Arizona | Geography, Facts, Map, & History (2024)

flag of Arizona

Seal of Arizona

Arizona's state bird is the cactus wren.

The blossom of the saguaro cactus is Arizona's state flower.

Category:

Capital:
Phoenix
Population:
(2020) 7,151,502; (2023 est.) 7,431,344
Governor:
Katie Hobbs (Democrat)
Date Of Admission:
February 14, 1912
U.S. Senators:
Mark Kelly (Democrat)
Kyrsten Sinema (Democrat)

Recent News

Feb. 23, 2024, 12:02 AM ET (AP)

Native American tribes gain new authority to stop unwanted hydopower projects

Feb. 21, 2024, 8:04 PM ET (AP)

Republican prosecutor in Arizona takes swipe at New York district attorney prosecuting Trump

Feb. 20, 2024, 9:28 PM ET (AP)

Man suspected in killing of woman in NYC hotel room arrested in Arizona after two stabbings there

Feb. 20, 2024, 7:29 PM ET (AP)

Man suspected in killing of woman in NYC hotel room arrested in Arizona after two stabbings there

Feb. 19, 2024, 6:09 PM ET (AP)

Trout says he wants to stay with Angels. Rendon discusses where baseball ranks on his priority list

Arizona, constituent state of the United States of America. Arizona is the sixth largest state in the country in terms of area. Its population has always been predominantly urban, particularly since the mid-20th century, when urban and suburban areas began growing rapidly at the expense of the countryside. Some scholars believe that the state’s name comes from a Basque phrase meaning “place of oaks,” while others attribute it to a Tohono O’odham (Papago) Indian phrase meaning “place of the young (or little) spring.” Arizona achieved statehood on February 14, 1912, the last of the 48 conterminous United States to be admitted to the union.

Arizona is a land of contradictions. Although widely reputed for its hot low-elevation desert covered with cacti and creosote bushes, more than half of the state lies at an elevation of at least 4,000 feet (1,200 metres) above sea level, and it possesses the largest stand of evergreen ponderosa pine trees in the world. Arizona is well known for its waterless tracts of desert, but, thanks to many large man-made lakes, it has many more miles of shoreline than its reputation might suggest. Such spectacular landforms as the Grand Canyon and the Painted Desert have become international symbols of the region’s ruggedness, yet Arizona’s environment is so delicate that in many ways it is more threatened by pollution than are New York City and Los Angeles. Its romantic reputation as a wild desert and a place of old-fashioned close-to-the-earth simplicity is at variance with the fact that after the 1860s the state’s economy became industrial and technological long before it was pastoral or agrarian.

Arizona is located in the southwestern quadrant of the conterminous states, bordered by California to the west, Nevada to the northwest, Utah to the north, New Mexico to the east, and the Mexican state of Sonora to the south. The Colorado River forms the boundary with California and Nevada. Phoenix, situated in the south-central part of the state, is the capital and largest city. Area 113,990 square miles (295,233 square km). Population (2020) 7,151,502; (2023 est.) 7,431,344.

Land

Plate tectonics—the shifting of large, relatively thin segments of Earth’s crust—and stream erosion have done the most to create Arizona’s spectacular topography. Specifically, the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate came into contact and created the major tectonic forces that uplifted, wrinkled, and stretched Arizona’s geologic crust, forming its mountain ranges, basins, and high plateaus. Over the course of millennia, rivers and their tributaries have carved distinctive landforms on these surfaces.

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Relief

To Arizona’s two major physiographic divisions, the Colorado Plateau and the Basin and Range Province, geologists add the Transition Zone (or Central Highlands). The northeastern two-fifths of Arizona is part of the scenic Colorado Plateau. Far less rugged than adjacent portions of the plateau in Utah, these tablelands in Arizona consist mainly of plains interrupted by steplike escarpments. Although they are labeled mesas and plateaus, their ruggedness and inaccessibility have been exaggerated. The incomparable Grand Canyon of the Colorado River provides the major exception to what has proved to be an area easily traversed. Forest-clad volcanic mountains atop the plateaus provide the state’s highest points: Humphreys Peak, 12,633 feet (3,851 metres), in the San Francisco Mountains, and Baldy Mountain, 11,403 feet (3,476 metres), in the White Mountains.

More than 200 miles (320 km) of the southern border of the Colorado Plateau is marked by a series of giant escarpments known collectively as the Mogollon Rim. West and south of the rim, a number of streams follow narrow canyons or broad valleys south through the Transition Zone and into the Basin and Range Province. The Transition Zone bordering the plateaus comprises separated plateau blocks, rugged peaks, and isolated rolling uplands so forbidding that they remained mostly unexplored until the late 19th century. The zone marks the ecological border between the low deserts and the forested highlands; it combines elements of both with, for example, the Spanish bayonet of the Sonoran Desert growing alongside the juniper characteristic of higher elevations.

