
Gold on Turquoise
The golden light on the surrounding cliffs reflects on the turquoise waters of the Little Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park.

Reflecting on the Little Colorado
Sunlit cliffs reflect in the turquoise waters of the Little Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park.

Tafoni in Blacktail Canyon
In the cliff walls of Blacktail Canyon are these small erosion pockets known as tafoni. The etymology of the word tafoni is unclear, but it may come from the Greek word taphos, or tomb. The largest of these tafoni measured close to five inches across.

Fire in Fern Glen
The fiery glow of reflected light in the narrows of Fern Glen in Grand Canyon National Park.

Musical Waters
The waterfalls of Elves Chasm. Royal Arch Creek in the Grand Canyon.

Reflected Light in Blacktail
Blacktail Canyon, a side canyon to the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park.

The Terrace at Fern Glen
Fern Glen Canyon, a side canyon to the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park.

Monument to Granite
Monument Creek flows into the Colorado River at Granite Rapid. From river mile 94 in Grand Canyon National Park.

Deer Creek Falls
Deer Creek waterfall in the Grand Canyon.

Sinuous Matkat
A small stream flows through a narrow passage in Matkatamiba Canyon. Near river mile 148 on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park

North Canyon Rapid
The Colorado River rushes through Marble Canyon at North Canyon Rapid. From river mile 20 in Grand Canyon National Park.

Chaos on the Colorado
Rapids churn on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.

Ancient Vista
Golden light reflects off the Colorado River as it meanders beneath the cliffs of Marble Canyon. From the trail to the Nankoweap Granaries in Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona.

Aqueous Apparition
North Canyon Rapid on the Colorado River in Marble Canyon. From river mile 20 in Grand Canyon National Park.

Whiserping Wind at Nankoweap
Beneath the towering cliffs of Marble Canyon near Nankoweap are the beautiful forms of these dead trees. They are far enough from the shoreline that you can no longer hear the river. The onyl sound is the wghisper of the wind through their branches.