Yellowstone Ecomap

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Yellowstone Ecomap O r water e r a U o Beartooth Highway C r A K l l closed from mid- r E e October to late May a T A Gardiner e H B A L P Roosevelt Arch Cooke North Entrance O City 5314 ft Road between Gardiner and L Silver Sportsman A Electric Peak 1620 m Cooke City is open all year Road between Gardiner and F Lake Hellroaring k Gate 1096 9 ft y F e Cooke City is open all year a 5 mi e 3343 m Mountain U r w - 8 km C 836 3 ft B e MONTANA n 254 9 m o k lowston l e e Roosevel t/ Northeast Entrance Mammoth Hot Springs Ye e k WYOMING 02 r 7365 ft r e C C h 2245 m e Mount Everts r g Albright Visitor Center r e u 784 1 ft e e Forces of the TowerC Area o l l D S b 239 0 m Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces See Northen Range l b i R e Abiathar detail G Park Headquarters a Barronette t i P a o k McBride r above v l Peak d c Phantom e Peak R Blacktail a a r Lake 1092 8 ft l n Lake f 1040 4 ft e Pond B f 3331 m R 18 mi u 3171 m Little Quadrant r Undine B Road closed from l a B A 29 km c A Falls k Mountain early November t one-w Bunsen a ay Slough Creek 9885 ft il to mid-April Peak Pl 3013 m R Wraith a t e N E a N iv 856 4 ft u Floating L Golden Falls e 261 0 m BLACKTAIL DEER D Island Tower-Roosevelt r O Gate r r 627 0 ft G H e i Lake v v PLATEAU 191 1 m e G i S Pebble Creek R E R Yellowstone E Swan N r Petrified Tree Association e L a k D Lake m E Quadrant n Institute e R a The d r e Mountain A r r Tower Fall C Thunderer G a R Druid Peak Trout Lake 9944 ft G 132ft i 9583 ft 1055 4 ft 3031 m Roosevelt Lodge v e P eek 40m S e 2921 m tt 3217 m anther Cr Sheepeater Cliff P r u Tower E B Cache Mountain Indian Creek Prospect Peak C Fall I L a 9596 ft 9525 ft M 29 mi d A o 2925 m 2903 m S k Antler E M 47 km Mount e k W N e Peak e A e I Norris r r P L 10023ft A C C A L R 9936 ft MammotO h W k R n 3055m e K R 3028 m W 01 e t V 21 mi L r e C e a I A n l A a 34 km o h i v D L c d p n k a L a e e Hot Springs G I S e 19 mi E C r er Y C w C E C H o 31 km E T r r r Dome Mountain e e N e B e e k 9894 ft Hotel k O Chittenden v U i Road between Tower Fall T 3016 m r Road R S e and Canyon Village is closed t Beaver R Obsidian Cliff mid-October to late May W in N Lake 7383 ft Mount Holmes O W 1033 6 ft 2250 m L L Y ellowstone 3150 m R Grizzly E A Lake Y Mount Washburn N 1024 3 ft k G k E M e e E 3122 m e H I r R C T R Roaring Mountain Dunraven Pass t Observation Peak 8859 ft e F O h Twin 9397 ft n O R g 2700 m i o Lakes 2864 m a t N r Museum of the s t w O P S Cascade Y Nymph National Park Ranger Grebe Washburn lo L Lake l N NationalA Park Lake Lake e A ller C Hot Springs Y C Mi reek Wolf Overlook T Norris Lake D E 7526 ft 231 1 m See detail above N A n A bo River R U Museum and b G i Information Station Ice G A Lake P Canyon Village P NORRIS GEYSER BASIN R Steamboat Geyser O Wapiti Lake 12 mi Lower Falls Visitor Education Center X IM 19 km Upper Falls Canyon and falls visible only from Saddle Virginia Canyon A 03 overlooks along the canyon rims T Mountain k Ecomap Cascade e E L e a 1067 0 ft r m Artists C C 3252 m Lodge r a te A r Monument Paintpots t O L D Geyser Basin Yellow E s R Beryl Spring t A o River 14 mi ek re n 23 km C B e m O u 16 mi U 14 mi l Castor Peak A White 23 km 26 km R Lake N 1085 4 ft Gibbon Falls i Lake D v 04 3308 1 m 84ft A bon e Madiso Gib River 26m r R Pelican n Y River YEL L OWS T ONE N AArTeIaO NAL Cone PA R K Xanterra, the National Park Madison H A 9643 ft Mount Haynes National Park 6806 ft 207 4 m U Y D Sulphur Caldron 2939 m E N V 8235 ft Mountain A A L L E Y 7500 ft Information Station 2510 m E Service, and Yellowstone's park 2286 m Mud Volcano LeHardys F T ir Rapids Firehole Falls e A h o Mary L partners, like Delaware North l P Pyramid Peak Firehole Canyon Drive e Lake k R e 1049 7 ft Fishing Bridge re C 3199 m L Y E th reek n L r C A Companies and