Susan Lamb
Writer/Naturalist


Selected Works
and
Works in Progress

Cultures of the Southwest
American Indian Folk Art of the Southwest
One of four guides to Southwestern arts by Susan Lamb.
Pueblo and Mission
Cultural roots of the Southwest
National Parks
Grand Canyon: The Vault of Heaven
An illustrated portrait.
Channel Islands National Park
A guide to the park.
Mesa Verde
Interpretive essays.
Natural History
100 Common Wildflowers of California
A field guide with notes on natural history.
Work in Progress: Fiction
The Bishop's Woman
A Novel of the New West.
Work in Progress: Natural and Cultural History
A Canticle of the Seasons
Nature, Science, and Faith.


Excerpt from Chapter Two:

Layers and Layers of Life

  Grand Canyon’s rocks tell us of past environments, of lost worlds teeming with forms of life that became extinct before the dinosaurs. Today within the canyon we also find a marvelous array of living flora and fauna: various plants that wine, bristle, or sprawl as well as prowling, flapping, and swimming animals. Life takes so many forms here!

  Plants and animals that would ordinarily be scattered all over the American West are close neighbors at Grand Canyon. The Canyon is a mile deep, so deep that the rims are often thirty degrees cooler than the Inner Canyon and may receive twice as much rain and snow. These extreme differences in climate result in several distinct habitats between the rim and the river. A young naturalist named C. Hart Merriam observed these distinctions here and on a lengthy expedition to the nearby San francisco Peaks in 1889, and published a description of them in 1890. At about eight thousand feet above sea level on the North Rim, spruce and fir forests of the Boreal Zone bristle around moist clearings, while massive ponderosas dominate the Transition Zone of the South Rim a thousand feet lower. In the Upper Sonoran Zone below that, a dwarf forest of pinyon pines and junipers gradually gives way to gray shrubs and grasses lower down. in the Canyon’s depths simmers a true desert of cactus and creosote bush: the Lower Sonoran Zone.

  There is yet another, entirely different world along the river at the very bottom of Grand Canyon. Tree frogs call from rocks lining pools hung with maidenhair fern, golden columbine, and scarlet monkeyflower. Violet-green swallows ‘hawk’ insects newly-hatched from the water, and in turn are snatched by peregrine falcons. Butterflies flutter along the river corridor on their long migrations, safe from the winds above the rim. Rare razorback suckers feed on the bottom of the turbulent Colorado, now shared with striped bass, catfish, and trout, and with the beavers that build dens in the riverbanks…





Find Authors

Created by The Authors Guild

A note for users of older versions of Internet Explorer, Netscape, or AOL:
This site will look a lot better in a newer browser. Download one for free!
Internet Explorer: Windows Mac   |   Netscape: Windows Mac Other
For AOL users, please choose Internet Explorer above.