Two billion years ago the river we call Colorado opened a **** in the Kaibab Plateau
sculpting sandstone, granite, and limestone spectra on the rugged canyon walls - reflecting the seering Arizona sun.
Millennial torrents scoured the surface. Juniper and Aspen, torn from the expanding banks, ****** into the river's red-stained vortex.
All the while the restless Colorado, obedient to gravity's law, scoured its bed a mile below the rim. The last dinosaur perished - choked by volcanic soot.
Pangaea rumbled, groaned and split and an eye-blink ago our African parents stood to take their first faltering steps.
Their progeny crossed the Bering bridge roaming south to build stone shelters tucked against these canyon walls.
Did the Havasupai huddle in fright of the jagged firelight searing the skies - pounding the air across the hollows?
And emerging at stormβs end did they gaze at the rainbow mist spread over the buttes and valleys?
After dusk, with fires withering to embers, did they rest supine, heads pillowed on their arms, pondering the jewel case universe above?
*November, 2006
Included in Unity Tree, published by Create Space available from Amazon.com in both book and Kindle formats.