleeces, and while you gaze these | |
fleeces rise and dissipate, leaving the canyon bare. At once around the | |
bases of the lowest cliffs white puffs begin to appear, creating a scene | |
of unparalleled beauty as their dazzling cumuli swell and rise and their | |
number multiplies, until once more they overflow the rim, and it is as | |
if you stood on some land’s end looking down upon a formless void. Then | |
quickly comes the complete dissipation, and again the marshaling in the | |
depths, the upward advance, the total suffusion and the speedy | |
vanishing, repeated over and over until the warm walls have expelled | |
their saturation. | |
Long may the visitor loiter upon the verge, powerless to shake loose | |
from the charm, tirelessly intent upon the silent transformations until | |
the sun is low in the west. Then the canyon sinks into mysterious purple | |
shadow, the far Shinumo Altar is tipped with a golden ray, and against a | |
leaden horizon the long line of the Echo Cliffs reflects a soft | |
brilliance of indescribable beauty, a light that, elsewhere, surely | |
never was on sea or land. Then darkness falls, and should there be a | |
moon, the scene in part revives in silver light, a thousand spectral | |
forms projected from inscrutable gloom; dreams of mountains, as in their | |
sleep they brood on things eternal. | |
[Illustration: Uncaptioned vista] | |
[Illustration: Uncaptioned vista] | |
THE SCIENTIFIC EXPLORER | |
BY J. W. POWELL | |
The Ives and Wheeler Expeditions | |
In the fall of 1857 Lieutenant Ives, of the engineer corps of the army, | |
ascended the Colorado River on a trip of exploration with a little | |
steamer called the Explorer; he went as far as the mouth of the Rio | |
Virgin. Falling back down river a few miles, Lieutenant Ives met a pack | |
train which had followed him up the bank of the stream. Here he | |
disembarked, and on the 24th of March started with a land party to | |
explore the eastern bank of the river; making a long detour he ascended | |
the plateau through which the Grand Canyon is cut, and in an adventurous | |
journey he obtained views of the canyon along its lower course. On this | |
trip J. S. Newberry was the geologist, and to him we are indebted for | |
the first geological explanation of the canyon and the description of | |
the high plateau through which it is formed. Doctor Newberry was not | |
only an able geologist, but he was also a graphic writer, and his | |
description of the canyon as far as it was seen by him is a classic in | |
geology. | |
In 1869 Lieutenant Wheeler was sent out by the chief engineer of the | |
army to explore the Grand Canyon from below. In the spring he succeeded | |
in reaching the mouth of Diamond Creek, which had previously been seen | |
by Doctor Newberry in 1858. Mr. Gilbert was the geologist of this | |
expedition, and his studies of the canyon region during this and | |
subsequent years have added greatly to our knowledge of this land of | |
wonders. | |
Major Powell’s Several Trips | |
In this same year I essayed to explore the Grand Canyon of the Colorado, | |
together with the upper canyons of that stream and the great canyons of | |
the lower portion of Green River. For this purpose I employed four | |
rowboats and made the descent from what is now Green River station | |
through the whole course of canyons to the mouth of the Rio Virgin, a | |
distance of more than a thousand miles. | |
[Illustration: From Kaibab Plateau, Looking South.] | |
In the spring of 1870 I again started with three boats and descended the | |
river to the Crossing of the Fathers, where I met a pack train and went | |
out with a party of men to explore ways down into the Grand Canyon from | |
the north, and devoted the summer, fall, winter, and following spring to | |
this undertaking. | |
In the summer of 1871 I returned to the rowboats and descended through | |
Marble Canyon to the Grand Canyon of Arizona, and then through the | |
greater part of the Grand Canyon itself. Subsequent years were then | |
given to exploration of the country adjacent to the Grand Canyon. On | |
these trips Mr. Gilbert, the geologist, who had been with Lieutenant | |
Wheeler, and Capt. C. E. Dutton, were my geological companions. On the | |
second boat trip, and during all the subsequent years of exploration in | |
this region, Prof. A. H. Thompson was my geographical companion, | |
assisted by a number of topographical engineers. | |
In 1882 Mr. C. D. Walcott, as my assistant in the United States | |
Geological Survey, went with me into the depths of the Grand Canyon. We | |
descended from the summit of the Kaibab Plateau on the north by a trail | |
which we built down a side canyon in a direction toward the mouth of the | |
Little Colorado River. The descent was made in the fall, and a small | |
party of men was left with Mr. Walcott in this region of stupendous | |
depths to make a study of the geology of an important region of | |
labyrinthian gorges. Here, with his party, he was shut up for the | |
winter, for it was known when we left him that snows on the summit of | |
the plateau would prevent his return to the upper region before the sun | |
should melt them the next spring. Mr. Walcott is now the Director of the | |
United States Geological Survey. | |
After this year I made no substantial additions to my geologic and | |
scenic knowledge of the Grand Canyon, though I afterward studied the | |
archæology to the south and east throughout a wide region of ruined | |
pueblos and cliff dwellings. | |
Since my first trip in boats many others have essayed to follow me, and | |
year by year such expeditions have met with disaster; some hardy | |
adventurers are buried on the banks of the Green, and the graves of | |
others are scattered at intervals along the course of the Colorado. | |
In 1889 the brave F. M. Brown lost his life. But finally a party of | |
railroad engineers, led by R. B. Stanton, started at the head of Marble | |
Canyon and made their way down the river as they extended a survey for a | |
railroad along its course. | |
Other adventurous travelers have visited portions of the Grand Canyon | |
region, and Mr. G. Wharton James has extended his travels widely over | |
the region in the interest of popular science and the new literature | |
created in the last decades of the nineteenth century. And now I once | |
more return to a reminiscent account of the Grand Canyon, for old men | |
love to talk of the past. | |
The Plateau Region | |
The Grand Canyon of Arizona and the Marble Canyon constitute one great | |
gorge carved by a mighty river through a high plateau. On the northeast | |
and north a line of cliffs face this plateau by a bold escarpment of | |
rock. Climb these cliffs and you must ascend from 800 to 1,000 feet, but | |
on their summit you will stand upon a plateau stretching away to the | |
north. Now turn to face the south and you will overlook the cliff and | |
what appears to be a valley below. From the foot of the cliff the | |
country rises to the south to a great plateau through which the Marble | |
and the Grand canyons are carved. This plateau terminates abruptly on | |
the west by the Grand Wash Cliffs, which is a high escarpment caused by | |
a “fault” (as the geologist calls it), that is, the strata of sandstone | |
and limestone are broken off, and to the west of the fracture they are | |
dropped down several thousand feet, so that standing upon the edge of | |
the plateau above the Grand Wash Cliffs you may look off to the west | |
over a vast region of desert from which low volcanic mountains rise that | |
