Cliff Collapse In The Grand Canyon Leads To This Unexpected And Startling Discovery

Jackson Sawa | June 24, 2024 6:48 pm

The Grand Canyon is a deep and gorgeous canyon in Arizona that has been carved by the Colorado River for millions of years, and it's still full of secrets waiting to be revealed.

On a trail that winds its way through the red cliffs, a geologist discovered a boulder that had fallen from an ancient rock formation. Upon closer examination, the geologist noticed something surprising. What he found changed what we know about prehistoric life in Arizona.

It All Started At Bright Angel Trail

Alexandra Schuler/picture alliance via Getty Images
Alexandra Schuler/picture alliance via Getty Images

This whole incredible story begins after a cliff face alongside Bright Angel Trail collapsed. This launched a boulder onto the path below, and although the rock was hiding a remarkable piece of history, it was frequently stepped over by both tourists and hikers that didn't think anything of it.

It was overlooked for so many years, but eventually, someone with the right knowledge finally came upon it and understood its importance.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Man Behind The Discovery

ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
George Rose/Getty Images
George Rose/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

The man who finally noticed the importance of rocks that collapsed was a biologist named Allan Krill. As he observed the boulder, he realized that there was something exceptional about it. In the stone, Krill found something that pre-dates the dinosaurs.

ADVERTISEMENT

Just four years later, one of Krill's friends went on to publish a paper that explained what made this piece of rock so extraordinary in the vast span of Grand Canyon history.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Breakthrough Discovery

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Today, Krill's discovery is considered to be one-of-a-kind, and his finding is something that we can learn about our world far before humans ever walked it.

ADVERTISEMENT

If the rocks hadn't fallen on the Bright Angel Trail, and Krill had never seen it, it's likely that the secret within the stone would have never been discovered. This is especially incredible since the Grand Canyon dates back more than two billion years.

ADVERTISEMENT

Creation Of The Grand Canyon

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
DEA / L. ROMANO/De Agostini via Getty Images
DEA / L. ROMANO/De Agostini via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

In the area that would become the Grand Canyon, compressive forces and increasing temperatures caused metamorphic and igneous rocks to form together. Then, sedimentary layers began to pile up, with each layer leaving behind pieces of the region's history that modern geologists use to track the history of the canyon's creation.

ADVERTISEMENT

However, it wasn't until the end of the Crustaceous period, around 145 million to 65 million years ago, that the actual ravine began taking shape.

ADVERTISEMENT

Millions Of Years In The Making

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Around 70 million years ago and over the course of the next 40 million years, the activity of the tectonic plates beneath the area around Arizona caused the Colorado Plateau to form. This plateau is elevated 10,000 feet above sea level and incredibly covers more than 130,000 square miles.

ADVERTISEMENT

This region stretches across the modern-day borders of Arizona, Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico. It's a place deep with a history that has taken millions of years to develop.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Lack Of Drainage Forged The Canyon

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Colorado River
David McNew/Getty Images
David McNew/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

During the time when the Colorado Plateau began to form, the drainage system in the area began to undergo a drastic shift. Melting ice and rainwater became trapped in parts of the Rocky Mountains, which began to seep westwards.

ADVERTISEMENT

As time went by, this water began to develop into what we know as the Colorado River, one of the most powerful and destructive rivers in the entire world. Only such an immense force could carve the Grand Canyon.

ADVERTISEMENT

A River At The Bottom Of The Canyon

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Colorado River
MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP via Getty Images
MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

For the following millions of years, the Colorado River blasted through the plateau, breaking away parts of the canyon and wearing down the rocks. It also began carving a path through the sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous layers of rock.

ADVERTISEMENT

The exposed banks then began to suffer from erosion too, creating a canyon that the water would flow through at the bottom of the canyon. Now, there's a river at the base of the canyon.

ADVERTISEMENT

The River Was Affected By Ice Ages

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Grand Canyon covered in snow
DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images
DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

As time passed, the river continued to cut deep into the rock, causing the canyon to grow even wider. Then, around two million years ago, a series of ice ages occurred, which resulted in the climate becoming wetter, making the river's current stronger, allowing it to cut even deeper into the rock.

ADVERTISEMENT

So, as the ice ages came and went, it drastically affected the size of the canyon and transformed it into what we know it as today.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Canyon Grew Over Time

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Arial shot of the canyon
DeAgostini/Getty Images
DeAgostini/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Carved out by the waters of the Colorado River, today, the Grand Canyon is considered to be one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World.

