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												PARK 0 1 5 Kilometers S Ri South Entrance Road Closed from Early November to Mid-May 0 1 5 Miles G Ra River S Access Sy
To West Thumb North Fa r ll ve YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK 0 1 5 Kilometers s Ri South Entrance Road closed from early November to mid-May 0 1 5 Miles G ra River s access sy ad Grassy Lake L nch Ro a g Ra Reservoir k lag e F - Lake of Flagg Ranch Information Station R n the Woods to o Road not recommended 1 h a Headwaters Lodge & Cabins at Flagg Ranch s d for trailers or RVs. Trailhead A Closed in winter River G r lade C e access re e v k i R SS ERNE CARIBOU-TARGHEE ILD Glade Creek e r W Trailhead k Rive ITH a Falls n 8mi SM S NATIONAL FOREST 13km H Indian Lake IA JOHN D. ROCKEF ELLER, JR. D E D E J To South Bo C Pinyon Peak Ashton one C o reek MEMORIAL PARKWAY u 9705ft lt er Creek Steamboat eek Cr Mountain 7872ft Survey Peak 9277ft 89 C a n erry re B ek o z 191 i 287 r A C o y B o a t il e eek ey r C C r l e w e O Lizard C k r k Creek e e e re k C k e e r m C ri g il ly P z z ri G Jackson Lake North Bitch Overlook Cre ek GRAND BRIDGER-TETON NATIONAL FOREST N O ANY k B C ee EB Cr TETON WILDERNESS W Moose Arizona Island Arizona 16mi Lake k e 26km e r C S ON TETON NY o A u C t TER h OL C im IDAHO r B ilg it P ch Moose Mountain rk Pacic Creek k WYOMING Fo e Pilgrim e C 10054ft Cr re e Mountain t k s 8274ft Ea c Leeks Marina ci a P MOOSE BASIN NATIONAL Park Boundary Ranger Peak 11355ft Colter Bay Village W A k T e E N e TW RF YO r O ALLS CAN C O Colter Bay CE m A ri N g Grand View Visitor Center il L PARK P A Point KE 4 7586ft Talus Lake Cygnet Two Ocean 2 Pond Eagles Rest Peak ay Lake Trailhead B Swan 11258ft er lt Lake o Rolling Thunder - 
												
												Cabin 1158 Information Booklet
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior White Grass Ranch - Cabin #1158 Guest Information Grand Teton National Park 1 This booklet is property of Cabin #1158 at White Grass Ranch. Please take care to see that it remains within this facility. Booklet made by Mackenzie King, Western Center for Historic Preservation. 2013. 2 2012 1955 Welcome Guests! The staff of the Western Center for Historic Preservation (WCHP) welcomes you to White Grass. Whether you are staying a night, several days, or longer, we hope your stay will be pleasant, restful, productive, and replenishing. Please let us know if there are things we can do to make your time here a grand experience, enough so that you will want to come stay with us again. To Our Volunteers! Whether a returning volunteer or new volunteer, we (WCHP staff) welcome you and thank you for your dedication and contribution to the preservation of cultural resources in Grand Teton National Park. We greatly appreciate your commitment to preserving our park’s cultural resources, and are grateful for your donation of time and hard work. The WCHP is only able to achieve their far-reaching goals with the help of our dedicated volunteers! Table of Contents I. Information about the Western Center for Historic Preservation................................................4 II. History of White Grass and Current Rehabilitation Plans..........................................................7 III. Images and Descriptions Relating to This Cabin’s Restoration................................................25 IV. Guest / Volunteer Information..................................................................................................35 V. Guest / Volunteer Sign-In: Journaling About Your Stay.............................................................43 If you have any questions not addressed in this binder, please feel free to contact our White Grass Ranch caretaker, in the Hammond Cabin. - 
												