seem like purple mounds in sand-clad lands. | |
On the east the great plateau breaks down in a very irregular way into | |
the valley of the Little Colorado, and where the railroad ascends the | |
plateau from the east it passes over picturesque canyons that run down | |
into the Little Colorado. On the south the plateau is merged into the | |
great system of mountains that stand in Southern Arizona. Where the | |
plateau ends and the mountains begin is not a well-defined line. The | |
plateau through which the Grand Canyon is cut is a region of great | |
scenic interest. Its surface is from six to more than eight thousand | |
feet above the level of the sea. The Grand Plateau is composed of many | |
subsidiary plateaus, each one having its own peculiar and interesting | |
feature. | |
The Kaibab Plateau, to the northeast of the Grand Canyon, is covered | |
with a pine forest which is intercepted by a few meadows with here and | |
there a pond or lakelet. It is the home of deer and bear. | |
To the west is the Shinumo Plateau in which the Shinumo Canyon is | |
carved; and on the cliffs of this canyon and in the narrow valley along | |
its course the Shinumo ruins are found—the relics of a prehistoric race. | |
To the west of the Shinumo Plateau is the Kanab Plateau, with ruins | |
scattered over it, and on its northern border the beautiful Mormon town | |
of Kanab is found, and the canyon of Kanab Creek separates the Shinumo | |
Plateau from the Kanab Plateau. It begins as a shallow gorge and | |
gradually increases in depth until it reaches the Colorado River itself, | |
at a depth of more than 4,000 feet below the surface. Vast amphitheaters | |
are found in its walls and titanic pinnacles rise from its depths. One | |
Christmas day I waded up this creek. It was one of the most delightful | |
walks of my life, from a land of flowers to a land of snow. | |
To the west of the Kanab Plateau are the Uinkaret Mountains—an immense | |
group of volcanic cones upon a plateau. Some of these cones stand very | |
near the brink of the Grand Canyon and from one of them a flood of | |
basalt was poured into the canyon itself. Not long ago geologically, but | |
rather long when reckoned in years of human history, this flood of lava | |
rolled down the canyon for more than _fifty miles_, filling it to the | |
depth of _two_ or _three hundred feet_ and diverting the course of the | |
river against one or the other of its banks. Many of the cones are of | |
red cinder, while sometimes the lava is piled up into huge mountains | |
which are covered with forest. To the west of the Uinkaret Mountains | |
spreads the great Shiwits Plateau, crowned by Mount Dellenbough. | |
Past the south end of these plateaus runs the Colorado River; southward | |
through Marble Canyon and in the Grand Canyon, then northwestward past | |
the Kaibab and Shinumo Canyon, then southwestward past the Kanab | |
Plateau, Uinkaret Mountains to the southernmost point of the Shiwits | |
Plateau, and then northwestward to the Grand Wash Cliffs. Its distance | |
in this course is little more than 300 miles—but the 300 miles of river | |
are set on every side with cliffs, buttes, towers, pinnacles, | |
amphitheaters, caves, and terraces, exquisitely storm-carved and painted | |
in an endless variety of colors. | |
The plateau to the south of the Grand Canyon, which we need not describe | |
in parts, is largely covered with a gigantic forest. There are many | |
volcanic mountains and many treeless valleys. In the high forest there | |
are beautiful glades with little stretches of meadow which are spread in | |
summer with a parterre of flowers of many colors. This upper region is | |
the garden of the world. When I was first there bear, deer, antelope, | |
and wild turkeys abounded, but now they are becoming scarce. Widely | |
scattered throughout the plateau are small canyons, each one a few miles | |
in length and a few hundred feet in depth. Throughout their course | |
cliff-dweller ruins are found. In the highland glades and along the | |
valley, pueblo ruins are widely scattered, but the strangest sights of | |
all the things due to prehistoric man are the cave dwellings that are | |
dug in the tops of cinder cones and the villages that were built in the | |
caves of volcanic cliffs. If now I have succeeded in creating a picture | |
of the plateau I will attempt a brief description of the canyon. | |
[Illustration: Copyright, 1899, by H. G. Peabody. | |
Bissell Point and Colorado River.] | |
Marble Canyon | |
Above the Paria the great river runs down a canyon which it has cut | |
through one plateau. On its way it flows with comparative quiet through | |
beautiful scenery, with glens that are vast amphitheaters which often | |
overhang great springs and ponds of water deeply embosomed in the | |
cliffs. From the southern escarpment of this plateau the great Colorado | |
Plateau rises by a comparatively gentle acclivity, and Marble Canyon | |
starts with walls but a few score feet in height until they reach an | |
altitude of about 5,000 feet. On the way the channel is cut into beds of | |
rock of lower geologic horizon, or greater geologic age. These rocks are | |
sandstones and limestones. Some beds are very hard, others are soft and | |
friable. The friable rocks wash out and the harder rocks remain | |
projecting from the walls, so that every wall presents a set of stony | |
shelves. These shelves rise along the wall toward the south as new | |
shelves set in from below. | |
In addition to this shelving structure the walls are terraced and the | |
cliffs of the canyon are set back one upon the other. Then these canyon | |
walls are interrupted by side streams which themselves have carved | |
lateral canyons, some small, others large, but all deep. In these side | |
gorges the scenery is varied and picturesque; deep clefts are seen here | |
and there as you descend the river—clefts furnished with little streams | |
along which mosses and other plants grow. At low water the floor of the | |
great canyon is more or less exposed, and where it flows over limestone | |
rocks beautiful marbles are seen in many colors; saffron, pink, and blue | |
prevail. Sometimes a façade or wall appears rising vertically from the | |
water for thousands of feet. At last the canyon abruptly ends in a | |
confusion of hills beyond which rise towering cliffs, and the group of | |
hills are nestled in the bottom of a valley-like region which is | |
surrounded by cliffs more than a mile in altitude. | |
The Grand Canyon | |
From here on for many miles the whole character of the canyon changes. | |
First a dike appears; this is a wall of black basalt crossing the river; | |
it is of lava thrust up from below through a huge crevice broken in the | |
rock by earthquake agency. On the east the Little Colorado comes; here | |
it is a river of salt water, and it derives its salt a few miles up the | |
stream. The main Colorado flows along the eastern and southern wall. | |
Climbing this for a few hundred feet you may look off toward the | |
northwest and gaze at the cliffs of the Kaibab Plateau. | |
This is the point where we built a trail down a side canyon where Mr. | |
Walcott was to make his winter residence and study of the region; it is | |
very complicated and exhibits a vast series of unconformable rocks of | |
high antiquity. These lower rocks are of many colors; in large part they | |
are shales. The region, which appears to be composed of bright- | |
hills washed naked by the rain, is, in fact, beset with a multitude of | |