Yellowstone rce Museum and a L o Pe ic N z R l A e Visitor Center e V N T See detail above P Fountain Flat Drive N N A Fishing Bridge RV Park LIC Park Service Stations, work E Lake Village E Hard-sided camping units only P NOR TH ABSAROKA W I LDER NES S k C e LOWER GEYSER BASIN e Indian r Fountain Paint Pot Pond together to provide sustainable C Turbid Lake Beach Bridge Bay y y ry Ba r Firehole Lake Drive Ma i Old Lake a Great Fountain06 Geyser F amenities in Yellowstone Fairy Goose Steamboat Lake Faithful Lake Butte Falls Natural Point e Bay Overlook MIDWAY GEYSER BASIN Bridge Stevenson Sedg 8348 ft National Park, including East Entrance Island 2544 m Cody Peak 6951 ft Grand Prismatic Spring Area Gull 1026 7 ft 2119 m 16 mi Point water-bottle-fillingAvalanche stations, Peak 3129 m Biscuit Basin 26 km Drive 27 mi 1056 6 ft 43 km 3221 m INE DE irehole ONT NTAL DIVI Hard-sided F River C YEL L OWS T ONE sustainably sourced food, and camping e Mallard Sylvan tl Mystic UPPER GEYSER Eleanor Sylvan Pass units only it Lake L AKE Lake Lake L Falls BASIN 8530 ft De Lacy Surface elevation 2600 m Road closed from Lakes made-in-the-USAGrizzly Peak retail. early November See detail above k 21 mi Black Sand Basin e 7733ft 2357m to early May e 9948 ft r 34 km Old Faithful Geyser C 3032 m Maximum depth 410ft 131m 8391 ft Dot WEST Top Notch Peak Kepler 2558 m Isa Island Cascades 1023 8 ft Lake THUMB Scaup 3121 m Craig Pass Visitor Education Center Lake 8262 ft This map is a helpful guide to 17 mi 2518 m See detail above Reservation Peak 27 km y 1062 9 ft Old Faithful c Mount Doane Mount a Frank 3240 m L 1065 6 ft Lone Star West Thumb Island Langford e the sustainable services and Summit 3248 m 1077 4 ft Geyser D Information Station P Lake 3284 m r WEST THUMB GEYSER BASIN Mount L e Delusion resources availableA during iv Stevenson A R Grant Lake S 1035 2 ft 05 O B 3155 m e T l H T o U your visit. SHOSHONE NATIONAL FOREST h Village E T e E S K P E r A H i L R F Visitor Center O m E W ASHAKIE A Ar M A Riddle ain A ount O E M S U N Lake Grant Village Flat N T O T L 7988 ft R H O e S S w CO O 2435 m N O R Mount Schurz T A H i I Y S s N O 1113 9 ft E U N R R 3395 m T T i A M v L H e K r D A I Eagle Pass V A A P I 9628 ft P D R R E Eagle Peak 2935 m O M X Y 1135 8 ft I e M LEWIS l 3462 m A l o Highest point T LAKE T able E w Colter in the park C s Mountain A t Peak L D o 1106 3 ft E Lewis Lake 1068 3 ft 3372 m R A n 3256 m T e B O INS k U A e W N NT H D U e A O E r R Trail Y M C Lewis Falls A O Turret D r E R Lake R e 29ft Mount T Water Filling Mountain v i 9m Recycling SustainablSheridane Food Sustainable Retail e Tire Inflation 1099 5 ft s R O R Icon Key: 1030 8 ft L u Station 3351 m PITCHSTONE PLA TEAU A 3142 m K E o C i r C v 22 mi Overlook E G h e i Ouzel Falls p 35 km Mountain m A r 235ft 9321 ft u N r 7 2 m Colonnade Falls 2841 m n in Creek e k unta Mo 100ft v C i 01 03 05 Mammoth Hot Canyon Lodge Grant Village Springs Hotel Camper Services Building: Recycling All Lodges: Recycling Recycled Glass Tables Sustainable Food Dining Room: Sustainable Food Canyon Plaza: Dining Room: and Benches, Recycling Water Filling Station General Store: Water Filling Station General Store: General Store: Water Filling Station Tire Inflation Gift Shop/Lobby: Water Filling Station, Service Station: Green Retail, Recycling Registration Desk: Recycling Yellowstone Tire Inflation Service Station: Tire Inflation Service Station: Ecomap 06 Terrace Grill: Recycling 04 Old Faithful Area 02 Lake Area General Stores: Water Filling Stations Service Stations: Tire Inflation Roosevelt/Tower Area Water Filling Station General Store: Old Faithful Inn: Sustainable Food, Recycling Sustainable Food, Recycling Lodge: Sustainable Food, Recycling Lake Hotel: Old Faithful Lodge: Recycling Recycling Restrooms: Recycling Lake Lodge: Snow Lodge: Sustainable Food, Recycling Recycling Service Station: Tire Inflation Fishing Bridge RV Park: Tower Store: Water Filling Station DrinkGo Wild Up Buy Local Drinking those eight Looking for souvenirs? glaTakesse advantages of water aof da oury we More than 68% of the areski shopsalways and hearing bike about items available in reallrentalsy is togood enjoy for the us .