												Naturalist Pocket Reference
Table of Contents Naturalist Phone Numbers 1 Park info 5 Pocket GRTE Statistics 6 Reference Timeline 8 Name Origins 10 Mountains 12 Things to Do 19 Hiking Trails 20 Historic Areas 23 Wildlife Viewing 24 Visitor Centers 27 Driving Times 28 Natural History 31 Wildlife Statistics 32 Geology 36 Grand Teton Trees & Flowers 41 National Park Bears 45 revised 12/12 AM Weather, Wind Scale, Metric 46 Phone Numbers Other Emergency Avalanche Forecast 733-2664 Bridger-Teton Nat. Forest 739-5500 Dispatch 739-3301 Caribou-Targhee NF (208) 524-7500 Out of Park 911 Grand Targhee Resort 353-2300 Jackson Chamber of Comm. 733-3316 Recorded Information Jackson Fish Hatchery 733-2510 JH Airport 733-7682 Weather 739-3611 JH Mountain Resort 733-2292 Park Road Conditions 739-3682 Information Line 733-2291 Wyoming Roads 1-888-996-7623 National Elk Refuge 733-9212 511 Post Office – Jackson 733-3650 Park Road Construction 739-3614 Post Office – Moose 733-3336 Backcountry 739-3602 Post Office – Moran 543-2527 Campgrounds 739-3603 Snow King Resort 733-5200 Climbing 739-3604 St. John’s Hospital 733-3636 Elk Reduction 739-3681 Teton Co. Sheriff 733-2331 Information Packets 739-3600 Teton Science Schools 733-4765 Wyoming Game and Fish 733-2321 YELL Visitor Info. (307) 344-7381 Wyoming Highway Patrol 733-3869 YELL Roads (307) 344-2117 WYDOT Road Report 1-888-442-9090 YELL Fill Times (307) 344-2114 YELL Visitor Services 344-2107 YELL South Gate 543-2559 1 3 2 Concessions AMK Ranch 543-2463 Campgrounds - Colter Bay, Gros Ventre, Jenny Lake 543-2811 Campgrounds - Lizard Creek, Signal Mtn. - 
												
												Grand Teton National Park
GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK • WTO MING * UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIO NAL PARK SERVICE Grand Teton [WYOMING] National Park United States Department of the Interior Harold L. Ickes, Secretary NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Arno B. Cammerer, Director UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1936 Rules and Regulations -I-HE PARK regulations are designed for the protection of the natural Contents beauties as well as for the comfort and convenience of visitors. The follow ing synopsis is for the general guidance of visitors, who are requested to assist in the administration of the park by observing them. Copies of the complete rules and regulations promulgated by the Secretary of the Interior Page for the government of the park may be obtained at the office of the super History of the Region 3 intendent and at other points of concentration throughout the park. Geographic Features 7 The destruction, injury, defacement, or disturbance of any buildings, Teton Range 7 signs, equipment, trees, flowers, vegetation, rocks, minerals, animal, bird, Jackson Hole 9 or other life is prohibited. The Work of Glaciers 9 Camps must be kept clean. Rubbish and garbage should be burned. Trails 13 Refuse should be placed in cans provided for this purpose. If no cans are Mountain Climbing 14 provided where camp is made, refuse should be buried. Wildlife 18 Do not throw paper, lunch refuse, or other trash on the roads and trails. Trees and Plants 21 Carry until the same can be burned in camp or placed in receptacle. Naturalist Service 23 Fires shall be lighted only when necessary and when no longer needed Fishing 24 shall be completely extinguished. - 
												
												The Cariboo and Monashee Ranges of British Columbia: an Alpinist’S Guide
1 THE CARIBOO AND MONASHEE RANGES OF BRITISH COLUMBIA: AN ALPINIST’S GUIDE by EARLE R. WHIPPLE Even today, British Columbia is still a wilderness of mountains, valleys, glaciers, forest and plateau. The Columbia Mountains (Interior Ranges; which include the Cariboo and Monashee Ranges) lie within British Columbia, west of the Canadian Rockies and the southern Alberta-British Columbia border. This guide describes the access and mountaineering in these two ranges. Aside from parts of the Coast Range and the northern Rockies, the Cariboo and Monashee Ranges are the most isolated in B.C. However, if one listens to the helicopters from the lodges in these ranges, when camped there, one may question this. Large, active glaciers (now in retreat) with spectacular icefalls exist in the mountains of the western part of the Halvorson Group, the northern Wells Gray Group, the Premier Ranges, the Dominion Group and northern Scrip Range; there is climbing on rock, snow and ice, and routes for those climbers wishing easy, relaxing climbing in beautiful scenery. Good rock climbing on gneiss is in the southern Gold Range and Mt. Begbie in the north. There are also locales offering fine hiking on trails or alpine meadows (Halvorson Group, southern Wells Gray Group, southern Scrip Range, and the Shuswap Group), and backpacking traverses have been worked out through the Halvorson and Dominion Groups, the Scrip Range and the Gold Range. Beautiful lake districts exist in the northern Cariboos, and the Monashees. The area covered by this book starts northwest of the town of McBride, on Highway 16, southeast of Prince George, and extends south to near the border with the U.S.A., staying within the great bend of the Fraser River, and then west of Canoe Reach (lake; formerly Canoe River) and just west of the lower Columbia River south of its great bend. - 
												
