Grand Canyon National Park's "Minute Out In It" is a collection of short films of the park's nature and culture in action. Enjoy these sights and sounds from the Grand Canyon and be sure to look and listen for them during your next visit to the park.
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Down in the depths of Grand Canyon, along the Bright Angel Creek, lies one of the most notorious sections of the corridor trails. Called "The Box" for the walls towering over the trail, enclosing the hiker in a narrow passage of granite and schist, this section of trail is dangerously hot in the summer. The blackened stone radiates heat like a blast furnace, often exceeding 120 degrees Fahrenheit in the shade. Spend a Minute Out In It in a section of The Box, and remember to cool off in the creek often!
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 1 second
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Grand Canyon is a popular waystation that monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) use along their migratory route from Canada to Mexico each fall. Their large, bright orange wings are a beautiful sight and a way to warn predators that the butterfly is poisonous to consume. Grand Canyon National Park participates in monarch studies as the species and its migration are sensitive to climatic changes. Take a "Minute Out In It" to flit about with a park ranger as she works to catch and tag monarchs.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 25 seconds
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Just below Indian Garden, on the Bright Angel Trail, hikers and mule riders pass along a winding and narrow shelf, sitting high above Garden Creek. This section of the trail, called the Tapeats Narrows, meanders through the Tapeats Sandstone, an over 500-million-year-old rock layer deposited during the Cambrian Period. Water cutting through this hard rock layer leaves behind cliffs and narrows as opposed to the slopes of softer rock. Take a Minute Out In It down in the depths of this riparian respite.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 18 seconds
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Water is life. For the thousands of residents and the millions of visitors of Grand Canyon National Park, that life comes forth from Roaring Springs. Take a Minute Out In It to appreciate the source of our drinking water. This is it, in all its power and fragility. Seeing the water flow down the Canyon walls, hearing the roar, smelling the sweet riparian creek life, feeling the cold water through one's fingers, one truly senses the importance of land stewardship. Where does the water you drink come from?
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 7 seconds
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Among the 1,750 species of plants at Grand Canyon, there is only one federally-listed as endangered: the sentry milkvetch (Astragalus cremnophylax var. cremnophylax). A member of the pea family, sentry milkvetch is a tiny, perennial herb that grows only in shallow soil pockets in cracks of the Kaibab Limestone, within 25 feet of the rim of Grand Canyon. Spend a Minute Out In It with the park's Vegetation crew, as they protect some of the precious few sentry milkvetch growing on the edge of the world.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 46 seconds
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Hopisinom (the Hopi people) have a traditional calendar that speaks to their connection to the changes in seasons through ceremony. Each moon cycle is named to coincide with the time of year. This time of year, 'baby hawks' grow stronger for the coming winter, symbolic of the young members who have been newly initiated into the tribe. Spend a Minute Out In It watching Kelmuya, the November Sparrow Hawk Moon, rise over Ongtupqa (Grand Canyon).
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 1 second
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Sometimes noticing the small can help augment the Grand. If visitors manage to pull away from the enchanting canyon cliffs and gorges, they may find subtle beauty quietly thriving in the juniper-pinyon woodland all around them. About 3.5 in (90mm) long, the Plateau lizard (Sceloporus tristichus) has creamy white lines running down its side and a stunning turquoise spot under its neck. Take a Minute Out In It to peer down at the woodland floor and appreciate the beauty of the microcosm!
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 6 seconds
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The Grand Canyon may inspire your inner artist. The Artist-In-Residence program at Grand Canyon National Park offers selected artists 6-8 weeks as an on-site resident. Heather L. Johnson saw her time as Grand Canyon’s Artist in Residence as an opportunity to broaden her self-awareness by examining intimately how her presence affects parts of the park and how the qualities and features of these environments affect her. Take a Minute Out In It to join her for a quick sketch along the rim!