ADVERTISEMENT

According to geologists, the canyon reached its current depth around 1.2 million years ago, right around when the floods and spring melts of the last ice age finally ended. The canyon would also be the place where Allan Krill would make his incredible discovery.

ADVERTISEMENT

People Have Lived In The Area For A Long Time

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Native American art
Patrick Gorski/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Patrick Gorski/NurPhoto via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

By looking at the geological evidence in the area, it may be surprising to learn that people have had a presence in the area for a very long time.

ADVERTISEMENT

Around the same time that the last ice age helped shape the Colorado River into the canyon, humans first began arriving in this region of Arizona. Then, in the mid-16th century, the first Europeans stumbled across this incredible piece of nature.

ADVERTISEMENT

It's Not Only Tourists Who Visit

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Scientists on a boat
Jeff Topping/Getty Images
Jeff Topping/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Although tourists make up the majority of the park's visitors, they aren't the only people that make the journey to Arizona to see the Grand Canyon. Since 1858, the region has become an extremely popular area for scientists like Allan Krill who are fascinated with the geology of the canyon.

ADVERTISEMENT

Thanks to these scientists, we have a better understanding of the past, present, and future of the canyon. One such discovery is that the walls contain no fewer than 13 different types of rock.

ADVERTISEMENT

Famous Rocks

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Man taking pictures
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Today, some of these rocks form the most famous areas of the canyon and are the center of many famous locations and the pictures taken throughout the year.

ADVERTISEMENT

For example, along the northern rim, there is an outcrop known as Isis Temple towers are around 7,000 feet above sea level. Also, there's a part of the canyon known as Granite Gorge, which holds the Colorado River as it flows and cuts its way through the canyon.

ADVERTISEMENT

Secrets Of The Canyon

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
People on a rock
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Although tourists and scientists have been flooding the canyon for years, the Grand Canyon still holds plenty of secrets.

ADVERTISEMENT

For example, back in 2014, geologists from the University of New Mexico published a paper that went against the long-held beliefs about the creation of the canyon. According to the study, one theory that was widely believed for a long time actually turned out to be wrong.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Canyon May Actually Be Younger Than Thought

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
People riding horses
Tom Stoddart/Getty Images
Tom Stoddart/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

In the academic journal Nature Geoscience, geologist Karl Karlstrom argued that the canyon known worldwide is far younger than 70 million years old, which is the age most people believe it to be.

ADVERTISEMENT

Karlstrom wrote, "Different segments of the canyon have different histories and different ages [...], but they didn't get linked together to form the Grand Canyon with the Colorado River running through it until five to six million years ago." So, it may actually be far younger than originally thought.

ADVERTISEMENT

His Claim Was Controversial

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
Robert Alexander/Archive Photos/Getty Images
Robert Alexander/Archive Photos/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Karlstrom's findings have been considered controversial by many, with numerous other scientists disagreeing with Karlstrom's beliefs about the age of the canyon. However, evidence for Karlstrom's claim is constantly disappearing.

ADVERTISEMENT

In an interview with Boston radio station WBUR in 2019, geologist Wane Ranney states, "The Colorado River is constantly tearing away at the walls of the canyon and removing the evidence of its earliest history." So, it's important that they perform their research sooner rather than later.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Erosion Is Not All Bad

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Eagle flying over the Grand Canyon
GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP via Getty Images
GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

However, this doesn't mean that we're going to be losing important areas of the Grand Canyon anytime soon. It's even a kind of blessing.

ADVERTISEMENT

As the rocks in the canyon continue to erode, other secrets are being exposed for the first time in millions of years. One of these secrets is what Krill managed to discover. Among these ancient secrets are fossils of very old animals that used to call the Grand Canyon home all those years ago.

ADVERTISEMENT

Fossilized Footprints

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of footprints
Grand Canyon National Park/Facebook
Grand Canyon National Park/Facebook
ADVERTISEMENT

Allan Krill found animal footprints in the rock! In May 2019, the National Park Service announced that a set of fossilized footprints had been discovered in a distant part of the canyon. Supposedly, these prints once belonged to a tetrapod, which was four-footed creatures that lived in the area around 280 million years ago.

ADVERTISEMENT

In fact, these animals were so ancient that they walked the Earth during a time even before the dinosaurs! So, it was incredible when geologists were able to identify these ancient footprints, thanks to Krill's keen eye for rocks.

ADVERTISEMENT

Discovering The Creature

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Painting of the creature
De Agostini via Getty Images/De Agostini via Getty Images
De Agostini via Getty Images/De Agostini via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

After some analysis, it was discovered by paleontologists that the marking was the work of a creature known as an Ichniotherium.

