LOS ANGELES — The awe-inspiring Grand Canyon was probably
carved about 70 million years ago, much earlier than thought, a
provocative new study suggests – so early that dinosaurs might have
roamed near this natural wonder.
Using a new dating tool, a team of scientists came up
with a different age for the gorge’s western section, challenging
conventional wisdom that much of the canyon was scoured by the mighty
Colorado River in the last 5 million to 6 million years.
Not everyone is convinced with the latest viewpoint
published online Thursday in the journal Science. Critics contend the
study ignores a mountain of evidence pointing to a geologically young
landscape and they have doubts about the technique used to date it.
The notion that the Grand Canyon existed during the
dinosaur era is “ludicrous,” said geologist Karl Karlstrom of the
University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.
How the Grand Canyon became grand – with its vertical
cliffs and flat plateaus – has been debated since John Wesley Powell
navigated the whitewater rapids and scouted the sheer walls during his
famous 1869 expedition.
Some 5 million tourists flock to Arizona each year to
marvel at the 277-mile-long chasm, which plunges a mile deep in some
places. It’s a geologic layer cake with the most recent rock formations
near the rim stacked on top of older rocks that date back 2 billion
years.
Though the exposed rocks are ancient, most scientists
believe the Grand Canyon itself was forged in the recent geologic past,
created when tectonic forces uplifted the land that the Colorado River
later carved through.
The new work by researchers at the University of Colorado
Boulder and California Institute of Technology argued that
canyon-cutting occurred long before that. They focused on the western
end of the Grand Canyon occupied today by the Hualapai Reservation,
which owns the Skywalk attraction, a horseshoe-shaped glass bridge that
extends from the canyon’s edge.
To come up with the age, the team crushed rocks collected
from the bottom of the canyon to analyze a rare type of mineral called
apatite. The mineral contains traces of radioactive elements that
release helium during decay, allowing researchers to calculate the
passage of time since the canyon eroded.
Their interpretation: The western Grand Canyon is 70
million years old and was likely shaped by an ancient river that coursed
in the opposite direction of the west-flowing Colorado.
Lead researcher Rebecca Flowers of the University of
Colorado Boulder realizes not everyone will accept this alternative
view, which minimizes the role of the Colorado River.
“Arguments will continue over the age of Grand Canyon,
and I hope our study will stimulate more work to decipher the
mysteries,” Flowers said in an email.
It’s not the first time that Flowers has dug up evidence
for an older Grand Canyon. In 2008, she authored a study that suggested
part of the eastern Grand Canyon, where most tourists go, formed 55
million years ago. Another study published that same year by a different
group of researchers put the age of the western section at 17 million
years old.
If the Grand Canyon truly existed before dinosaurs
became extinct, it would have looked vastly different because the
climate back then was more tropical. Dinosaurs that patrolled the
American West then included smaller tyrannosaurs, horned and dome-headed
dinosaurs and duckbills.
If they peered over the rim, it would not look like “the
starkly beautiful desert of today, but an environment with more lush
vegetation,” said University of Maryland paleontologist Thomas Holtz.
Many scientists find it hard to imagine an ancient Grand
Canyon since the oldest gravel and sediment that washed downstream date
to about 6 million years ago and there are no signs of older deposits.
And while they welcome advanced dating methods to decipher the canyon’s
age, Karlstrom of the University of New Mexico does not think the latest
effort is very accurate.
Karlstrom said it also defies logic that a fully formed
canyon would sit unchanged for tens of millions of years without
undergoing further erosion.
Geologist Richard Young of the State University of New
York at Geneseo said his own work suggests there was a cliff in the
place of the ancient Grand Canyon.
Flowers “wants to have a canyon there. I want to have a cliff there. Obviously, one of us can’t be right,” he said.
Whatever the age, there may be a middle ground, said Utah State University geologist Joel Pederson.
Researchers have long known about older canyons in the
region cut by rivers that flow in a different direction than the
Colorado River. It’s possible that a good portion of the Grand Canyon
was chiseled long ago by these smaller rivers and then the Colorado came
along and finished the job, he said.
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