{"id":786,"date":"2025-03-24T18:15:58","date_gmt":"2025-03-24T19:15:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/guruapproved.com\/?p=786"},"modified":"2025-04-01T13:31:33","modified_gmt":"2025-04-01T13:31:33","slug":"fascinating-facts-about-yellowstone-national-park","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/guruapproved.com\/index.php\/2025\/03\/24\/fascinating-facts-about-yellowstone-national-park\/","title":{"rendered":"Fascinating Facts About Yellowstone National Park"},"content":{"rendered":"
Nat Hab’s journey through Yellowstone<\/a> is a trip for the true wanderer, embracing the spirit of remote nature travel. This adventure stands apart from the typical park tour, delving deep into Yellowstone’s wilds. Before your visit, here are some fascinating facts you may not have known about the wildlife, natural wonders and storied past of this beloved national park.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n (function(d,u,ac){var s=d.createElement(‘script’);s.type=’text\/javascript’;s.src=’https:\/\/a.omappapi.com\/app\/js\/api.min.js’;s.async=true;s.dataset.user=u;s.dataset.campaign=ac;d.getElementsByTagName(‘head’)[0].appendChild(s);})(document,123366,’xxj0jyiipxchuyg5m9jj’); President Ulysses S. Grant signed the Yellowstone National Park Protection Act into law on March 1, 1872, establishing the world’s first national park. Yellowstone National Park is larger than the states of Delaware and Rhode Island combined, and this vast swath of protected land, brimming with geological wonders and abundant wildlife, became a conservation model for generations to come.<\/p>\n President Theodore Roosevelt, upon laying the cornerstone for the Gateway to Yellowstone National Park in 1903, proclaimed:<\/p>\n “The Yellowstone Park is something absolutely unique in the world, so far as I know…The scheme of its preservation is noteworthy in its essential democracy… This Park was created, and is now administered, for the benefit and enjoyment of the people… The only way that the people as a whole can secure to themselves and their children the enjoyment in perpetuity of what the Yellowstone Park has to give is by assuming the ownership in the name of the nation and by jealously safeguarding and preserving the scenery, the forests, and the wild creatures.”<\/em><\/p>\n > Read: Celebrate Yellowstone National Park’s 150th Anniversary<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n There are 500 geysers in Yellowstone and 10,000 hydrothermal features in total, including fumaroles, travertine terraces, hot springs, steam vents and mudpots. This is the largest active geyser field on the planet, home to 60% of the world’s geysers!<\/p>\n Many of these features are found in the Upper Geyser Basin, including Old Faithful. Named for its frequent eruptions, which take place about 20 times a day, Old Faithful was discovered by the Washburn Expedition in 1870. A little-known fact is that members of the party tried doing their laundry in the geyser, placing clothes inside the crater and leaving them to be ejected by Old Faithful. Talk about a power wash!<\/p>\n Another famed thermal area is Norris Geyser Basin. Steamboat, the tallest active geyser in the world, is its most popular feature, reaching heights of more than 300 feet.<\/p>\n > Read: Geysers, Hot Springs and the Yellowstone Volcano<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n Archeological evidence shows us that people have inhabited Yellowstone for more than 11,000 years. This was the traditional homeland of the Tukudeka\u2014a band of Shoshone Native Americans\u2014and other tribes, such as the Blackfeet and Nez Perce, traveled through the area. They engaged in trade, gathered plants, hunted, fished, quarried obsidian and held religious and medicinal ceremonies at sacred sites.<\/p>\n Today, 27 tribes have historic connections to Yellowstone.<\/p>\n Yellowstone has the largest concentration of mammals in the Lower 48. There are 67 different mammals that inhabit its grasslands and forests.<\/p>\n Large predators include grizzly bears, black bears, gray wolves, coyotes, wolverines, mountain lions and Canada lynx.<\/p>\n There are eight species of ungulates (hoofed mammals): bighorn sheep, bison, elk, moose, mountain goats, mule deer, pronghorn and white-tailed deer.<\/p>\n Smaller mammals include badger, beaver, bobcats, ground squirrels, marten, pika, red fox, river otter, snowshoe hare and yellow-bellied marmot.<\/p>\n > Learn More: Yellowstone Wildlife Guide<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n The bison is the largest land mammal in North America, with bulls weighing up to 2,000 pounds! Roaming herds of these impressive ungulates can be found in Yellowstone, which has the largest population on public land.<\/p>\n Although bison were hunted to near extinction<\/a> in the 1800s, the U.S. Army eventually stepped in to protect what was left of Yellowstone’s bison from further poaching. This makes Yellowstone the only place in the Lower 48 to have a free-ranging bison population since prehistoric times.<\/p>\n Recognizing its prominent place in history and significance to the American landscape, former President Barack Obama designated the bison as the United States’ national mammal in 2016 when he signed the National Bison Legacy Act.<\/p>\n
\n<\/p>\nAmerica’s Oldest National Park<\/h2>\n
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Geysers Galore<\/h2>\n
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Yellowstone’s First Inhabitants<\/h2>\n
Mammals in Yellowstone<\/h2>\n
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Bison\u2014An American Icon<\/h3>\n
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