ADVERTISEMENT

This is a group of tetrapods known as diadectomorphs that had never been seen in a desert environment before. This is what made the discovery so incredible because it shed light on the types of animals that once lived in the area, although they are all gone today.

ADVERTISEMENT

New Information

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the animal
Sepia Times/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Sepia Times/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

In 2019, Dr. Heitor Francischini, a Brazilian paleontologist, explained in a press release that "These new fossil tracks discovered in Grand Canyon National Park provide important information about the paleobiology of the diadectomorphs."

ADVERTISEMENT

He continued, "The diadectomorphs were not expected to live in an arid desert environment because they supposedly did not have the classic adaptations for being completely independent of water."

ADVERTISEMENT

Compiling A Database

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Woman sitting on a rock
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

In 2019, the National Parks Service announced that it would be putting together its largest-ever database of paleontological data ever.

ADVERTISEMENT

This includes a comprehensive catalog of the fossil history of the Grand Canyon, which will greatly aid in helping both experts and everyday tourists gain a better understanding of the region and the animals that both used to live there and currently do now. This way it's likely there could be more surprise fossil finds in the area.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Surprises Didn't Stop

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Bright Angel Trail
Patrick Gorski/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Patrick Gorski/NurPhoto via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Even though experts and amateurs alike have spent the past decades searching the Grand Canyon for fossils, there are still some surprises that are yet to be found, which brings us back to Krill.

ADVERTISEMENT

In 2016, the Norwegian geologist was taking a group of students along the Bright Angel Trail. Krill assumed that it was going to be another typical hike like he had done before, yet little did he know he would become involved in the prehistoric life in the area.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Secret In The Rocks

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Person hiking
Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images
Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Bright Angel Trail is renown for its beauty, and begins on the ravine's southern rim at the Grand Canyon and has a path that runs for eight miles, which simultaneously drops 4,000 feet to the Colorado River.

ADVERTISEMENT

While on the trail, hikers pass several well-known rock formations, including Brahma Temple, and Cheops Pyramid. However, it wasn't the magnificent rock formations that caught Krill's attention, but something much smaller and almost unnoticeable inside the wall of rocks.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Unique Boulder

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
People sitting on rocks
SEBASTIEN DUVAL/AFP via Getty Images
SEBASTIEN DUVAL/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

As he was hiking with his students, Krill spotted a boulder resting on the side of the trail. Yet, this wasn't any typical boulder, as Krill noticed that strange markings were covering it.

ADVERTISEMENT

Also, Krill was able to deduce where the boulder had come from. It was clear that it had come from an exposed section of the cliff known as the Manakacha Formation. It had obviously fallen to the ground.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Specific Type Of Rock

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
Getty Images/Bob Riha, Jr.
Getty Images/Bob Riha, Jr.
ADVERTISEMENT

The boulder came from a part of a rock layer known as the Supai Group, with the Manakacha Formation being a mudstone and limestone cliff that runs throughout the Grand Canyon.

ADVERTISEMENT

For millions of years, it has formed the geological mixture that makes up the incredible Colorado Plateau. However, eventually, a portion of the Manakacha Formation has collapsed, resulting in the boulder being on the trail.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sending Photos To Experts

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
People at the Grand Canyon
Paul Harris/Getty Images
Paul Harris/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Interested in the markings that he had found on the boulder, Krill decided to take a few photos and sent them to Rowland, a University of Nevada paleontologist. Just by looking at the image, the American researcher then confirmed what his colleague had suspected.

ADVERTISEMENT

The patterns were fossilized footprints from millions of years ago. Then, just two years later, Krill's surprise discovery was finally announced at the annual meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Lot Happened In The Following Years

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
People paddling down the river
Joe Munroe/Getty Images
Joe Munroe/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

It would still be another few years before the truth behind Krill's discovery was finally revealed. On August 19, 2020, Rowland and his fellow colleagues, Mario Caputo and Zachary Jenson went on to publish a paper in the scientific journal PLOS ONE.

ADVERTISEMENT

In their writing, the three experts discussed the fossilized tracks around the Grand Canyon, including what Krill discovered when hiking on the Bright Angel Trail with his students.

ADVERTISEMENT

They Could Tell The Age Of The Prints

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
People On The Edge Of A Cliff
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Incredibly, just by looking at previous studies done on the Manakacha Formation as well as geological maps of the area, the researchers were able to figure out the age of the tracks with astonishing precision.

ADVERTISEMENT

As it turns out, Krill had made the right decision to stop and take a closer look at the boulder on the side of the trail. His small decision to do this resulted in one of the most notable recent discoveries at the canyon.

