W Post
 
New research revives debate over  Grand Canyon’s age

 
 
By _Joel Achenbach_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/joel-achenbach/2011/02/24/AB5edOJ_page.html) , 
Sunday, January 26,  2014

 
 
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When we last checked in on the _Old Canyon vs. Young Canyon_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/grand-canyon-70-million-years-old-fo
rmed-during-era-of-dinosaurs-new-study-claims/2012/11/29/5788b9d0-3a45-11e2-
b01f-5f55b193f58f_story.html)  debate, in late 2012, the Old  Canyoneers 
had just put forth a new paper in the journal Science declaring the  Grand 
Canyon to be roughly 70 million years old, having been excised by rivers  other 
than the one that’s currently at the bottom, the Colorado. 
That figure, if accurate, would make the Grand Canyon so old that dinosaurs 
 could have been among the first tourists. 



 
But now comes another rebuttal, _published Sunday online in the journal 
Nature Geoscience_ (http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2065) ,  stating that the 
canyon as we see it today is 5 million to 6 million years old,  with some older 
stretches in a couple of spots, including one patch that reaches  almost 
back to the dinosaur era. 
“The canyon we see today is young, but it made use of some old segments,”  
said Karl Karlstrom, professor of geology at the University of New Mexico 
and  lead author of the new paper. 
He added, “The question is resolved that the canyon is not 70 million years 
 old.”  
Not so fast. Consensus is hard to come by in a debate in which the opposing 
 viewpoints have been separated by a yawning chasm. The Old Canyon 
advocates are  sticking to their story. 
The lead author of the 2012 paper, University of Colorado geologist Rebecca 
 Flowers, said by e-mail that “it will take a bit more time to understand 
fully  why their interpretations are so different from ours.”  
Brian Wernicke, a Caltech geologist who co-authored that paper with 
Flowers,  and who is considered a leader of the Old Canyon caucus, said he 
still 
believes  that the westernmost stretch of the canyon is 70 million years old, 
when it was  carved to within a thousand feet of its current depth.  
“The idea that the westernmost Grand Canyon was filled up with rock [until 
6  million years ago], that’s just a nonstarter for us,” Wernicke said. 
Both camps rely on thermochronology, which measures the past temperatures 
of  rocks along the canyon wall. Scientists take rock samples and study them 
by  microscope, looking for crystals known as apatite. The crystals record 
the decay  of radioactive elements into helium as hot, buried rocks are 
exposed to the  surface by erosion and cool down.  
Karlstrom’s paper grants that a section of the eastern canyon is fairly 
old,  having been excised 15 million to 25 million years ago. And there’s an 
even  older portion, known as the Hurricane fault segment, that the Karlstrom 
papers  states was carved 50 million to 65 million years ago by a 
northwest-flowing  river.  
But in the Karlstrom formulation, that’s not the Grand Canyon we see today. 
 About 5 million to 6 million years ago, the Karlstrom paper says, the 
Colorado  River integrated the two older canyon segments with two very young 
canyon  segments and began flowing into the Gulf of California. The canyon then 
got  wider and deeper. The canyon has since deepened at a fairly steady 
rate of  roughly 100 to 200 meters (328 to 656 feet) every million years, the 
paper  states. 
Joel Pederson, a geologist at Utah State University, said of the new paper, 
 “It certainly doesn’t end the debate.” He added, “If you want to call 
something  ‘Grand Canyon,’ and you want to do it correctly, ‘Grand Canyon’ 
is less than 6  million years old and that’s all there is to it.” 
Now comes a new geological wrinkle: James Sears, a professor of geology at  
the University of Montana, has published research arguing that the 
mysterious  river that carved the eastern Grand Canyon about 25 million years 
ago 
could have  flowed through Nevada, Idaho and Montana and all the way up 
through Canada to  the Atlantic Ocean. 
He bases this on gravel deposits found in Montana that don’t match any of 
the  local bedrock but do match the bedrock in Nevada. In that formulation, 
the  ancestral Colorado River would have followed the base of a mountain 
range in  what is now the western United States and flowed to the Atlantic in a 
huge  watershed reminiscent of today’s Amazon as it emerges from the Andes.  
“The moral of the story is that the tectonics of western North America have 
 been very active in the recent geologic past, and the way we see it today 
was  not the way it was,” Sears said. “It’s very hard to read through the 
modern  landscape to see this ancient landscape, because the tectonics have 
been so  active.”

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