Friday morning, the gorges of the Grand Canyon were filled with fog in a rare temperature inversion
A temperature inversion happens when hot air high up acts as a seal to keep cold air pollution and fog trapped below
While inversions happen once or twice a year at the Grand Canyon, a full inversion is more unusual, happening closer to every 10 years
Those who decided to skip Black Friday shopping in favor of a trip to the Grand Canyon yesterday got to see the natural wonder from an extraordinary perspective.
Due to a rare weather phenomenon, the canyon's famous gorges were filled with a river of fog.
According to the national park's Facebook page, the fog was caused by something called a 'temperature inversion'. This happens when warm air acts as a lid to seal cool air near the ground. That means all pollution and fog is trapped and unable to rise.

Filling the abyss: The Grand Canyon's gorges were filled with fog Friday morning, creating quite the Kodak moment