ADVERTISEMENT

They Were Millions Of Years Old

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Fossilized footprint
PHAS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
PHAS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

After studying the footprints, Rowland had come to the conclusion that incredibly, there were around 313 million years old! This means that they originated from the Carboniferous Period.

ADVERTISEMENT

The prints also broke records and are believed to be the oldest fossilized vertebrate footprints ever discovered at the Grand Canyon. So, not only was Krill lucky to find these prints by chance on a rock, but they also turned out to be quite the groundbreaking discovery.

ADVERTISEMENT

There Were Still Questions

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Reptile footprints
DeAgostini/Getty Images
DeAgostini/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Although the researchers were able to determine approximately how old the footprints were, they weren't positive exactly what kind of animal made them. However, what they were sure of was that they were from a reptile.

ADVERTISEMENT

In August 2020, Rowland explained in a statement from the National Parks Service that "They are among the oldest tracks on Earth of shelled-egg-laying animals and the earliest evidence of vertebrate animals walking in sand dunes."

ADVERTISEMENT

Arizona Looked Much Different Back Then

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of footprints
Hoberman Collection/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Hoberman Collection/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

According to the experts' reports, the tracks were formed back when Arizona was nothing more than a plain that was located close to the Equator during a time when the terrain was much different.

ADVERTISEMENT

Rowan claims that at some point, all those millions of years ago, two prehistoric creatures walked diagonally across the ground, which would eventually become a part of the Manakacha Formation, and leaving their footprints behind, only to be discovered by Krill so many years later.

ADVERTISEMENT

Some Have Their Doubts

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of a fossilized foot
ClassicStock/Getty Images
ClassicStock/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Although some of the experts were convinced, not everyone is sure that two separate creatures were responsible for leaving these ancient tracks behind.

ADVERTISEMENT

For instance, some argue that the tracks could have been created by the same vertebrate that was crossing the area on two separate occasions. Yet, no matter the case, it's clear that there are two different sets of prints that were made with varying speeds.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Strange Walking Pattern

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of a fossil footprint
DeAgostini/Getty Images
DeAgostini/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Although it's clear that there are two sets of tracks either made by two animals or the same one on different occasions, it also seems that at least one of the creatures moved using what's called a later-sequence walk.

ADVERTISEMENT

In a 2020 interview with The Arizona Republic, Rowland described the movement of the creature as being "where the left rear foot moves and then the left front, and then the right rear and the right front and so on."

ADVERTISEMENT

Many Animals Today Walk In A Lateral Sequence

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Cat walking
Tim Graham/Getty Images
Tim Graham/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

In his statement, Rowland continued to explain that "Living species of tetrapods - dog and cats, for example - routinely use a lateral-sequence gait when they walk slowly." So, by no means is this style of movement considered to be particularly rare in the animal kingdom, no matter how old the creatures might have been.

ADVERTISEMENT

Rowland went on, "The Bright Angel Trail tracks document the use of this gait very early in the history of vertebrate animals. We previously had no information about that."

ADVERTISEMENT

How The Prints Were Preserved

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Colorado River
Jeff Topping/Getty Images
Jeff Topping/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

A question remained: how did the prints manage to last in the rock for all those millions of years and stay in such good condition? The experts assumed this is possible after the track was covered with sand and water.

ADVERTISEMENT

Then, as the years passed, the impression remained and became part of the rock. For millions of years, these ancient prints remained hidden in the Manakacha Formation until they were discovered and shown to the world.

ADVERTISEMENT

Nothing Is Certain

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
Ivan Dmitri/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
Ivan Dmitri/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Although the experts seem to know as much as they can about the fossilized print, Rowland understands that his findings are far from conclusive. This could lead to some further controversies in the paleontological world.

ADVERTISEMENT

When speaking to the Associated Press in August 2020, Mark Nebel of the Grand Canyon commented, "There's a lot of disagreement in the scientific community about interpreting tracks [and] interpreting the age of rocks – especially interpreting what kind of animal made these tracks."

ADVERTISEMENT

The Boulder Is Now A Tourist Attraction

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Picture of the Grand Canyon
George Rose/Getty Images
George Rose/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Although several questions remain about the prints, the Bright Angel Trail boulder remains where Krill first discovered it. Now, it's a tourist attraction that regular hikers visit, as well as paleontologists and geologists that travel to see it.

ADVERTISEMENT

Nebel explained, "A lot of people walk by and never see it [...] Scientists, we have trained eyes. Now that they know somethding's there, it will draw more interest." Today, discussion of the boulder has spread, and it has become a popular attraction at the canyon. Would you go visit?