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Yellowstone National Park

For thousands of years, Native peoples moved in and out of the area that was to become Yellowstone National Park for ceremonies, hunting, and the medicines, minerals, and plants found there. Yellowstone was established as the first national park on March 1, 1872, and has remained an enduring inspiration for artists and scientists. Geology and botany specimens in the Smithsonian's collections from the 1870s Hayden expedition into Yellowstone still serve scientists studying changes in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem over time. When Hayden led the first geological survey of Yellowstone, he brought along a photographer, William Henry Jackson, and a painter, Thomas Moran, to document the area. Their images helped influence Congress to make Yellowstone the first National Park.


Entering Yellowstone National Park--passing through new Lava Entrance Arch at Gardiner, Mont. [Active no. 12003 : stereo photonegative,]

Flint And Obsidian Scrapers.

Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone and Falls

Dracocephalum parviflorum Nutt.

Professors' Mess, 1872

Flooded Canyon: Clear Dawn at Yellowstone

Lone Star Geyser Cone, Yellowstone National Park

[Yellowstone National Park]: rock formations, probably in the canyon of the Yellowstone River.

[Yellowstone National Park]: Old Faithful geyser.

Waterfalls - Yellowstone Falls (lava flow)

"Field notes, Glacier National Park and Yellowstone National Park, July 1-September 24, 1917, Specimen, Insert"


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