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Grand Canyon Travel Guide

This travel guide from Frommer's expert is chockfull of information.

ByABC News via logo
May 6, 2008, 1:11 PM

May 7, 2008 — -- The Grand Canyon has a mythic hold over visitors, thanks to its diverse wildlife, flora and fauna, and expansive, cavernous red terrain of terraced buttes and mesas that stretch for 277 river miles across the Arizona desert. The Colorado River bisects the canyon and divides it between the North Rim and the South Rim.

Quick facts about the Grand Canyon:

The oldest and deepest rock layer, the Vishnu Formation, was formed some 2 billion years ago.

More than1,500 and 400 plant and animal species can be found in the Grand Canyon.

The Grand Canyon is up to 18 miles wide in some places and a mile deep.

Grand Canyon was made a national monument in 1908 and became a national park in 1919.

The Grand Canyon is populated by five American Indian tribes: Hopi, Navajo, Havasupai, Paiute and Hualapai.

The Grand Canyon National Park

Telephone: 928-638-7888

Web site: www.nps.gov/grca

North Rim entrance is located about 30 miles south of Jacob Lake on Highway 67, close to Utah; the canyon rim is an additional 14 miles south. The South Rim is 60 miles north of Williams, Ariz., (via Route 64 from Interstate 40) and 80 miles northwest of Flagstaff (via Route 180).

If you're renting a car and driving to the South Rim, it's advisable to park in a designated spot and take one of the canyon's free shuttles. The Grand Canyon is a good distance from major airports, and many people fly into either Phoenix, which is 220 miles from the South Rim, or McCarran Airport in Las Vegas, 263 miles from the North Rim, and rent a car at either point.

For more information on how to get to the Grand Canyon by car, bus, train or shuttle, click here.

Costs: $25 per private vehicle. The cost for those who enter on foot, bicycle, motorcycle or as part of a noncommercial group is $12 per person. Admission is valid for seven days and gains you entrances to both the North and South Rims. Visiting the Skywalk (tel. 877-716-9378; www.grandcanyonskywalk.com) is an entirely separate affair, as it is owned and managed by the Hualapai tribe and not the park; admission is $29.95.

There are a variety of options both inside and outside the park, and camping remains a popular option. If you're interested in staying inside the park, the reservations are handled by Xanterra Parks and Resorts (tel. 888-29-PARKS; www.xanterra.com). If you want to camp in the park, reservations can be made for two of the campgrounds within the park through the National Recreation Service (tel. 877/444-6777; www.recreation.gov).

Expensive: El Tovar Hotel

Moderate: Grand Canyon Lodge

Budget: North Rim Campground