winding canyons with their own precipitous walls. It is a region of many | |
canyons in the depths of the Grand Canyon itself. | |
In this beautiful region Mr. Walcott, reading the book of geology, lived | |
in a summerland during all of a long winter while the cliffs above were | |
covered with snow which prevented his egress to the world. His | |
companions, three young Mormons, longing for a higher degree of | |
civilization, gazed wistfully at the snow-clad barriers by which they | |
were inclosed. One was a draughtsman, another a herder of his stock, and | |
the third his cook. They afterward told me that it was a long winter of | |
homesickness, and that months dragged away as years, but Mr. Walcott | |
himself had the great book of geology to read, and to him it was a | |
winter of delight. | |
A half dozen miles below the basaltic wall the river enters a channel | |
carved in 800 or 1,000 feet of dark gneiss of very hard rock. Here the | |
channel is narrow and very swift and beset with rapids and falls. On the | |
south and southwest the wall rises abruptly from the water to the summit | |
of the plateau for about 6,000 feet, but across the river on the north | |
and west mountains of gneiss and quartzites appear, sometimes rising to | |
the height of a thousand feet. These are mountains in the bottom of a | |
canyon. The buttes and plateaus of the inter-canyon region are composed | |
of shales, sandstones, and limestones, which give rise to vast | |
architectural shelving and to pinnacles and towers of gigantic | |
proportions, the whole embossed with a marvelously minute system of | |
fretwork carved by the artistic clouds. Looking beyond these mountains, | |
buttes, and plateaus vistas of the walls of the great plateau are seen. | |
From these walls project salients, and deep re-entrant angles appear. | |
The whole scene is forever reminding you of mighty architectural | |
pinnacles and towers and balustrades and arches and columns with lattice | |
work and delicate carving. All of these architectural features are | |
sublime by titanic painting in varied hues—pink, red, brown, lavender, | |
gray, blue, and black. In some lights the saffron prevails, in other | |
lights vermilion, and yet in other lights the grays and blacks | |
predominate. At times, and perhaps in rare seasons, clouds and cloudlets | |
form in the canyon below and wander among the side canyons and float | |
higher and higher until they are dissolved in the upper air, or perhaps | |
they accumulate to hide great portions of the landscape. Then through | |
rifts in the clouds vistas of Wonderland are seen. Such is that portion | |
of the canyon around the great south bend of the Colorado River past the | |
point of the Kaibab Plateau. | |
As Seen by the Geologist | |
In the last chapter of my book entitled “The Canyons of the Colorado” I | |
have described the Grand Canyon in the following terms: | |
The Grand Canyon is a gorge 217 miles in length, through which flows a | |
great river with many storm-born tributaries. It has a winding way, as | |
rivers are wont to have. Its banks are vast structures of adamant, piled | |
up in forms rarely seen in the mountains. | |
Down by the river the walls are composed of black gneiss, slates, and | |
schists, all greatly implicated and traversed by dikes of granite. Let | |
this formation be called the black gneiss. It is usually about 800 feet | |
in thickness. | |
Then over the black gneiss are found 800 feet of quartzites, usually in | |
very thin beds of many colors, but exceedingly hard, and ringing under | |
the hammer like phonolite. These beds are dipping and unconformable with | |
the rocks above. While they make but 800 feet of the wall or less they | |
have a geologic thickness of 12,000 feet. Set up a row of books aslant; | |
it is ten inches from the shelf to the top of the line of books, but | |
there may be three feet of the books measured directly through the | |
leaves. So these quartzites are aslant, and though of great geologic | |
thickness they make but 800 feet of the wall. Your books may have | |
many- bindings and differ greatly in their contents; so these | |
quartzites vary greatly from place to place along the wall, and in many | |
places they entirely disappear. Let us call this formation the | |
variegated quartzite. | |
Above the quartzites there are 500 feet of sandstones. They are of a | |
greenish hue, but are mottled with spots of brown and black by iron | |
stains. They usually stand in a bold cliff, weathered in alcoves. Let | |
this formation be called the cliff sandstone. | |
Above the cliff sandstone there are 700 feet of bedded sandstones and | |
limestones, which are massive sometimes and sometimes broken into thin | |
strata. These rocks are often weathered in deep alcoves. Let this | |
formation be called the alcove sandstone. | |
Over the alcove sandstone there are 1,600 feet of limestone, in many | |
places a beautiful marble, as in Marble Canyon. As it appears along the | |
Grand Canyon it is always stained a brilliant red, for immediately over | |
it there are thin seams of iron, and the storms have painted these | |
limestones with pigments from above. Altogether this is the red-wall | |
group. It is chiefly limestone. Let it be called the red-wall limestone. | |
Above the red wall there are 800 feet of gray and bright red sandstone, | |
alternating in beds that look like vast ribbons of landscape. Let it be | |
called the banded sandstone. | |
And over all, at the top of the wall, is the Aubrey limestone, 1,000 | |
feet in thickness. This Aubrey has much gypsum in it, great beds of | |
alabaster that are pure white in comparison with the great body of | |
limestone below. In the same limestone there are enormous beds of chert, | |
agates, and carnelians. This limestone is especially remarkable for its | |
pinnacles and towers. Let it be called the tower limestone. | |
These are the elements with which the walls are constructed, from black | |
buttress below to alabaster tower above. All of these elements weather | |
in different forms and are painted in different colors, so that the wall | |
presents a highly complex façade. A wall of homogeneous granite, like | |
that in the Yosemite, is but a naked wall, whether it be 1,000 or 5,000 | |
feet high. Hundreds and thousands of feet mean nothing to the eye when | |
they stand in a meaningless front. A mountain covered by pure snow | |
10,000 feet high has but little more effect on the imagination than a | |
mountain of snow 1,000 feet high—it is but more of the same thing—but a | |
façade of seven systems of rock has its sublimity multiplied sevenfold. | |
[Illustration: A Panoramic View of the Canyon.] | |
Consider next the horizontal elements of the Grand Canyon. The river | |
meanders in great curves, which are themselves broken into curves of | |
smaller magnitude. The streams that head far back in the plateau on | |
either side come down in gorges and break the wall into sections. Each | |
lateral canyon has a secondary system of laterals, and the secondary | |
canyons are broken by tertiary canyons; so the crags are forever | |
branching, like the limbs of an oak. That which has been described as a | |
wall is such only in its grand effect. In detail it is a series of | |
structures separated by a ramification of canyons, each having its own | |
walls. Thus, in passing down the canyon it seems to be inclosed by | |
walls, but oftener by salients—towering structures that stand between | |
canyons that run back into the plateau. Sometimes gorges of the second | |
or third order have met before reaching the brink of the Grand Canyon, | |
