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In the parched summer of 1988, wildfires ripped through more than one-third of Yellowstone National Park during the most severe fire year in park history. Approximately 1.2 million acres scorched by ...
Yellowstone National Park's 1988 wildfires made international headlines after nearly one-third of the park was consumed by flames.
"Now we see fires of that scale every year, just constantly," Kodas said. In 1988 one third of Yellowstone park, almost 800,000 acres, was scorched.
It's the Yellowstone conspiracy theory that's too loud to ignore: John Dutton is still alive, and his death is just a trap set for his fiercest villain.
In 1988, wildfires raced through Yellowstone National Park, consuming hundreds of thousands of acres. This series of Landsat images tracks the landscape’s slow recovery through 2019.
The effects of the fires of 1988 are still visible today as lush young forests grow amid blackened reminders of the summer of fire. Today, Monday and Tuesday we look back at the summer of fire.
Lake fires in northern Minnesota are a common occurrence due to the same phenomenon, known as spotting or spot fires, he added, though the effects vary based on island size, distance from shore ...
The forests rising from the Rodeo-Chediski Fire scar could be living on borrowed time, scientists say, amid drought and climate change.
Major flooding at Yellowstone National Park has caused officials to shut the park to visitors at the beginning of one of its busiest seasons.
The Yellowstone fires of 1988 provide a good example of high-severity fire in a high-elevation forest. When wildfire comes through those systems, in those conditions, it’s often a “stand replacing” ...
It`s easy to slip into a Yellowstone National Park trout stream these days and forget there was a burn. The browns still gobble orange caddises and shrimp flies that bounce along the bottoms of swi… ...
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