Recommended publications
  • Yellowstone Wolfproject Annual Report 1999
    YELLOWSTONE WOLFPROJECT ANNUAL REPORT 1999 Yellowstone Wolf Project Annual Report 1999 Douglas W. Smith, Kerry M. Murphy, and Debra S. Guernsey National Park Service Yellowstone Center for Resources Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming YCR-NR-2000-01 Suggested citation: Smith, D.W., K.M. Murphy, and D.S. Guernsey. 2000. Yellowstone Wolf Project: Annual Report, 1999. National Park Service, Yellowstone Center for Resources, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, YCR-NR-2000-01. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Background.................................................................... iv Composition of Wolf Kills ...................................... 8 1999 Summary................................................................ v Winter Studies ......................................................... 8 The Yellowstone Wolf Population .................................. 1 Wolf Management .......................................................... 9 Population Status and Reproduction ....................... 1 Area Closures .......................................................... 9 Population Movements and Territories ................... 2 Pen Removal ........................................................... 9 Mortalities ............................................................... 3 Wolf Depredation Outside the Park......................... 9 Pack Summaries ............................................................. 3 Wolf Genetics Studies .................................................... 9 Leopold Pack ..........................................................
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  • Visiting the Upper Geyser Basin (Old Faithful Geyser)
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  • YELLOWSTONE Today
    YELLOWSTONE Today National Park Service Autumn 2005 Official Newspaper of Yellowstone National Park U.S. Department of the Interior Road Construction DELAYS & CLOSURES See map on back page Yellowstone National graphic removed for faster loading Park’s Mission Preserved within Yellowstone National Park are Old Faithful and the majority of the world’s geysers and hot springs. An outstanding mountain wildland with clean water and air, Yellowstone is home of the grizzly bear and wolf and free-ranging herds of bison and elk. Centuries-old sites and historic buildings that reflect the unique heritage of America’s first national park are also protected. Yellowstone National Park serves as a model and inspiration for national parks throughout the world. Mission of the National Park Service The National Park Service preserves unimpaired the natural and cultural resources and values of the national park system for the enjoyment, education, and inspira- tion of this and future generations. The National Park Service cooperates with partners to extend the benefits of natural and cultural resource conservation and out- door recreation throughout this country and the world. In This Issue hmidt MAP & ROAD INFORMATION Back Cover .Sc S/J NP Safety . .2 Aspens on Mount Everts, near Mammoth Hot Springs Planning Your Visit . .3 Welcome to the World’s First National Park Ranger-led Programs . .4 Yellowstone National Park was established in 1872 to protect the unique geysers and other hydro- Learn & Explore . .5 thermal features. The park is the core of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem—one of the largest intact temperate zone ecosystems remaining on the planet.
