Friendship

On our way to Page, the northern most part of Arizona, we made two stops. One was at Meteor Crater. The other was at Walnut Canyon National Monument.

The Meteor Crater, with a 1,200 m diameter and 170 m depth, was formed 50,000 years ago. A nickel-iron meteorite struck the former grassland, causing the crater. The meteor mostly vaporized at impact.

There exist fragments of the Canyon Diablo meteorite (named after a nearby Canyon). The biggest peace of meteorite found, called the Holsinger Meteorite, is shown publicly. It was great to touch a material coming from space.

Beside the natural wonder of Meteor Crater near Flagstaff, there is a remarkable ancient place nearby. It is the Walnut Canyon National Park. Since ancient times, indigenous people built their homes in the cliffs and did farming along the rim of the Canyon.

View from Walnut Canyon to the mountain range of San Francisco Peak near Flagstaff

Walnut Creek is down below. The Creek carved a 600 m deep Canyon. It created an island where the remnants of the Cliff dwellings can be seen.

The trail around this island passes 25 cliff dwellings. They were built under limestone ledges by the Sinagua people, who lived there between 1100 and 1250 AD.

The dwellings are small and were only used for cooking and sleeping. About 80 cliff dwellings are found in the surrounding area. One does not know why the Sinagua people left the area.

Cliff dwellings

When we arrived in Page, we visited the Horseshoe Bend, another natural wonder.

The Colorado River carved out this enormous Canyon. It also carved out an island. The latter is without access to the rim.

The Glen Canyon Dam near Page creates an enormous desert lake called lake Powell. In recent years, the water level fell to a record low. This happened because of the persistent lack of rain and snow.

Glen Canyon Dam, started in 1956

We were sitting at the shore watching canoes arriving in the evening. The water level is too low for larger boats.

Our travel back in time brought us to another interesting site – the Big Water Visitor center. It is part of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Many different kinds of dinosaurs lived there once. Since 2005, fourteen new dinosaur species have been found.

The staff member was very knowledgeable. He not only explained the different fossils exhibited, but he had also discovered a dinosaur fossil in the area.

Going back in time and seeing the ancestors of our birds.

Not far away from the Big Water Visitor Center are the Wahweap Hoodoos. These are very unique sandstone formations. They have been shaped by 30 million years of erosion.

Mushroom shaped formations

Toadstool Hoodoo from farther away

Toadstool Hoodoo. It might take another million years until it disappears.

In comparison to all these ancient formations, we humans on earth are just a very brief flash of light. If we compare the universe’s age to one year, the dinosaurs’ existence on earth lasted five days. The length of the existence of the human race is 21 seconds.

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gwwien
gwwienhttps://simplyjustwalking.com
Born and raised in a village along the Danube in Austria, Traude Wild soon ventured out into the world. After a two-year program for tourism in Klesheim/Salzburg, she spent nearly a year in South Africa and Namibia. By returning back to Austria, she acquired a Master of Economics at the University of Vienna. After moving to the United States with her four children, she studied Art History at Arizona State University and stayed in the United States for fourteen years. Here, she was teaching Art History in several Universities like Webster University and University of Missouri-St. Louis. Now, she lives partially in Arizona and Vienna and works together with her husband for the University of South-Carolina, Moore School of business as Adjunct Professor organising and leading Study tours in Central Europe. She also teaches at the Sigmund Freud University in Vienna. Since 1999, she is practicing Zen meditation in the lineage of Katagiri Roshi. She loves to hike and to write and is a student of Natalie Goldberg. During her often many weeks long hikes she brings her awareness into the Here and Now, describing her experiences in an authentic way. She loves to walk pilgrimages. The longest hike so far was the 1,400 km long 88 Temple pilgrimage in Shikoku, Japan in 2016.

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