and then great salients are cut off from the wall and stand out as | |
buttes—huge pavilions in the architecture of the canyon. The scenic | |
elements thus described are fused and combined in very different ways. | |
Its Length | |
We measured the length of the Grand Canyon by the length of the river | |
running through it, but the running extent of wall can not be measured | |
in this manner. In the black gneiss, which is at the bottom, the wall | |
may stand above the river for a few hundred yards or a mile or two; then | |
to follow the foot of the wall you must pass into a lateral canyon for a | |
long distance, perhaps miles, and then back again on the other side of | |
the lateral canyon; then along by the river until another lateral canyon | |
is reached, which must be headed in the black gneiss. So for a dozen | |
miles of river through the gneiss there may be a hundred miles of wall | |
on either side. Climbing to the summit of the black gneiss and following | |
the wall in the variegated quartzite, it is found to be stretched out to | |
a still greater length, for it is cut with more lateral gorges. In like | |
manner there is yet greater length of the mottled (or alcove) sandstone | |
wall, and the red wall is still farther stretched out in ever-branching | |
gorges. | |
To make the distance for ten miles along the river by walking along the | |
top of the red wall it would be necessary to travel several hundred | |
miles. The length of the wall reaches its maximum in the banded | |
sandstone, which is terraced more than any of the other formations. The | |
tower limestone wall is less tortuous. To start at the head of the Grand | |
Canyon on one of the terraces of the banded sandstone and follow it to | |
the foot of the Grand Canyon, which by river is a distance of 217 miles, | |
it would be necessary to travel many thousand miles by the winding way; | |
that is, the banded wall is many thousand miles in length. | |
As Seen Traveling Down Stream | |
For eight or ten miles below the mouth of the Little Colorado, the river | |
is in the variegated quartzites, and a wonderful fretwork of forms and | |
colors, peculiar to this rock, stretches back for miles to a labyrinth | |
of the red-wall cliff; then below, the black gneiss is entered and soon | |
has reached an altitude of 800 feet and sometimes more than 1,000 feet, | |
and upon this black gneiss all the other structures in their wonderful | |
colors are lifted. These continue for about seventy miles, when the | |
black gneiss below is lost, for the walls are dropped down by the West | |
Kaibab Fault and the river flows in the quartzites. | |
Then for eighty miles the mottled (or alcove) sandstones are found in | |
the river bed. The course of the canyon is a little south of west and is | |
comparatively straight. At the top of the red-wall limestone there is a | |
broad terrace, two or three miles in width, composed of hills of | |
wonderful forms carved in the banded beds, and back of this is seen a | |
cliff in the tower limestone. Along the lower course of this stretch the | |
whole character of the canyon is changed by another set of complicating | |
conditions. We have now reached a region of volcanic activity. After the | |
canyons were cut nearly to their present depth, lavas poured out and | |
volcanoes were built on the walls of the canyon, but not in the canyon | |
itself, though at places rivers of molten rock rolled down the walls | |
into the Colorado. | |
The canyon for the next eighty miles is a compound of that found where | |
the river is in the black gneiss and that found where the dead volcanoes | |
stand on the brink of the wall. In the first stretch, where the gneiss | |
is at the foundation, we have a great bend to the south, and in the last | |
stretch, where the gneiss is below and the dead volcanoes above, another | |
great southern detour is found. These two great beds are separated by | |
eighty miles of comparatively straight river. | |
Let us call this first great bend the Kaibab reach of the canyon, and | |
the straight part the Kanab reach, for the Kanab Creek heads far off in | |
the plateau to the north and joins the Colorado at the beginning of the | |
middle stretch. The third great southern bend is the Shiwits stretch. | |
Thus there are three distinct portions of the Grand Canyon: The Kaibab | |
section, characterized more by its buttes and salients; the Kanab | |
section, characterized by its comparatively straight walls with | |
volcanoes on the brink, and the Shiwits section, which is broken into | |
great terraces with gneiss at the bottom and volcanoes at the top. | |
The Work of Erosion | |
The erosion represented in the canyons, although vast, is but a small | |
part of the great erosion of the region, for between the cliffs blocks | |
have been carried away far superior in magnitude to those necessary to | |
fill the canyons. Probably there is no portion of the whole region from | |
which there have not been more than a thousand feet degraded, and there | |
are districts from which more than 30,000 feet of rock have been carried | |
away; altogether there is a district of country more than 200,000 square | |
miles in extent, from which, on the average, more than 6,000 feet have | |
been eroded. Consider a rock 200,000 square miles in extent and a mile | |
in thickness, against which the clouds have hurled their storms, and | |
beat it into sands, and the rills have carried the sands into the | |
creeks, and the creeks have carried them into the rivers, and the | |
Colorado has carried them into the sea. | |
We think of the mountains as forming clouds about their brows, but the | |
clouds have formed the mountains. Great continental blocks are upheaved | |
from beneath the sea by internal geologic forces that fashion the earth. | |
Then the wandering clouds, the tempest-bearing clouds, the | |
rainbow-decked clouds, with mighty power and with wonderful skill, carve | |
out valleys and canyons and fashion hills and cliffs and mountains. The | |
clouds are the artists sublime. | |
Winter and Cloud Effects | |
In winter some of the characteristics of the Grand Canyon are | |
emphasized. The black gneiss below, the variegated quartzite, and the | |
green or alcove sandstone form the foundation for the mighty red wall. | |
The banded sandstone entablature is crowned by the tower limestone. In | |
winter this is covered with snow. Seen from below, these changing | |
elements seem to graduate into the heavens, and no plane of demarcation | |
between wall and blue firmament can be seen. The heavens constitute a | |
portion of the façade and mount into a vast dome from wall to wall, | |
spanning the Grand Canyon with empyrean blue. So the earth and the | |
heavens are blended in one vast structure. | |
[Illustration: Copyright, 1899, by H. G. Peabody. | |
The Lower Gorge, Foot of Bright Angel Trail.] | |
When the clouds play in the canyon, as they often do in the rainy | |
season, another set of effects is produced. Clouds creep out of canyons | |
and wind into other canyons. The heavens seem to be alive, not moving as | |
move the heavens over a plain, in one direction with the wind, but | |
following the multiplied courses of these gorges. In this manner the | |
little clouds seem to be individualized, to have wills and souls of | |
their own and to be going on diverse errands—a vast assemblage of | |
self-willed clouds faring here and there, intent upon purposes hidden in | |
their own breasts. In imagination the clouds belong to the sky, and when | |