												T E T O N R a N
To West Thumb Road closed from early November to mid-May F al er YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK ls iv R South Entrance G River ra s access sy S Camping along Grassy Lake Road ES ad Grassy Lake L ERN nch Ro a LD g Ra Reservoir k Fourteen primitive sites are free; I lag e W F first-come, first-served; and have - Lake of Flagg Ranch Information Station E R L n the Woods O o a picnic table, metal fire ring, pit H to Headwaters Lodge & Cabins at Flagg Ranch h a toilet, but no potable water. R s d Trailhead A A G E r River N I Glade C e access re e v W k i R S ERNES CARIBOU-TARGHEE ILD Glade Creek e r W Trailhead k Rive ITH a Falls M n 8mi NATIONAL FOREST S S 13km H Indian Lake IA JOHN D. ROCKEF ELLER, JR. D E D E J To C Pinyon Peak South Boo o ne Cr u 9705ft Ashton eek MEMORIAL PARKWAY lt er 2958m Road not recommended Creek for trailers or RVs. eek Steamboat Cr Closed in winter Mountain 7872ft 2399m Survey Peak 9277ft 2827m 89 a ry Cre n Ber ek o z i 191 r 287 A C C on o an B y t a o C il t ree e e k eek y r C C r l e w Lizard C e O k k r e Creek e e e r k C k e e m r ri C lg Pi ly z z ri G Jackson Lake orth Overlook N Bitch C reek GRAND BRIDGER-TETON NATIONAL FOREST S o u N th O Y k AN e B B C re TETON WILDERNESS i EB C tc W se Arizona h Moo Island Cr Arizona ee k 16mi Lake k e e 26km r C ON TETON NY CA ER OLT C im gr IDAHO il P k Moose Mountain ork Pacific Creek e F e WYOMING Pilgrim r 10054ft C Mountain 3064m t 8274ft as c E fi Leeks Marina ci 2522m a P Park Boundary MOOSE BASIN NATIONAL Ranger Peak 11355ft 3461m Colter Bay Village W A k T e T E - 
												
												Backcountry Camping Brochure
National Park Service Grand Teton U.S. Department of the Interior Grand Teton National Park John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial Parkway Backcountry Camping The North Fork of Cascade Canyon - Danielle Lehle photo Before Leaving Home Weather Planning Your Trip Group Size Boating This guide provides general information about backcountry use in Grand Teton National Individual campsites accommodate one to Register all vessels annually with the park. Park and the John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial Parkway. The map on the back page is six people. Groups of seven to 12 people Purchase permits at the Craig Thomas, only for general trip planning and/or campsite selection. For detailed information, use a must use designated group sites that are Colter Bay or Jenny Lake (cash only) visitor topographic map or hiking guide. When planning your trip, consider each member of your larger and more durable. In winter, parties centers. Lakeshore campsites are located party. Backpackers should expect to travel no more than 2 miles per hour, with an additional are limited to 20 people. on Jackson and Leigh lakes. Camping is hour for every 1,000 feet of elevation gain. Do not plan to cross more than one mountain not allowed along the Snake River. Strong The table below summarizes weather at Moose, WY, 6467 feet. Temperatures in the Teton pass in a day. If you only have one vehicle, you may want to plan a loop trip. There is no Backcountry Conditions afternoon winds occur frequently. For Range can change quickly and be much colder at upper elevations. Check the local area shuttle service in the park, but transportation services are available; ask at a permits desk for Snow conditions vary annually. - 
												
												Ap P E N D I C
A p p e n d i c e s A1. GlossAry of Terms Affordable (housing). Housing is affordable if the ratio of a household’s income to its cost of housing does not cost burden the household. Amenity. Tangible or intangible features that increase attractiveness or value or contribute to comfort or convenience of a place. Examples of tangible amenities are recreation centers, pathways or services. Examples of intangible amenities are scenic views, good schools, or sense of community. Attached Housing. Residential dwelling units that share a common wall, floor or ceiling. Examples include duplexes, town homes, apartments or condominiums. Capital Improvement Plan (CIP). A short‐term plan that identifies capital projects and equipment purchases, provides a planning schedule, and identifies financing options. Clustering. Grouping development on a portion of the development site for purposes of providing open space to protect wildlife habitat, wildlife movement, scenic resources, and/or agriculture. Commercial Use. A subset of nonresidential uses, such as office, retail and services. Community Supported Agriculture (CSA). A locally‐based socioeconomic model of agriculture food distribution which includes a network or association of individuals who have pledged to support one or more local farms, with growers and consumers sharing the risks and benefits of food production. Complete Street. Streets that are designed and operated to enable safe access for all users including pedestrians, bicyclists, motorists and transit riders of all ages and abilities. Conservation Easement. An encumbrance that creates a legally enforceable land preservation agreement between a landowner and a government agency (municipality, county, state, federal) or a qualified land protection organization (often called a land trust), for the purposes of conservation. - 
												
