Grand Canyon project to mark centennial


Grand Canyon National Park

"Colorado River in the Grand Canyon," 1925. From the McCulloch Brothers Inc. Photographs collection on the ASU Digital Repository.

|

Thousands of high-quality archival photographs and documents about the early history of the Grand Canyon National Park will be made accessible to the public through a new project called "One Hundred Years of Grand."

The project helps mark the Grand Canyon National Park centennial on Feb. 26, 2019.

University Archivist Rob Spindler said the project, which was recently awarded funding from the Library Services and Technology Act, not only holds significance to state historians but to the more than 280 million people who visit national parks each year, in addition to Arizona businesses and educators.

"Visitors to the park will enhance their experience by exploring historical details of early park history, students and teachers will illustrate class lectures and create assignments on Grand Canyon history, and Arizona businesses that rely on Grand Canyon tourism will use these materials in their advertisement and marketing efforts," Spindler said.

The project, endorsed by the Arizona Office of Tourism, is a collaboration between ASU Library, Northern Arizona University (NAU) Special Collections and Archives and the Grand Canyon Museum, National Park Service.

High-quality digital materials will be presented and delivered via online repositories, such as the ASU Digital Repository and NAU's Colorado Plateau Digital Archives.

"Community members will benefit because they will be able to acquire and reuse archives, enhance their tourism experience with historical context, learn about balancing public and commercial uses of public lands, and celebrate the Grand Canyon National Park centennial with creative uses of historical materials," Spindler said.

The Grand Canyon project is supported by the Arizona State Library, Archives andPublic Records, a division of the Secretary of State, with federal funds from the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

More Environment and sustainability

 

Mother and child polar bear at the endge of a glacier in the Last Ice Area of northern Canada.

New study on Arctic’s ‘Last Ice Area’ highlights the urgency for reducing warming

The Arctic’s “Last Ice Area” — a vital habitat for ice-dependent species — might disappear within a decade after the central…

A helicopter douses a wildfire with water.

ASU fire expert Stephen Pyne on learning to live alongside fire

Stephen Pyne is having a busy retirement. On top of caring for chickens, sheep and citrus on his urban farm in Queen Creek,…

Burned desert vegetation

New interdisciplinary research highlights wildfire impacts on water and ecosystems in arid regions

As wildfires increasingly threaten arid regions, a new conceptual framework developed by a team of researchers offers a fresh…