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  • Map Showing Geology, Structure, and Geophysics of the Central Black
    U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Prepared in cooperation with the SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS MAP 2777 U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY SOUTH DAKOTA SCHOOL OF MINES AND TECHNOLOGY FOUNDATION SHEET 2 OF 2 Pamphlet accompanies map 104°00' 103°30' 103°00' 104°00' 103°30' 103°00' ° ° EXPLANATION FOR MAPS F TO H 44 30' 44°30' EXPLANATION 44 30' 44°30' EXPLANATION Spearfish Geologic features 53 54 Tertiary igneous rocks (Tertiary and post-Tertiary Spearfish PHANEROZOIC ROCKS 90 1 90 sedimentary rocks not shown) Pringle fault 59 Tertiary igneous rocks (Tertiary and post-Tertiary Pre-Tertiary and Cretaceous (post-Inyan Kara sedimentary rocks not shown) Monocline—BHM, Black Hills monocline; FPM, Fanny Peak monocline 52 85 Group) rocks 85 Sturgis Sturgis Pre-Tertiary and Cretaceous (post-Inyan Kara A Proposed western limit of Early Proterozoic rocks in subsurface 55 Lower Cretaceous (Inyan Kara Group), Jurassic, Group) rocks 57 58 60 14 and Triassic rocks 14 Lower Cretaceous (Inyan Kara Group), Jurassic, B Northern extension (fault?) of Fanny Peak monocline and Triassic rocks Paleozoic rocks C Possible eastern limit of Early Proterozoic rocks in subsurface 50 Paleozoic rocks Precambrian rocks S Possible suture in subsurface separating different tectonic terranes 89 51 89 2 PRECAMBRIAN ROCKS of Sims (1995) 49 Contact St 3 G Harney Peak Granite (unit Xh) Geographic features—BL, Bear Lodge Mountains; BM, Bear Mountain; Fault—Dashed where approximately located G DT DT, Devils Tower 48 B Early Proterozoic rocks, undivided Anticline—Showing trace of axial surface and 1 St Towns and cities—B, Belle Fourche; C, Custer; E, Edgemont; HS, Hot direction of plunge.
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  • Yellowstone National Park Visitor Study Report
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research Publications Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research 11-2019 Yellowstone National Park Visitor Study Report Jake Jorgenson RRC Associates Jeremy Sage ITRR Norma Nickerson ITRR Carter Bermingham ITRR Mandi Roberts Otak Inc. See next page for additional authors Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/itrr_pubs Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Jorgenson, Jake; Sage, Jeremy; Nickerson, Norma; Bermingham, Carter; Roberts, Mandi; and White, Christina, "Yellowstone National Park Visitor Study Report" (2019). Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research Publications. 397. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/itrr_pubs/397 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research Publications by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Authors Jake Jorgenson, Jeremy Sage, Norma Nickerson, Carter Bermingham, Mandi Roberts, and Christina White This report is available at ScholarWorks at University of Montana: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/itrr_pubs/397 i Contents Acknowledgements .................................................................................................................................................
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  • 2015 Yellowstone National Park Trip Planner
    Yellowstone National Park Trip Planner Explore Yellowstone Safely Welcome Millions of visitors come to Yellowstone each year to see and experience wild animals in their natural environment, and exceptionally preserved hydrothermal features. This guide aims to help you enjoy and make the most of these opportunities. Stay on boardwalks Follow park happenings online: You must stay on boardwalks and www.nps.gov/yell designated trails around hydrother- www.facebook.com/YellowstoneNPS mal features. Delicate formations twitter.com/YellowstoneNPS twitter.com/GeyserNPS and the crust surrounding them are www.youtube.com/YellowstoneNPS thin and break easily, and often over- www.flickr.com/photos/YellowstoneNPS lie scalding water. Visitors have died instagram.com/YellowstoneNPS in thermal features. • Toxic gases exist at dangerous Leave room for wildlife levels in some areas. If you feel Do not approach wildlife, no sick, leave immediately. matter how tame or calm they may • Pets are prohibited in hydrother- appear. If any wild animal changes its mal areas. behavior due to your presence, you • Swimming is prohibited where are too close. Always obey instruc- water flows entirely from a tions from park staff on scene. hydrothermal spring or pool. Big as they are, bison can sprint three Where allowed, swim at your times faster than humans can run. own risk. The water can harbor No vacation picture is worth person- agents of fatal meningitis and al injury. Your best view may be from Legionnaires’ disease. inside a hard-sided vehicle. Do not feed any animals (including birds and squirrels), or allow them to obtain a food reward from you.
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