A new line of evidence links Arizona’s Meteor Crater to a huge landslide and cliff collapse that blocked the Colorado River roughly 56,000 years ago.

The event likely created a long, temporary lake inside the Grand Canyon and left telltale debris high on cave walls.

The scale is striking. One landslide appears to have bottled up the river and backed water upstream for about 39 miles, flooding caves perched far above today’s flow.

Cliffs, meteors, and landslides

In a new study, researchers tied driftwood and lake sediments in high Grand Canyon caves to a single ancient flood pulse, then matched that pulse to the age of the Meteor Crater impact.

The proposed …

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