GRAND CANYON
LOCATION
SOME FACTS
•   IT Is 277 miles long and up to 18 miles wide

•   Below Yavapai point is 2,400 feet above sea level, about 4,500 feet
    below the South Rim and 5,400 feet below the North Rim for an
    average depth of about one mile

•   Took 3-6 million years to form; erosion continues to alter its contours
•   Includes approximately 70 species of mammals, 250 species of birds,
    25 types of reptiles and five species of amphibians

•    It was formed by the Colorado River, which flows west through the
    canyon and averages about 300 feet width, 100 feet in depth and flows
    at an average speed of four miles per hour
•    It was made a national monument in 1908 and became a national park
    in 1919

•   It Is populated by five Indian tribes: The Hopi, Navajo, Havasupai,
    Paiute and Hualapai
Yosemite National Park( California)
Yosemite history
• . Here’s a list of ten Yosemite facts we bet you didn’t know about
  this amazing park.
• 1. Male deer (bucks) in Yosemite Park shed their antlers every fall
  after mating season. They grow them back in the spring.
• 2. Giant Sequoias which grow in Yosemite National Park are the
  biggest living things on the planet. However, the seed for the Giant
  Sequoia is only the size of a piece of oatmeal. Grizzly Giant is the
  name of the oldest Sequoia in Yosemite Park.
• 3. The American Indians who live in Yosemite are called the
  Ahwahneechee Indians. Their traditional homes look like teepees,
  but are actually made of incense-cedar bark.
• 4. Yosemite National Park is visited by over 3.5 million people every
  year. Summer is by far the busiest season at Yosemite.
• 5. Yosemite Park was the first area of land set aside by the US
  government for preservation and protection.
•   .
•   6. Though Half Dome and El Capitan are Yosemite’s most well known
    summits, Mt. Lyell is actually Yosemite’s highest peak.
•   7. Yosemite National Park covers nearly 1,200 square miles. However, only
    a tiny fraction of that land is traversed by visitors. The vast majority of the
    park is largely untouched and uninhabited by humans.
•   8. California has approximately 7,000 known plant species. Yosemite
    contains twenty percent of those species.
•   9. Galen Clark was the first designated Guardian of Yosemite. He used to
    hike through the park barefoot and was quoted as saying that shoes are
    “cruel and silly instruments of torture, at once uncivilized, unhuman and
    unnecessary.”
•   10. Black bears found in Yosemite weigh between 150 and 500 pounds
    when full grown, but when they are born, they weigh less than half a pound.
    The mother black bear is fast asleep during hibernation when her baby is
    born.
Location
El capitán & half Dome
Waterfalls
The giant sequoias in Mariposa
            Grove
Yosemite black bears
• The cute little bears can be quite…
…dangerous, so be careful!!!

Grand canyon & yosemite

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 5.
    SOME FACTS • IT Is 277 miles long and up to 18 miles wide • Below Yavapai point is 2,400 feet above sea level, about 4,500 feet below the South Rim and 5,400 feet below the North Rim for an average depth of about one mile • Took 3-6 million years to form; erosion continues to alter its contours • Includes approximately 70 species of mammals, 250 species of birds, 25 types of reptiles and five species of amphibians • It was formed by the Colorado River, which flows west through the canyon and averages about 300 feet width, 100 feet in depth and flows at an average speed of four miles per hour • It was made a national monument in 1908 and became a national park in 1919 • It Is populated by five Indian tribes: The Hopi, Navajo, Havasupai, Paiute and Hualapai
  • 6.
  • 7.
    Yosemite history • .Here’s a list of ten Yosemite facts we bet you didn’t know about this amazing park. • 1. Male deer (bucks) in Yosemite Park shed their antlers every fall after mating season. They grow them back in the spring. • 2. Giant Sequoias which grow in Yosemite National Park are the biggest living things on the planet. However, the seed for the Giant Sequoia is only the size of a piece of oatmeal. Grizzly Giant is the name of the oldest Sequoia in Yosemite Park. • 3. The American Indians who live in Yosemite are called the Ahwahneechee Indians. Their traditional homes look like teepees, but are actually made of incense-cedar bark. • 4. Yosemite National Park is visited by over 3.5 million people every year. Summer is by far the busiest season at Yosemite. • 5. Yosemite Park was the first area of land set aside by the US government for preservation and protection.
  • 8.
    . • 6. Though Half Dome and El Capitan are Yosemite’s most well known summits, Mt. Lyell is actually Yosemite’s highest peak. • 7. Yosemite National Park covers nearly 1,200 square miles. However, only a tiny fraction of that land is traversed by visitors. The vast majority of the park is largely untouched and uninhabited by humans. • 8. California has approximately 7,000 known plant species. Yosemite contains twenty percent of those species. • 9. Galen Clark was the first designated Guardian of Yosemite. He used to hike through the park barefoot and was quoted as saying that shoes are “cruel and silly instruments of torture, at once uncivilized, unhuman and unnecessary.” • 10. Black bears found in Yosemite weigh between 150 and 500 pounds when full grown, but when they are born, they weigh less than half a pound. The mother black bear is fast asleep during hibernation when her baby is born.
  • 9.
  • 10.
    El capitán &half Dome
  • 11.
  • 12.
    The giant sequoiasin Mariposa Grove
  • 13.
    Yosemite black bears •The cute little bears can be quite…
  • 14.