GRAND CANYON
Grand Canyon is formed by a single river, the Colorado River. This canyon is 4,674 feet deep and 277 miles long. The ages of the rocks in this canyon range from Precambrian to Pennsylvian/Permian, with a combined duration of 1.8 billion years.
By the way, there is a commercially available, rubber-raft (or wood boat) trip down through the Grand Canyon.
Figure 1. A representative portion of the Grand Canyon, Arizona; image by R. L. Squires, Sept. 1973.
COPPER CANYON
Copper Canyon is a scenic area in northwest Mexico, in the state of Chihuahua and is always compared (online at least) to the Grand Canyon in Arizona, USA. The name “Copper Canyon” is derived from the copper-green hue of some of its canyon walls.
By the way, it is possible to take a commercial train through the Copper Canyon area, which has extensive Douglas Fir, pine, and oak trees along the route.
Copper Canyon is actually a misnomer. It is not a single canyon, rather it a network of six separate canyons with many side canyons. The deepest part of canyon network is 6,136 feet.
Copper Canyon encompasses about 25,000 square miles, that together is four to seven times the size of the Grand Canyon (depending on how you map the Copper Canyon area).
Cooper Canyon rocks consist primarily of explosive volcanic ash flows, mudflows, and breccia (angular conglomerates), deposited approximately 20 to 40 million years ago during early Eocene to early Miocene time.
Figure 2. A representative area of a part of Copper Canyon (image modified from an image in the website entitled: images.pexels.com).