they are in the canyon the skies come down into the gorges and cling to | |
the cliffs and lift them up to immeasurable heights, for the sky must | |
still be far away. Thus they lend infinity to the walls. | |
You can not see the Grand Canyon in one view as if it were a changeless | |
spectacle from which a curtain might be lifted, but to see it you have | |
to toil from month to month through its labyrinths. It is a region more | |
difficult to traverse than the Alps or the Himalayas, but if strength | |
and courage are sufficient for the task, by a year’s toil a concept of | |
sublimity can be obtained never again to be equaled on the hither side | |
of paradise. | |
[Illustration: Copyright, 1899, by H. G. Peabody. | |
On Grand View Point.] | |
[Illustration: Uncaptioned vista] | |
THE GREATEST THING IN THE WORLD | |
BY CHARLES F. LUMMIS | |
“The greatest thing in the world.” That is a large phrase and an | |
over-worked one, and hardened travelers do not take it lightly upon the | |
tongue. Noticeably it is most glibly in use with those but lately, and | |
for the first time, wandered beyond their native state or county, and as | |
every province has its own local brag of biggest things, the too | |
credulous tourist will find a superlative everywhere. And superlatives | |
are unsafe without wide horizons of comparison. | |
Yet in every sort there is, of course, somewhere “the biggest thing in | |
the world” of its kind. It is a good word, when spoken in season and not | |
abused in careless ignorance. | |
I believe there is and can be no dispute that the term applies literally | |
to several things in the immediate region of the Grand Canyon of | |
Arizona. As I have more than once written (and it never yet has been | |
controverted), probably no other equal area on earth contains so many | |
supreme marvels of so many kinds—so many astounding sights, so many | |
masterpieces of Nature’s handiwork, so vast and conclusive an | |
encyclopedia of the world-building processes, so impressive monuments of | |
prehistoric man, so many triumphs of man still in the tribal relation—as | |
what I have called the Southwestern Wonderland. This includes a large | |
part of New Mexico and Arizona, the area which geographically and | |
ethnographically we may count as the Grand Canyon region. Let me mention | |
a few wonders: | |
The largest and by far the most beautiful of all petrified forests, with | |
several hundred square miles whose surface is carpeted with agate chips | |
and dotted with agate trunks two to four feet in diameter; and just | |
across one valley a buried “forest” whose huge silicified—not | |
agatized—logs show their ends under fifty feet of sandstone. | |
The largest natural bridge in the world—200 feet high, over 500 feet | |
span, and over 600 feet wide, up and down stream, and with an orchard on | |
its top and miles of stalactite caves under its abutments. | |
The largest variety and display of geologically recent volcanic action | |
in North America; with 60-mile lava flows, 1,500-foot blankets of creamy | |
tufa cut by scores of canyons; hundreds of craters and thousands of | |
square miles of lava beds, basalt, and cinders, and so much “volcanic | |
glass” (obsidian) that it was the chief tool of the prehistoric | |
population. | |
The largest and the most impressive villages of cave-dwellings in the | |
world, most of them already abandoned “when the world-seeking Genoese” | |
sailed. | |
The peerless and many-storied cliff-dwellings—castles and forts and | |
homes in the face of wild precipices or upon their tops—an aboriginal | |
architecture as remarkable as any in any land. | |
The twenty-six strange communal town republics of the descendants of the | |
“cliff-dwellers,” the modern Pueblos; some in fertile valleys, some | |
(like Acoma and Moki) perched on barren and dizzy cliff tops. The | |
strange dances, rites, dress, and customs of this ancient people who had | |
solved the problem of irrigation, 6-story house building, and clean | |
self-government, and even women’s rights—long before Columbus was born. | |
The noblest Caucasian ruins in America, north of Mexico—the great stone | |
and adobe churches reared by Franciscan missionaries, near three | |
centuries ago, a thousand miles from the ocean, in the heart of the | |
Southwest. | |
Some of the most notable tribes of savage nomads—like the Navajos, whose | |
blankets and silver work are pre-eminent, and the Apaches, who, man for | |
man, have been probably the most successful warriors in history. | |
All these, and a great deal more, make the Southwest a wonderland | |
without a parallel. There are ruins as striking as the storied ones | |
along the Rhine, and far more remarkable. There are peoples as | |
picturesque as any in the Orient, and as romantic as the Aztecs and the | |
Incas of whom we have learned such gilded fables, and there are natural | |
wonders which have no peers whatever. | |
Of the Canyon, and Other Wonders | |
At the head of the list stands the Grand Canyon of the Colorado; whether | |
it is the “greatest wonder of the world” depends a little on our | |
definition of “wonder.” Possibly it is no more wonderful than the fact | |
that so tiny a fraction of the people who confess themselves the | |
smartest in the world have ever seen it. As a people we dodder abroad to | |
see scenery incomparably inferior. | |
But beyond peradventure it is the greatest chasm in the world, and the | |
most superb. Enough globe-trotters have seen it to establish that fact. | |
Many have come cynically prepared to be disappointed; to find it | |
overdrawn and really not so stupendous as something else. It is, after | |
all, a hard test that so be-bragged a wonder must endure under the | |
critical scrutiny of them that have seen the earth and the fullness | |
thereof. But I never knew the most self-satisfied veteran traveler to be | |
disappointed in the Grand Canyon, or to patronize it. On the contrary, | |
this is the very class of men who can best comprehend it, and I have | |
seen them fairly break down in its awful presence. | |
I do not know the Himalayas except by photograph and the testimony of | |
men who have explored and climbed them, and who found the Grand Canyon | |
an absolutely new experience. But I know the American continents pretty | |
well, and have tramped their mountains, including the Andes—the next | |
highest mountains in the world, after half a dozen of the Himalayas—and | |
of all the famous quebradas of the Andes there is not one that would | |
count 5 per cent on the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. For all their | |
25,000-foot peaks, their blue-white glaciers, imminent above the bald | |
plateau, and green little bolsones (“pocket valleys”) of Chile, Peru, | |
Bolivia, and Ecuador; for all their tremendous active volcanoes, like | |
Saugay and Cotopaxi; for all an earthquake activity beside which the | |
“shake” at Charleston was mere paper-doll play; for all the steepest | |
gradients in the world (and Peru is the only place in the world where a | |
river falls 17,000 feet in 100 miles)—in all that marvelous 3,000-mile | |
procession of giantism there is not one canyon which any sane person | |
would for an instant compare with that titanic gash that the Colorado | |
has chiseled through a comparatively flat upland. Nor is there anything | |
remotely approaching it in all the New World. So much I can say at first | |
hand. As for the Old World, the explorer who shall find a gorge there | |
one-half as great will win undying fame. | |
The quebrada of the Apu-Rimac is a marvel of the Andes, with its | |
