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New wildfire danger for Yellowstone National Park
New research shows that dead trees in Yellowstone National Park may pose a greater fire danger than previously suspected.
drought conditions can make predicting a fire’s behavior “much more difficult,” according to the Yellowstone National Park website. Add gusty winds to the mix and even natural forest fires ...
CODY — Stories from the Yellowstone fires ... Another story — which received national coverage — was of a fire crew from Idaho being written a ticket by a park ranger for parking their ...
CODY — Stories from the Yellowstone fires of 1988, which burned approximately 1.3 million acres inside the park and surrounding area, were shared recently during a program at the Buffalo Bill ...
The Yellowstone supervolcano last erupted approximately ... scientists have found that only one region on the northeast side of the national park is likely to erupt in the future.
Standing dead trees in Yellowstone National Park are growing wildfire ... understand how dead trees contribute to fire danger. The team used a random forest classification model, a powerful ...
After a federal judge intervened, park rangers, wildlife biologists and forest technicians in Jackson Hole received emails ...
Four conservation groups today challenged a U.S. Forest Service plan to clearcut more than 4,600 acres of pine forests, log across an additional 9,000 acres, and bulldoze up to 56 miles of road on ...
WEST YELLOWSTONE, Mont.— Conservation groups late Monday challenged a U.S. Forest Service plan to clearcut more than 5,500 acres of pine forests just outside Yellowstone National Park, in the Custer ...
But the huge fire of 1988 ultimately produced few ... Wolf reintroduction, predation risk, and cottonwood recovery in Yellowstone National Park. Forest Ecology and Management, 184, 299-313.