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More on Yellowstone
For
its outrageous variety and natural splendor, Yellowstone ranks at the
top of my list. Here the word abundance takes on meaning that most of
us just can’t appreciate. It is no wonder to me why writers, poets,
painters and photographers have come here to express the passion they
feel in their hearts. My love for this place goes back 30 years, and to
this day, the doors my parents opened for me here in this place are the
roots of my own "Windows of Nature".
"Climb
the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature’s peace will flow into
you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own
freshness into you and the storms their energy, while care will drop
off like autumn leaves." – John Muir
My Experience of Yellowstone
Forthcoming from DeeAnn Pederson
The Nature of Yellowstone
By Bradford Glass
Yellowstone
National Park became the world’s first national park in 1872.
Encompassing 2.2 million acres in the states of Idaho, Montana, and
Wyoming, the park is a protected habitat for wolf, coyote, elk, bison,
moose, grizzly and black bear, an abundance of other animals and birds,
and phenomenal variety of scenic beauty. The land is rich in
vegetation, with 60 percent of the park covered by Lodgepole pines.
Since its birth as a national park, it has attracted travelers,
explorers, artists and vacationers from around the world who come to
experience spewing geysers, rugged terrain, beautiful scenery,
cascading waterfalls and abundant wildlife.
Volcanism
has created and shaped the Yellowstone area with three cataclysmic
eruptions over the past 2 million years. Massive debris was ejected and
scattered over thousands of square miles. The last eruption, 600,000
years ago, created a caldera 30 miles across and 45 miles long.
Yellowstone is situated in an area where the earth’s crust is thin,
which explains today’s unusual thermal activity of geysers, fumaroles,
geothermal pools and mud pots.
The
Yellowstone River, flowing here for over 2 million years, has carved a
1500-foot deep "Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone," and leaving the
majestic "Lower Falls" to drop 308 feet, one of the most photographed
sights of the area.
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"Where The Buffalo Roam"

"Amber Mist"
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In
the 1800s, some 10 million American Bison roamed the west. Hunted
nearly to extinction, the vanishing herd was holding out on the high
plateau of Yellowstone in the late 1890s. The capture of infamous
poacher Ed Howell by Army Scout Burgess is legend. It may have been the
pivotal moment in saving these American icons from extinction. Today as
you explore the park, bison are everywhere. Massive and dangerous
animals, they are an awesome sight, up close and personal.
It
is here where we are learning, sometimes the hard way, about the
differences between wild and managed lands, and about man’s attempts to
tip the scales of nature, both in creating imbalance and trying to
restore it. Fires, long suppressed in our protected lands, are an
important part of a forest ecosystem. Without fire, many trees and
plants won’t reseed. Worse, when the inevitable fires do come, the
damage is devastating. The story of the wolf is almost identical to
that of fire. Wolves filled an important niche in the ecosystem of the
American west. Hunted nearly to extinction due to their perceived
threat to human endeavors, their absence created havoc in the
populations of their prey. Now being reintroduced, notably here in
Yellowstone, nature’s balance is being restored. With both fire and
wolves, however, human attitudes change even more slowly than the
recovery of an ecosystem, and even more slowly than the learning
process that could tip our own scales. |
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