vertiginous depths and its suspension bridge of wild vines. The Grand | |
Canyon of the Arkansas, in Colorado, is a noble little slit in the | |
mountains. The Franconia and White Mountain notches in New Hampshire are | |
beautiful. The Yosemite and the Yellowstone canyons surpass the world, | |
each in its way. But if all of these were hung up on the opposite wall | |
of the Grand Canyon from you the chances are fifty to one that you could | |
not tell t’other from which, nor any of them from the hundreds of other | |
canyons which rib that vast vertebrate gorge. If the falls of Niagara | |
were installed in the Grand Canyon between your visits and you knew it | |
by the newspapers—next time you stood on that dizzy rimrock you would | |
probably need good field-glasses and much patience before you could | |
locate that cataract which in its place looks pretty big. If Mount | |
Washington were plucked up bodily by the roots—not from where you see | |
it, but from sea-level—and carefully set down in the Grand Canyon, you | |
probably would not notice it next morning, unless its dull colors | |
distinguished it in that innumerable congress of larger and painted | |
giants. | |
All this, which is literally true, is a mere trifle of what might be | |
said in trying to fix a standard of comparison for the Grand Canyon. But | |
I fancy there is no standard adjustable to the human mind. You may | |
compare all you will—eloquently and from wide experience, and at last | |
all similes fail. The Grand Canyon is just the Grand Canyon, and that is | |
all you can say. I never have seen anyone who was prepared for it. I | |
never have seen anyone who could grasp it in a week’s hard exploration; | |
nor anyone, except some rare Philistine, who could even think he had | |
grasped it. I have seen people rave over it; better people struck dumb | |
with it, even strong men who cried over it; but I have never yet seen | |
the man or woman that _expected_ it. | |
It adds seriously to the scientific wonder and the universal | |
impressiveness of this unparalleled chasm that it is not in some | |
stupendous mountain range, but in a vast, arid, lofty floor of nearly | |
100,000 square miles—as it were, a crack in the upper story of the | |
continent. There is no preparation for it. Unless you had been told, you | |
would no more dream that out yonder amid the pines the flat earth is | |
slashed to its very bowels, than you would expect to find an iceberg in | |
Broadway. With a very ordinary running jump from the spot where you get | |
your first glimpse of the canyon you could go down 2,000 feet without | |
touching. It is sudden as a well. | |
But it is no mere cleft. It is a terrific trough 6,000 to 7,000 feet | |
deep, ten to twenty miles wide, hundreds of miles long, peopled with | |
hundreds of peaks taller than any mountain east of the Rockies, yet not | |
one of them with its head so high as your feet, and all ablaze with such | |
color as no eastern or European landscape ever knew, even in the | |
Alpen-glow. And as you sit upon the brink the divine scene-shifters give | |
you a new canyon every hour. With each degree of the sun’s course the | |
great countersunk mountains we have been watching fade away, and new | |
ones, as terrific, are carved by the westering shadows. It is like a | |
dissection of the whole cosmogony. And the purple shadows, the dazzling | |
lights, the thunderstorms and snowstorms, the clouds and the rainbows | |
that shift and drift in that vast subterranean arena below your feet! | |
And amid those enchanted towers and castles which the vastness of the | |
scale leads you to call “rocks,” but which are in fact as big above the | |
river-bed as the Rockies from Denver, and bigger than Mount Washington | |
from Fabyan’s or the Glen! | |
The Grand Canyon country is not only the hugest, but the most varied and | |
instructive example on earth of one of the chief factors of | |
earth-building—erosion. It is the mesa country—the Land of Tables. | |
Nowhere else on the footstool is there such an example of deep-gnawing | |
water or of water high-carving. The sandstone mesas of the Southwest, | |
the terracing of canyon walls, the castellation, battlementing, and | |
cliff-making, the cutting down of a whole landscape except its | |
precipitous islands of flat-topped rock, the thin lava table-cloths on | |
tables 100 feet high—these are a few of the things which make the | |
Southwest wonderful alike to the scientist and the mere sight-seer. | |
That the canyon is not “too hard” is perhaps sufficiently indicated by | |
the fact that I have taken thither ladies and children and men in their | |
seventies, when the easiest way to get there was by a 70-mile stage | |
ride, and that at six years old my little girl walked all the way from | |
rim to bottom of canyon and came back on a horse the same day, and was | |
next morning ready to go on a long tramp along the rim. | |
[Illustration: Copyright, 1899, by H. G. Peabody. | |
The North Wall from Grand Scenic Divide.] | |
[Illustration: Uncaptioned vista] | |
INFORMATION FOR TOURISTS | |
Preliminary | |
There is only one way by which to directly reach the Grand Canyon of | |
Arizona, and that is via the Santa Fe (The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe | |
Railway System). | |
There are three ways of reaching the Canyon from the Santa Fe—rail from | |
Williams, private conveyance from Flagstaff and Peach Springs. | |
The route from Flagstaff is not available in winter. The Peach Springs | |
route is open in winter, but now little used. The bulk of the travel is | |
via Williams, sixty-five miles north to Bright Angel—open all the year. | |
Three Gateways | |
There are but three points from which an easy descent may be made of the | |
south wall to the granite gorge of the Grand Canyon: | |
1. At Grand View, down Berry’s (Grand View) or Hance’s (Red Canyon) | |
trails. | |
2. At Bright Angel, down Bright Angel Trail. | |
3. At Bass’ Camp, down Mystic Spring Trail. | |
While the canyon may be reached over trails at other places outside of | |
the district named (such as Lee’s Ferry Trail, by wagon from Winslow; | |
Moki Indian Trail, by way of Little Colorado Canyon; and Diamond Creek | |
road to Colorado River from Peach Springs station), most tourists prefer | |
the Bright Angel, Grand View, and Bass’ Camp routes, because of the | |
superior facilities and views there offered. The Peach Springs route is | |
the only other one now used by the public to any extent. | |
It is near Grand View that Marble Canyon ends and the Grand Canyon | |
proper begins. Northward, a few miles away, is the mouth of the Little | |
Colorado Canyon. Here the granite gorge is first seen. | |
Bright Angel is approximately in the center, and Bass’ Camp at the | |
western end of the granite gorge. By wagon road it is eighteen miles | |
from Bright Angel east to Grand View, and twenty-three miles west to | |
Bass’ Camp. | |
In a nutshell, the Grand Canyon at Grand View is accounted most | |
sublime—a scene of wide outlooks and brilliant hues; at Bright Angel, | |
deepest and most impressive—a scene that awakens the profoundest | |
emotions; at Bass’ Camp, the most varied—a scene of striking contrasts | |
in form and color. | |
Each locality has its special charm. All three should be visited, if | |
time permits, as only by long observation can one gain even a | |
superficial knowledge of what the Grand Canyon is. To know it intimately | |
requires a longer stay and more careful study. | |
The Ride from Williams | |
Because of recent improvements in service the Grand Canyon of Arizona | |
may now be visited, either in summer or winter, with reasonable comfort | |
and without any hardship. No one need be deterred by fear of inclement | |
weather or a tedious stage ride. The trip is entirely feasible for the | |
average traveler every day in the year. | |
Leaving the Santa Fe transcontinental train at Williams, Arizona, | |
passengers change in same depot to a local train of the Grand Canyon | |
Railway, which leaves Williams daily, and arrives at destination after a | |
three hours’ run. | |
Williams is a busy town of 1,500 inhabitants, 378 miles west of | |
Albuquerque, on the Santa Fe. Here are located large sawmills, smelters, | |
numerous well-stocked stores, and railroad division buildings. Prior to | |
the disastrous fire in July, 1901, there were several excellent hotels. | |
The one not destroyed affords good accommodations; it has been recently | |
enlarged and otherwise improved. | |
There is usually ample time at Williams, between trains, for the ascent | |
of Bill Williams Mountain, which rises near the town to a height of | |
9,000 feet. Tourists will find the trip thoroughly enjoyable. It can be | |
made in five hours on horseback in perfect safety. The trail is an easy | |
one, first leading through a gently sloping path of pines, then steeply | |
up to the wind-swept summit alongside a pretty stream bordered by | |
thickets of quaking aspens. Chimney Rock, with its eagle’s nest, is a | |
noteworthy rock formation. On the summit is buried the historic pioneer | |
scout, Bill Williams. From his resting-place there is a wide outlook, | |
embracing, on clear days, the wall of the Grand Canyon, Verde River, | |
Chino Valley, Jerome, Hell Canyon, Seligman, Ash Fork, and many | |
neighboring peaks. | |
The railroad track to the canyon is remarkably smooth for a new line. It | |
is built across a slightly rolling mesa, in places thickly wooded, in | |
others open. The snow-covered San Francisco Peaks are on the eastern | |
horizon. Kendricks, Sitgreaves, and Williams mountains are also visible. | |
Red Butte, thirty miles distant, is a prominent local landmark. Before | |
the terminus is reached the train climbs a long, high ridge and enters | |
Coconino Forest, which resembles a natural park. The route here is amid | |
fragrant pines, over low hills, and along occasional gulches and | |
“washes.” Taken under the favorable conditions which generally prevail | |
at this high altitude, the journey is a novelty and a delight. | |
At Destination | |
The hotel at head of Bright Angel Trail is reached early in the evening. | |
The tourist then finds himself on the verge of a high precipice, from | |
which is obtained by moonlight a magnificent view of the opposite wall | |
and of the intervening crags, towers, and <DW72>s. The suddenness, the | |
surprise, the revelation come as a fitting climax to a unique trip. | |
After nightfall the air becomes cold, for here you are 7,000 feet above | |
the sea; yet the absence of humidity, peculiar to these high altitudes, | |
makes the chill less penetrating than on lower levels. By day, in the | |
sunshine, there is usually a genial warmth—then overcoats, gloves, and | |
wraps are laid aside. | |
Bright Angel Hotel | |
The Bright Angel Hotel is managed by Mr. M. Buggeln, who also controls | |
the stage line, trail stock, guides, etc. The hotel comprises a | |
combination log and frame structure of eight rooms, with three frame | |
annexes containing forty-six sleeping rooms, and (for summer use) | |
several rows of tents, all clustered on the rim and surrounded by pines | |
and spruces. Each room in the annexes has one or two beds, a stove, | |
dressing table, and Navajo rugs. In the log-cabin part of the main | |
edifice are two large rooms. One is used for reception purposes, being | |
warmed by means of an old-fashioned fireplace and tastefully carpeted | |
with Indian rugs, also furnished with capacious rocking chairs and a | |
piano; the other of these two rooms is for the office. | |
Good meals are prepared by expert cooks and served in a pleasant | |
dining-room. In a word, the hotel facilities are good, far better than | |
one might expect to find for the reasonable rate charged. There is no | |
“roughing it”; everything is homelike and comfortable. One must not, | |
however, expect all the city luxuries. A telephone and telegraph line | |
directly connects the hotel with the outer world at Williams. | |
Note.—A fine modern hotel of fifty rooms, with cottage annexes, to be | |
known as Bright Angel Tavern, will be built in this vicinity during | |
1903 and managed by Mr. Fred Harvey. It will be a permanent affair and | |
will provide all the latest conveniences. | |
While one ought to remain at least a week, a stop-over of three days | |
from the transcontinental trip will allow practically two days at the | |
canyon. One full day should be devoted to an excursion down Bright Angel | |
Trail, and the other to walks and drives along the rim. Another day on | |
the rim—making a four-days’ stop-over in all—will enable visitors to get | |
more satisfactory views of this stupendous wonder. | |
Down Bright Angel Trail | |
The trail here is perfectly safe and is generally open the year round. | |
In midwinter it is liable to be closed for a few days at the top by | |
snow, but such blockade is only temporary. It reaches from the hotel | |
four miles to the top of the granite wall immediately overlooking the | |
Colorado River. At this point the river is 1,200 feet below, while the | |
hotel on the rim is 4,300 feet above. The trip is commonly made on | |
horseback, accompanied by a guide; charges for trail stock and services | |
of guide are moderate. A strong person, accustomed to mountain climbing, | |
can make the round trip on foot in one day, by starting early enough; | |
but the average traveler will soon discover that a horse is a necessity, | |
especially for the upward climb. | |
Eight hours are required for going down and coming back, allowing two | |
hours for lunch, rest, and sight-seeing. Those wishing to reach the | |
river leave the main trail at Indian Garden Spring and follow the | |
downward course of Willow and Pipe creeks. Owing to the abrupt descent | |
from this point, part of the side trail must be traversed on foot. | |
Provision is made for those wishing to camp out at night on the river’s | |
edge. | |
The famous guide, John Hance, is now located at Bright Angel. | |
What to Bring | |
If much tramping is done, stout, thick shoes should be provided. Ladies | |
will find that short walking skirts are a convenience; divided skirts | |
are preferable, but not essential, for the horseback journey down the | |
zigzag trail. Traveling caps and (in summer) broad-brimmed straw hats | |
are useful toilet adjuncts. Otherwise ordinary clothing will suffice. A | |
good field glass and camera should be brought along. | |
[Illustration: Bright Angel Hotel.] | |
The round-trip ticket rate, Williams to Grand Canyon and return, is only | |
$6.50. Adding $6 for two days’ stay at Canyon Hotel, $1 for part of a | |
day at hotel in Williams, $1.50 for probable proportion of cost of | |
guide, $3 for trail stock, and the total necessary expense of the three | |
days’ stop-over is about $18 for one person; each additional day only | |
adds $3 to the cost for hotel. | |
Stop-overs will be granted at Williams on railroad and Pullman tickets | |
if advance application is made to train and Pullman conductors. Trunks | |
may be stored in the station at Williams free of charge by arrangement | |
