Yellowstone National Park Travel Information
Yellowstone National Park, a region once rumored to be "the place
where hell bubbles up", is one of the Earth's greatest natural
wonders, a mountainous land parked atop one of the world's largest
active volcanoes. Yellowstone is best known for its bubbling calderas
and other geothermal wonders, peculiarly framed by thickly forested
mountains and high alpine lakes. These spectacular features have
amazed visitors from the beginning, including Native Americans,
explorers, and trappers, and helped lead to Yellowstone's designation
as the world's first national park. In 1872, President Ulysses S.
Grant signed a law declaring that Yellowstone would forever be
"dedicated and set apart as a public park or pleasuring ground for the
benefit and enjoyment of the people." Yellowstone is a raw and
unpredictable land full of wildlife, remote thermal areas, turbulent
streams, and rugged mountains and visitors will be amazed by the brute
natural force displayed by its numerous calderas and thrilling
geysers. Yellowstone National Park encompasses over 2.2 million acres
and is one of America's premier wilderness areas. Most of the park is
classified as backcountry and managed as wilderness. Yellowstone has
over 1,100 miles of trails that access its every corner that are very
popular with hikers, backpackers and horsepackers alike. Yellowstone
has excellent wildlife viewing opportunity with a variety of large
game and land mammals, such as elk, moose, the ever popular bison,
deer, grizzly and black Bear, mountain goats, bighorn sheep, wolves
and is a migratory home to a great number of bird species.
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