News

Learn more about some of the microbes found in Yellowstone National Park hot springs and how they may hold the secrets to how ...
Those seeking to see a living specimen of Yellowstone National Park's most rare species, Yellowstone sand verbena, are sworn to secrecy. Its location is closely guarded, and those who visit are ...
The information is available whether individuals are in the park using geotagging, or anywhere in the world for those tuning ...
Sports; Outdoors; One-of-a-kind Yellowstone plant is closely guarded secret Wed., Aug. 23, 2017 Sand verbena, the rarest species in Yellowstone National Park grows in a secluded and secret place ...
Scientists have long been mystified about how animals who munch on plants in Yellowstone National Park all get enough food to eat. Animals all living in the same habitat and eating the same foods ...
Yellowstone National Park officials have created a plan to manage a variety of invaders that continue to threaten the 2.2 million-acre caldera and want to know what the public thinks.
Johnny Diaz Reporting on the outdoors 🏔. For over 10,000 years before becoming a national park, Yellowstone was a place where Native Americans lived, hunted, fished, gathered plants and used ...
The “first national park” was born 151 years ago, on March 1, 1872, when President Ulysses S. Grant signed into law the Yellowstone National Park Protection Act.
In this Aug. 3 photo, Heidi Anderson, director of the Yellowstone National Park Herbarium speaks about plants, in the Heritage and Research Center in Gardiner, Montana.
In this Aug. 3, 2017 photo, Heidi Anderson, director of the Yellowstone National Park Herbarium speaks about plants, in the Heritage and Research Center in Gardiner, Mont.