with ticket agent. | |
Grand View | |
Grand View (previously mentioned) may be reached in summer by private | |
conveyance from Flagstaff, a distance of seventy-five miles; or at any | |
time of the year by stage from Bright Angel, sixteen miles along the | |
rim. The rate for round trip, Bright Angel to Grand View, is $2.50 to $5 | |
each person, according to size of party. While Flagstaff is an | |
interesting place to visit—with its near-by cliff and cave dwellings and | |
San Francisco Peaks—and the trip thence to the Grand Canyon is a novel | |
one, distance and time are such that most travelers prefer to go in by | |
railroad from Williams. | |
Grand View Hotel is a large, rustic structure, built near the head of | |
Berry’s Trail and about three miles from Hance’s Trail, in the midst of | |
tall pines and overlooking the mighty bend of the Colorado. This is the | |
point to which visitors were conducted in the days of the old stage line | |
from Flagstaff. | |
It is noted for its wide views of the Coconino Forest and Painted | |
Desert, as well as for the beautiful forms and color of the canyon | |
itself. A favorite trip here is to go down one trail and up the other. | |
The hotel accommodations are quite good; capacity, forty guests; rate, | |
$3 per day. | |
Bass’ Camp | |
At the western end of the granite gorge is Mystic Spring Trail, an easy | |
route down to the Colorado River and up the other side to Dutton’s Point | |
and Powell’s Plateau. The magnificent panorama eastward from Havasupai | |
Point takes in fifty miles of the canyon, while westward is the unique, | |
table-like formation which characterizes the lower reaches of the river. | |
The views from both rims are pronounced by noted artists and explorers | |
to be unequaled. | |
Present accommodations at Havasupai Hotel (Bass’ Camp), near head of | |
this trail, are fairly good, consisting of a cabin, several tents, and | |
good trail stock; wholesome meals are served in comfortable style. A new | |
hotel is to be built here during 1903. Bass’ Camp is now reached by | |
stage from Coconino, a station on the Grand Canyon Railway, or one may | |
take a team direct from Bright Angel. | |
A visit should be made to the Havasupai Indian village in Cataract | |
Canyon. Any bona fide tourist can procure an introductory letter from | |
the railroad agent at Williams or Grand Canyon. On presenting same to | |
the U. S. Indian agent at Supai, permission will be granted to enter the | |
reservation. This is an unique trip of about forty miles, first by wagon | |
across a timbered plateau, then on horseback down precipitous Topocobya | |
Trail, along the rocky floors of Topocobya and Cataract canyons, deep in | |
the earth, to a place of gushing springs, green fields, and enchanting | |
waterfalls. Here live the Havasupai Indians, one of the most interesting | |
tribes in Arizona. The round trip from Bright Angel or Bass’ Camp is | |
made in three or four days at an expense of $35 to $50 each for a party | |
of three persons. | |
Peach Springs Route | |
The trip in winter from Peach Springs station down to the Colorado | |
River, through Diamond Creek Canyon, is most enjoyable. Owing to the low | |
altitude here (4,780 feet at Peach Springs and approximately 2,000 feet | |
at the river) the air is usually balmy from November to April; in summer | |
the heat is a considerable drawback. | |
A journey of but twelve miles leads you through a miniature Grand Canyon | |
with scenery increasingly sublime. On either side are abrupt walls and | |
wonderfully suggestive formations—castles, domes, minarets. On your | |
left, glancing backward, is an exact reproduction of Westminster Abbey. | |
This comparatively easy jaunt brings you by team to the very brink of | |
the swift-rolling Colorado, whereas by the other Grand Canyon gateways | |
you are landed on the rim and must go down thousands of feet by a steep | |
trail. The outlook here is restricted to the river itself and the great | |
walls rising precipitously from its banks—a scene well worth while, but | |
not so impressive as the wide sweep of the canyon visible from the rim. | |
Following Diamond Creek to its source you may walk along the bed of the | |
stream between walls thousands of feet high and glistening in the white | |
sunlight as if varnished. The upper part of Diamond Creek is a veritable | |
terrace of fern bowers, luxuriant vegetation, crystal cascades, and | |
sequestered meadow parks. | |
Flagstaff and Vicinity | |
The town itself is an interesting place, prettily situated in the heart | |
of the San Francisco uplift and surrounded by a pine forest. | |
Its hotels, business houses, lumber mills, and residences denote thrift. | |
On a neighboring hill is the Lowell Observatory, noted for its many | |
contributions to astronomical science. | |
[Illustration: San Francisco Peaks.] | |
Eight miles southwest from Flagstaff—reached by a pleasant drive along a | |
level road through tall pines—is Walnut Canyon, a rent in the earth | |
several hundred feet deep and three miles long, with steep terraced | |
walls of limestone. Along the shelving terraces, under beetling | |
projections of the strata, are scores of quaint cliff dwellings, the | |
most famous group of its kind in this region. The larger abodes are | |
divided into several compartments by cemented walls, many parts of which | |
are still intact. It is believed that these cliff dwellers were of the | |
same stock as the Pueblo Indians of to-day and that they lived here | |
about 800 years ago. | |
Nine miles from Flagstaff and only half a mile from the old stage road | |
to the Grand Canyon, upon the summit of an extinct crater, the | |
remarkable ruins of the cave-dwellers may be seen. | |
The magnificent San Francisco Peaks, visible from every part of the | |
country within a radius of a hundred miles, lie just north of Flagstaff. | |
There are three peaks which form one mountain. From Flagstaff a road has | |
been constructed up Humphrey’s Peak, whose summit is 12,750 feet above | |
sea level. It is a good mountain road, and the entire distance from | |
Flagstaff is only about ten miles. The trip to the summit and back is | |
easily made in one day. | |
Announcement | |
The Santa Fe has published a new and beautiful book on the Grand Canyon. | |
It contains articles by Hamlin Garland, Harriet Monroe, Robert Brewster | |
Stanton, Chas. S. Gleed, John L. Stoddard, Charles Dudley Warner, R. D. | |
Salisbury, “Fitz Mac,” Nat M. Brigham, Joaquin Miller, Edwin Burritt | |
Smith, David Starr Jordan, C. E. Beecher, Henry P. Ewing, and Thomas | |
Moran, as well as the authors represented in this pamphlet. The book has | |
more than a hundred pages, illustrated with half-tones and portraits; | |
the cover is from a painting of the Canyon by Thomas Moran, and is | |
lithographed in seven colors. It will be forwarded on receipt of fifty | |
cents. | |
A beautiful and unique color picture of the Grand Canyon, mounted to | |
show all its colors as in nature, may be had for twenty-five cents. | |
Address W. J. BLACK, | |
Gen’l Passenger Agent, A., T. & S. F. Ry., CHICAGO. | |
Ad. 71—2-3-03. 10M. | |
Transcriber’s Notes | |
--Retained publication information from the printed exemplar (this eBook | |
is in the public domain in the country of publication.) | |
--Only in the text versions, delimited italicized text with | |
_underscores_. | |
--Silently corrected several typos. | |
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Titan of Chasms, by | |
C. A. Higgins and John Wesley Powell and Charles F. Lummis | |
*** |