												Grand Teton National Park
To West Thumb Road closed from early November to mid-May F al r ls ve YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK Ri South Entrance ERNESS ILD Grassy Lake W E oad Reservoir L R Flagg Ranch O H r e te Information Station ak in R L w Trailhead A in y G s ed s os E ra cl Lake of the Woods N G I CARIBOU-TARGHEE W r r F ve e all i NATIONAL FOREST iv Huckleberry Mountain s R R 8mi 9615ft 13km 2930m Indian Lake JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR. Pinyon Peak e k 9705ft a n 2958m S C o u MEMORIAL PARKWAY lte r No trailers or large RVs Creek on one-lane portion eek Steamboat Cr Mountain 7872ft 2399m Survey Peak 9277ft 2827m 89 a n o y err C z B r i e r e 191 k A 287 B a ek il re ey C o C ntant ek e r C C k l e w r O e re e C k Lizard k e Creek e r C m ri g ly il z P z ri G Jackson Lake N Overlook or th Bi BRIDGER-TETON NATIONAL FOREST S tch o u C re th ek N NYO k CA e B BB re it E C c W Arizona Island h Moose TETON WILDERNESS Arizona Cr ee Lake k 16mi 26km ON CANY ER OLT C Pilgrim Mountain IDAHO Moose Mountain 8274ft k 2522m ee WYOMING r 10054ft C rk 3064m o Leeks Marina F c Ranger Peak t ifi s c 11355ft E a a E P 3461m K MOOSE BASIN ek A Park Boundary re C L GRAND TETON im W r lg T A i W TER YON Colter Bay P O F N ALLS CA Colter Bay Village O C Visitor Center EA N Indian Arts Museum Grand View Point LA and Trailhead KE NATIONAL PARK 7327ft Cygnet Talus Lake 2233m Pond m y Eagles Rest Peak 4 a N B Swan 6 r 11258ft e 0 lt Lake 3431m O 2 o C LD Rolling Thunder Mountain ATI A M L S t A 10908ft North f K M Jackson Lake Lodge A E dger 3325m K 2 M Ba Cre o 7 Medical Clinic uth ek - 
												
												Neoarchean Tectonic History of the Teton Range: Record of Accretion
Research Paper THEMED ISSUE: Active Margins in Transition—Magmatism and Tectonics through Time: An Issue in Honor of Arthur W. Snoke GEOSPHERE Neoarchean tectonic history of the Teton Range: Record of accretion GEOSPHERE; v. 14, no. 3 against the present-day western margin of the Wyoming Province doi:10.1130/GES01559.1 B. Ronald Frost1, Susan M. Swapp1, Carol D. Frost1, Davin A. Bagdonas1,2, and Kevin R. Chamberlain1,3 1Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming 82071, USA 18 figures; 1 set of supplemental files 2Carbon Management Institute, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming 82071, USA 3Faculty of Geology and Geography, Tomsk State University, Tomsk 634050, Russia CORRESPONDENCE: [email protected] ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION CITATION: Frost, B.R., Swapp, S.M., Frost, C.D., Bag- donas, D.A., and Chamberlain, K.R., 2018, Neoar- chean tectonic history of the Teton Range: Record Although Archean gneisses of the Teton Range crop out over an The Wyoming Province is an Archean craton that occupies most of of accretion against the present-day western margin area of only 50 × 15 km, they provide an important record of the Ar- Wyoming and portions of Montana, and adjacent states. The Archean rocks of the Wyoming Province: Geosphere, v. 14, no. 3, chean history of the Wyoming Province. The northern and southern are exposed in the cores of basement-involved Laramide uplifts. The early p. 1008–1030, doi:10.1130/GES01559.1. parts of the Teton Range record different Archean histories. The north- mafic crust appears to have been Hadean (Frost et al., 2017), though most of ern Teton Range preserves evidence of 2.69–2.68 Ga high-pressure the exposed area consists of Paleoarchean to Neoarchean quartzofeldspathic Science Editor: Shanaka de Silva Guest Associate Editor: Joshua Schwartz granulite metamorphism (>12 kbar, ~900 °C) followed by tectonic as- orthogneisses that retain an isotopic signature of that ancient crust (Frost, 1993). - 
												
