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Throughout Yellowstone, unlucky victims learned that the infamous Train Station the Duttons took people to was just a code for something much darker.
Stories from the Yellowstone fires of 1988, which burned approximately 1.3 million acres, were shared recently during a program at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Cody.
In 1988, almost 800,000 acres of Yellowstone National Park was burned in what was, at the time, one of the most significant wildland fires in American history.
If conditions were perfectly horrible, Yellowstone National Park could experience another fire season that rivaled the record-setting 1988 burn when about 1,200 square miles were charred, but it ...
The monument on the sidewalk along South Third Street is easy to miss, a piece of history hidden in plain sight. The marker, made from the cornerstone of the former Lewisburg Opera House, is the ...
Bob Landis recalls vividly the day now known as “Black Saturday.” On Aug. 20, 1988, Landis was filming across Gibbon meadow, northwest of Norris Geyser Basin. Humidity was low that ...
An American icon, deaf, mute, blind Helen Keller, was born in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Author, