Facts About | |
Capital | |
Population | 6,340,000 people |
Rank among states in population | 17th |
Major cities | |
Area | 114,000 square miles 295,000 square kilometers |
Rank among states in area | 6th |
Statehood | February 14, 1912, the 48th state |
State nickname | The |
Name for residents | Arizonans |
State bird | Cactus Wren |
State flower | Saguaro Blossom |
State tree | Palo Verde |
Abbreviation | AZ |
THE GRAND CANYON STATE
You can stand at the rim of the canyon and look down at the river below. You’ll see rock formations in a rainbow of colors. The colors change during the day as the Sun moves across the sky. An exciting trip is a mule ride to the bottom of the canyon.
STONE TREES AND A PAINTED DESERT
Where can you find a forest of stone trees and a painted desert? Try eastern Arizona . The trees in the Petrified Forest National Park died millions of years ago. They were buried by sand and mud. Minerals slowly replaced the wood, and the trees turned to stone. Different minerals created different colors. You’ll see petrified (stone) trees in a variety of bright colors, including pink, red, orange, and purple.
The Painted Desert starts in the Petrified Forest and extends north. The hills and mesas (flat-topped rocks) in the Painted Desert look like layer cakes of different-colored stone. Minerals like iron and aluminum create the colors. You’ll see reds, oranges, and pinks as well as blues, grays, and lavenders.
A CACTUS FOREST
At least 50 kinds of cactuses grow in Arizona . The largest is the saguaro. It can grow 50 feet (15 meters) tall! It takes a long time for a cactus to reach that height, but saguaro cactuses can live 200 years. Giant saguaros form a forest at the Saguaro National Park in southeastern Arizona .
Coyotes, foxes, squirrels, and other desert animals feast on the sweet saguaro fruit. Woodpeckers make nesting holes in the trunk or large branches of saguaros.
CITIES IN THE DESERT
In 1870, white settlers founded Phoenix on the eastern edge of the Sonoran Desert , near the Salt River . The settlers built canals to bring water from the Salt River to fields near Phoenix . The canals followed the paths of canals built hundreds of years earlier by Hohokam Indians to irrigate their fields.
Agriculture helped Phoenix grow quickly. On February 14, 1912, Arizona became the 48th state. Phoenix was named the state capital.
NAVAJO CODE TALKERS
Today, most Native Americans in Arizona live on reservations. The Navajo Reservation borders the Grand Canyon . It is the largest reservation in the United States .
During World War II (1939-1945), Navajo soldiers in the U.S. Marines used their language as a secret code. Navajo code talkers relayed secret messages about troop movements and other enemy activities by telephone and radio. The code talkers were used against the Japanese. Japan never broke the Navajo code.
DWELLINGS IN CLIFFS
Hundreds of years ago, Native Americans in the Southwest built dwellings in hollows on the sides of cliffs. They entered their dwellings by ladders.
You can see the remains of cliff dwellings at several sites in Arizona , including Canyon de Chelly National Monument and Montezuma Castle National Monument .
To see the Wild West of gunslingers, go to Tombstone , Arizona . The lawless mining town boomed in the late 1800s, after silver was discovered nearby.
Gunfighter Wyatt Earp, one of the heroes of the American West, came to Tombstone in 1879 to enforce the law. In 1881, he took part in a famous shootout against cattle rustlers at the O.K. Corral. Movies and TV shows have celebrated his encounters with outlaws.
Do you know the nursery rhyme “London Bridge Is Falling Down”? Well, London Bridge in London , England , was falling down in the mid-1900s. A wealthy American decided to buy it and move it to the Arizona desert in the 1960s. The bridge now crosses Lake Havasu , a lake created by a dam on the Colorado River .
METEOR CRATER
Near Winslow , Arizona , there’s a giant hole in the desert. It’s called Meteor Crater. About 50,000 years ago, a meteor hit Earth here. It left a crater almost 1 mile (almost 1.6 kilometers) wide and about 600 feet (over 180 meters) deep.
The meteor was much smaller than the crater. It probably measured about 150 feet (about 50 meters) across. But it was traveling at high speed, about 40,000 miles per hour (about 60,000 kilometers per hour), when it smashed into Earth. The force of the collision created the gigantic crater.