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Bryce Canyon National Park
Geologic Formations
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| Rich colors can be seen among the varied hoodoos, walls, and fins |
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Bryce Canyon is not a "real" canyon. It is not carved by flowing water. Water is the active ingredient here, but in the form of "frost-wedging" and chemical weathering.
For 200 days a year the temperature goes above and below freezing every day. During the day, melt water seeps into fractures only to freeze at night, expanding by 9%. Now as ice, it exerts a tremendous force (2,000-20,000 pounds per squarte inch). Over time this "frost-wedging" shatters and pries rock apart. In addition, rain water, which is naturally acidic, slowly dissolves the limestone, rounding off edges and washing away debris.
In the pages contained here you can see various phases of erosion and geological change.
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 Dinosaurs exploring Bryce Canyon Visit our GEODETECTIVE website for fun paleo- and geological information more... | |
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Did You Know?
Bryce Canyon National Park has three wildlife species listed under the Endangered Species Act: Utah Prairie Dog, California condor, and the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher. It is illegal to take, capture, kill, pursue, hunt, or harm these species or their habitat.
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Last Updated: October 25, 2006 at 17:19 EST |