A canyon that is formed when rocky ground is eroded by a river is an example of the interaction between the hydrosphere and the lithosphere. A canyon refers to the ravine found between a pair of cliffs.
he discovered the Grand Canyon
The Anasazi.
I believe you mean the Grand Canyon, which is located in Arizona.
Yes, it created the Canyon.
Grand Canyon
the Colorado river that runs threw the grand canyon eroded away the ground for thousands of years eventually making the Grand Canyon
The material eroded from the Grand Canyon was deposited on a plain. Over many years, water eroded the plain creating a canyon later known as the Grand Canyon. The water kept weathering down the rocks until it came down to a lower level way below the top of the Grand Canyon. That is why today we have a higher and lower part of the Grand Canyon. Overall, the Grand Canyon started out as a plain and as many years passed water weathered down the rocks.
no the Colorado river eroded out the grand canyon not a glacier
Nobody built the Grand Canyon--it formed naturally because the Colorado River eroded the sides of the canyon off.
The Grand Canyon.
Yes, the Grand Canyon as we know it today would look very much like the Grand Canyon of 17 million years ago.
It is a canyon that is under the sea.A canyon is a place where the ground has eroded into a deep ravine or gully - like the Grand Canyon. The sea is the same as the ocean.
the Colorado river eroded the land to make the grand canyon
If I'm not mistaken, lava didn't really shape the grand canyon, the Colarado River did. It slowly eroded the rock until it is the massive canyon we know today.
erode is a noun. Wind and water erode rock. past tense- eroded The Colorado River eroded the Grand Canyon
no, it was caused by long periods of contact with the river at its base that eroded it to look the way it does now.