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The Basin and Range region of the southern and western third of the state contains the bulk of the population but none of the large canyons and mesas for which Arizona is famous. It consists largely of broad, open-ended basins or valleys of gentle slope. Isolated northwest-to-southeast–tending mountain ranges rise like islands in the desert plain.

Contrary to desert stereotypes, sand dunes are nearly nonexistent, and stony desert surfaces are seldom visible except in the far southwestern portion of the state. The younger soils of river floodplains provide the more-desirable soils for agriculture.

Drainage

Virtually all of Arizona lies within the Colorado River drainage system. The Gila River, with its major feeder streams—the Salt and the Verde—is by far the Colorado’s main Arizona tributary.

The Black, White, and Verde rivers are the primary perennial tributaries of the Salt River, which enters the Gila River southwest of Phoenix. Only during the infrequent—and occasionally devastating—flood periods does runoff water advance downstream past the numerous dams built on the Salt’s system. The Gila River rises in that part of the Mogollon Rim located in western New Mexico, and it includes another and smaller Mogollon Rim tributary, the San Francisco River. Two intermittent southern Arizona streams, the Santa Cruz and San Pedro rivers, flow northward into the Gila, while two other intermittent streams, the Agua Fria and Hassayampa rivers, drain central Arizona southward into the Gila. Dams and irrigation systems, except on rare occasions, leave the Gila River dry for most of its length.

The Little Colorado River—which drains the Mogollon Rim’s lee side and flows from southeast to northwest into the Colorado River between Marble Canyon and the Grand Canyon—draws and transports little water from its large watershed. Because of the rain shadow effect on the Mogollon Rim’s lee side, the Little Colorado usually is no more than a trickle and often is dry. Several other small and intermittent streams, such as the Bill Williams River, drain a large but arid part of western Arizona.

Arizona | Geography, Facts, Map, & History (2024)

FAQs

What are some interesting facts about the geography of Arizona? ›

Arizona is a land of contradictions. Although widely reputed for its hot low-elevation desert covered with cacti and creosote bushes, more than half of the state lies at an elevation of at least 4,000 feet (1,200 metres) above sea level, and it possesses the largest stand of evergreen ponderosa pine trees in the world.

What is Arizona known for in history? ›

The Grand Canyon, considered one of the seven great natural wonders of the world, earned Arizona the nickname the “Grand Canyon State.” Located mainly in Arizona, Grand Canyon National Park became one of the first national parks established in the United States when it was christened by Teddy Roosevelt in 1908.

What are 3 interesting facts about Phoenix Arizona? ›

General Facts

Greater Phoenix consistently ranks among the nation's top cities in the number of Five Diamond and Four Diamond and Five Star and Four Star hotels and resorts. There are six lakes within a 75-minute drive of downtown Phoenix. Phoenix is home to one of the largest municipal parks in North America.

What is unique in Arizona? ›

Arizona is home to some of the best adventures and cuisine in the world. The most famous and unique is also one of the seven wonders of the natural world, The Grand Canyon National Park. We hope you enjoy rediscovering Arizona with today's theme.

What are 3 facts about Arizona? ›

Arizona became the 48th state on February 14, 1912, the last of the contiguous states to be admitted into the Union. Arizona is roughly the size of Italy. The amount of copper on the roof of the Capitol building is equivalent to 4,800,000 pennies. Arizona leads the nation in copper production.

Does Arizona have a lot of history? ›

Although the region's physical environment may appear inhospitable to habitation and subsistence, Arizona contains some of North America's oldest records of human occupation. Relics of material culture are evidence that humans most likely lived in Arizona more than 25,000 years ago.

How old is Arizona state? ›

Arizona was admitted to the Union on Feb. 14, 1912, as the 48th state. Nickname: The Grand Canyon State.

What is a fast fact about Arizona? ›

Arizona produces silver and gold, but its top metal is copper—the state produces the most in the United States. In the early 1900s, the state's copper helped build the Arizona's railroads. Part of the largest stand of ponderosas lies in Arizona and extends into New Mexico, which yield lumber and paper.

Who is a famous person in Arizona? ›

15 Most Popular Arizona Celebrities Ranked in 2024
CelebrityHometown CitySearch Volume Over Past Year
1. Hailey Bieber, Model / Internet PersonalityTucson2.0M
2. Emma Stone, ActressScottsdale1.3M
3. Stevie Nicks, Singer-SongwriterPhoenix683K
4. Brock Purdy, 49ers QBQueen Creek648K
11 more rows
Feb 22, 2024

What is one historical fact about Arizona? ›

Spanish explorers first arrived in the 1530s, but through the 1840s, Arizona—as well as present-day California, Utah, Nevada, and New Mexico—was a part of Mexico. The United States gained control of the land after winning the Mexican-American War in 1848.

How many historical sites are in Arizona? ›

This is a directory of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Arizona. There are about fourteen hundred listed sites in the state, and each of its fifteen counties has at least ten listings on the National Register.

How old is Arizona in years? ›

5 things to know as Arizona celebrates 112 years of statehood.

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