Resources
From maps and fact sheets to scientific data and issue briefs – the most vital information about the issues you care about, at your fingertips.

Native voices share their personal and cultural connections to the Colorado River and the Grand Canyon.

Watch, listen, and learn from Native people who have called the Grand Canyon home since time immemorial.

Native voices share their personal and cultural connections to the Little Colorado River in this multimedia story collection.

Native voices — sheepherders, scientists, educators, farmers, artists, and activists — share their personal and cultural connections to the Little Colorado River, from its headwaters to the Grand Canyon

Native voices share their personal and cultural connections to the Little Colorado River in this collection of stories.

Loretta Jackson-Kelly, a Hualapai woman, speaks about her ancestral ties to the Grand Canyon and the importance of the Colorado River to her people.

Nikki Cooley, a Diné woman and Grand Canyon river guide, talks about her cultural view of the Colorado River and how to visit respectfully.

Jim Enote, a Zuni tribal member, traditional farmer, and CEO of the Colorado Plateau Foundation talks about his homelands, the Zuni place of emergence, petroglyphs, and connections to the Grand Canyon.

Year after year of economic data shows that Grand Canyon National Park is an economic engine for northern Arizona.

According to Dianna Sue White Dove Uqualla (Havasupai), the Grand Canyon is one of the most powerful altars in this world.

Zoom in on this interactive map of Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni – Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument.

Find out what Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni – Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument protects in this interactive story map.

See a map of the Havasupai, Hopi, Hualapai, Navajo, Southern Paiute, Yavapai-Apache, and Zuni tribes’ traditional connections to the Grand Canyon region.

Completed in 1963, Glen Canyon Dam was designed to operate with a full reservoir behind it. But climate change and rising demand of water across the thirsty West are shrinking Lake Powell. It’s time to address the dam’s design flaws.

Below Glen Canyon Dam, nonnative fish like smallmouth bass are threatening imperiled humpback chub in the Grand Canyon. Get the facts.

The rules for managing the Colorado River expire at the end of 2026. There isn’t enough water in the Colorado River to go around. New rules are desperately needed to sustain the river for people and the environment.

A map of the traditional tribal connections to the Grand Canyon.

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