												Grand Teton National Park
Do not use this map for Turnout or overlook Trail Ranger station Campground Food service Gasoline Marina Self-guiding nature trail Distances are shown backcountry hiking. Buy between markers. USGS topographic maps Unpaved road Glacier / snowfield Picnic area Tent only campground Lodging Store Stables at visitor centers. To West Thumb 01 5 Kilometers Road closed from early November to early May 01 5 Miles Fa r lls ive YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK North R South Entrance Grassy Lake Visitor Information Station Reservoir Road r Flagg Ranch e te k in La w in d sy se s clo Snake River ra Lake of the Woods G r r e iv e Falls R TARGHEE NATIONAL FOREST iv Huckleberry Mountain R 8mi 9615ft 13km 2930m Indian Lake WINEGAR HOLE WILDERNESS JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR. e Pinyon Peak k 9705ft a n 2958m S C o u MEMORIAL PARKWAY lt er No trailers or large RVs Creek on one lane portion eek Steamboat Cr Mountain 7872ft 2399m Survey Peak 9277ft 2827m 89 a n erry C o B z re i e 191 r k A 287 B k a e il re ey Co C Lizard Creek ntant reek C C k l e w r e O e r e C k k e e r C m ri lg ly i z P z ri G N orth B TETON NATIONAL FOREST S itch o C u re N th ek O k NY e B CA re B EB C itc W Arizona Island h Moose TETON WILDERNESS C Arizona re Lake ek 16mi 26km YON CAN ER OLT C Pilgrim Mountain IDAHO Moose Mountain 8274ft k ee WYOMING 10054ft 2522m r rk C 3064m Fo c Ranger Peak Leeks Marina t ifi s c 11355ft a a 3461m E P MOOSE BASIN E ek K re C GRAND TETON A W m A L ri T g E N il TW R YO P O FALLS CAN Colter Bay Village O Colter Bay CE AN L Visitor Center Grand View Point - 
												
												BUSINESS NAME PHONE ADDRESS CITY ST ZIP Jackson WY 83001 1170 South Park Storage 307-739-1698 PO Box 764 Jackson WY 83001 135 E
BUSINESS NAME PHONE ADDRESS CITY ST ZIP Jackson WY 83001 1170 South Park Storage 307-739-1698 PO Box 764 Jackson WY 83001 135 E. Broadway, LLC 307-732-1910 Po Box 3992 Jackson WY 83001 1st Interstate Bank (Main) 307-734-7373 PO Box 11095 Jackson WY 83001 22 Tech & Web 307-733-1155 PO Box 3737 Jackson WY 83001 225 N. Millward 307-690-2495 PO Box 11803 Jackson WY 83001 2LSN, LLC 307-690-0506 Po Box 3737 Jackson WY 83001 3 G Electric LLC 208-313-7413 6050 S 1000 W Victor ID 83455 307 Mechanical, Inc. 307-248-2330 PO Box 3333 Etna WY 83118 4Sight Security, LLC 208-403-5992 1720 Woodruff Park Idaho Falls ID 83401 50 King Street Partnership PO Box 2812 Jackson WY 83001 A & J Construction Company 303-419-1511 PBM 234 Westminster CO 80020 A + RL Plumbing 208-313-4885 2430 S Fieldstone Dr Idaho Falls ID 83406 A Black Car Service LLC 307-413-2572 PO Box 3441 Jackson WY 83001 A Cut Above 307-733-6005 PO Box 3727 Jackson WY 83001 A Jackson Hole Transportation Services 307-699-3369 PO Box 210 Jackson WY 83001 A New Leaf Garden Design, LLC 307-690-2917 PO box 4423 Jackson WY 83001 A Sound Image 307-200-1614 PO Box 13403 Jackson WY 83002 A to B Transportation LLC 307 413 7378 PO Box 13219 Jackson WY 83001 A&R Party Rentals 208-705-2131 Po Box 7071 Jackson WY 83001 A.L.L. Body Therapy, Inc. 307-733-7037 PO Box 9725 Jackson WY 83001 A1 Autosportz LLC 307-732-2277 PO Box 9222 Jackson WY 83001 A-1 Cleaners 307-734-4418 PO Box 6589 Jackson WY 83002 A-1 Taxi 307-690-3900 Po Box 471 Wilson WY 83014 A2 Plus Inc 307-690-2664 PO Box 1467 Wilson 83014 AA All American Taxi 307-699-3192 PO Box 13934 Jackson WY 83001 AA Sisters, LLC 307-690-9809 Po Box 1630 Jackson WY 83001 AAA Mountain Waterproofing, LLC 970-625-9257 1779 Airport Rd.