The Grand Canyon is the iconic American canyon but is by no means the only one. The mountains and deserts of the west are filled with deep, shallow and steep-walled slashes in the earth. A small river may course through the canyon bottom; sometimes it's a white water river and other times a silty trickle. Canyons are deeper than they are wide. They cut through layers of rock over millions of years to depths of hundreds or thousands of feet or several miles.

Slot

Flash floods create slot canyons. These narrow canyons are gashed into eroding plateaus and are not very wide, but usually fall to depths of hundreds of feet. Powerful and fast-moving flash floods can create slot canyons because there is little vegetation or substantial soil to slow the water. Each time a flash flood courses over a plateau it finds the depression made by the last flood and cuts deeper.

Plateau

Plateau canyons begin with fast-moving rivers that cut deep into the river bottom over time. The water that forms them is powerful, but does not come and go quickly like flash floods. Instead, the river -- through its normal cycles -- cuts into the rock, wearing it down deeper and deeper. The harder the rock, the steeper the canyon. Softer rock results in walls that erode more quickly, creating a wider canyon that can be deep but not steep.

Submarine

The ocean has its own canyons. Submarine canyons are not unlike canyons on land, but they are cut into the ocean floor by currents. Some of these begin at a shore where a canyon river runs into the sea. The river continues to cut its canyon when it reaches into the ocean. Other submarine canyons are cut by particle-filled currents that plunge to the ocean floor.

About the Author

Roz Calvert was a contributing writer for the award-winning ezine Urban Desires where her travel writing and fiction appeared. Writing professionally since 1980, she has penned promotional collateral for Music Magnet Media and various musicians. The "Now Jazz Consortium" published her jazz educational fiction. She published a juvenile book about Zora Neale Hurston and attended West Virginia University and the New School.

Photo Credits

  • Canyons, , Grand Canyon, Arizona image by csourav from Fotolia.com
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