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 22 seconds
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“Grand Canyon is a space that is filled with embodied relationships to the land. My goal is to create art that inspires that.” Erin Reynolds recently ended her time as Artist in Residence. She is a dancer, a professor of dance, and an artistic director. Her residency was spent giving programs to the public that explored site-conscious movement. She also created a film called “The Sum of Ones Parts.” Spend a Minute Out In It watching Erin explore the land through dance, under the setting Sun and rising Moon.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 33 seconds
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“I recommend starting to hike pre-dawn, you'll want to make it up The Corkscrew before it gets too hot.” So says many a park ranger to backpackers at the bottom of the Grand Canyon enquiring about the hike out. Also known as Devil’s Corkscrew, this section of the Bright Angel Trail is notorious for its steep grade and, in the summer, its dangerous heat. Take a Minute Out In It to experience The Corkscrew in the late fall, when backpackers enjoy a respite from the heat--an ideal time to hike the Canyon.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 10 seconds
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Hopisinom (the Hopi people) have a traditional calendar that speaks to their connection to the changes in seasons through ceremony. Each moon cycle is named to coincide with the time of year. In July, the Hopi ritualize the going-home dance ceremonies known as Niman, when the spiritual entities known as Katsinas depart the Hopi Villages and return to the sacred Katsina Peaks. Spend a Minute Out In It watching Nimanmuya, the July Going Home Moon, rise over Ongtupqa (Grand Canyon).
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 23 seconds
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Grand Canyon Railway steam doubleheader arriving at Grand Canyon Village to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the revival of Grand Canyon Railway, on September 21, 2019. The train featured No. 29 and No. 4960 pulling the Williams Flyer round-trip from Williams, Arizona to Grand Canyon, with no diesel locomotive assist.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 51 seconds
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A Colorado River expedition offers many opportunities to witness the passing of time, seasonal changes, and current conditions. We take pleasure in the journey. It's the joy of the ride, the sight of wildlife, the smell of rain, the roar of rapids, the endless night sky, and the unity we experience: that oneness between us, the river, and the canyon that makes running this river so special.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 1 second
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Recorded on April 17, 2011 at Pipe Creek, which is along the Tonto Trail and east of Indian Garden. The condor in the video is #87, a male, hatched in captivity on 4/22/1998. In 2008: sired 476M/H6 w/ 133F/33 in Redwall cave below Grandeur Point.
- Duration:
- 59 seconds
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Split Rock is located on Bright Angel Creek and along the North Kaibab Trail, above Cottonwood Campground and about 1/2 mile (.8km) below the Roaring Springs Ranger Station. (residence) The North Kaibab Trail is the least visited but most difficult of the three maintained trails at Grand Canyon National Park. (There is no narration accompanying this video)
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 1 second
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Mule trips into the canyon - as well as rides through the park's woodlands to scenic canyon overlooks - are offered on both the North and South Rims.
- Duration:
- 58 seconds
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"Just after dinner we pass a stream on the right, which leaps into the Colorado by a direct fall of more than 100 feet, forming a beautiful cascade. On the rocks in the cave-like chamber are ferns, with delicate fronds and enameled stalks." - John Wesley Powell, August 23, 1869.
- Duration:
- 59 seconds
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Serenity comes to Grand Canyon during the winter. Stillness. On clear, crisp mornings, some bundle up and venture out to witness sunrise on the rim. Low temperatures are generally in the teens along the Rim; however afternoon highs still average in the 40s (4-9°C), due to the amount of sunshine the area receives.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 16 seconds
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WATER is the lifeblood of Grand Canyon — a force of erosion, a sustainer of scarce riparian habitat in a desert environment, a spiritual element for native peoples, a provider of recreation, and a central factor in the exploration, development, and politics of the American West. Recorded on April 21, 2012 along Hermit Creek, in the vicinity of Hermit Creek Campground.
- Duration:
- 1 minute
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Arizona State Centennial (1912-2012) Steam Train Departing Grand Canyon Depot and Village, February 14, 2012.
- Duration:
- 1 minute, 47 seconds
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