Arizona
The tourism industry in ARIZONA has, literally, one
colossal advantage - the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River.
It's the single most awe-inspiring spectacle in a land of
unforgettable geology, and one of the few places in the world that
you absolutely have to see at least once in your life. However, the
Grand Canyon is by no means the most interesting or memorable
destination in the state. Indeed, in comparison to its inhuman
scale, other parts of Arizona have a more abiding emotional impact,
precisely because of the sheer drama of human involvement in this
forbidding but deeply resonant desert landscape.
Over a third of the state still belongs to the Native
Americans who have lived here for centuries, and who outside
the cities form the majority of the population. In the so-called
Indian Country of northeastern Arizona, the reservation
lands of the Navajo Nation hold the stupendous Canyon de
Chelly and dozens of other marvellously sited Ancestral
Puebloan ruins , as well as the stark rocks of Monument
Valley . The Navajo surround the homeland of one of the most
stoutly traditional of all Native American peoples, the Hopi
, who live in remote mesa-top villages . The third main
tribal group are the Apache , in the harshly beautiful
southeastern mountains - the last Native Americans to give in to
the overwhelming power of the white American invaders.
Away from the reservations, Wild West towns like
Tombstone , site of the famed gunfight at the OK Corral,
give a clear sense of Arizona's characteristically rough-and-ready,
pioneer mentality; this was the last of the lower 48 states to join
the Union, in 1912. The cities , however, are not much fun.
In Phoenix , the capital, well over a million souls are
scattered over a 500-square-mile morass of shopping malls and
tract-house suburbs; Tucson is a bit more civil, but still
wears thin after a day or so.
Though the open spaces of southern Arizona can be harsh and
violent - most of the southwestern quarter, along the parallel I-8
and I-10 highways, is used as a bombing range - the bleakness is
balanced somewhat by the many nature reserves which protect its
amazing flora and fauna, such as Saguaro National Park ,
just outside Tucson, with its giant cactuses, real-life roadrunners
and rare Gila monsters.
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