News

"Should be charged with child endangerment." Onlooker captures shocking video of reckless parent risking toddler's safety ...
Tourists keep tangling with wild animals at Yellowstone National Park. News flash: A buffalo, elk or grizzly bear will mess you up. So no selfies, no touching, no chasing.
Yellowstone National Park, sprawling across nearly 3,500 square miles of wilderness, is a veritable treasure trove of diverse ...
As the weather warms and visitors flock to the oldest national park in the U.S., the number of disturbing human-wildlife encounters has prompted Yellowstone officials to beg guests to maintain ...
The incident occurred at Grand Prismatic Spring near Old Faithful as tourists were enjoying a close-up view of the famous and ...
The dog at Glacier appears to have been labeled a service dog, which in itself generated significant outrage. But even ...
Yellowstone National Park officials are reminding visitors not to get "inappropriately close to wildlife" after a string of incidents with misbehaving tourists.
Yellowstone National Park has issued an urgent call for visitors to protect wildlife and respect safety regulations, the park's most aggressive action yet following a month of concerning incidents.
The recent death of a bison at Grand Prismatic Spring is an emphatic example of the danger posed by thermal areas in ...
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. – YOLO, FOMO, selfies: They are among the greatest dangers to visitors trying to get that perfect photo or video. People are getting too close and personal with ...
Yellowstone pleads with visitors to respect park's wildlife after several recent incidents Yellowstone received more than 3 million visitors last year, making it the seventh-most visited National Park ...
Visitors at Yellowstone National Park view wildlife in a video posted to YouTube by Mike Godfrey on June 19. (Photo: At Home in Wild Spaces) The park's wild, free-roaming animals are, after all ...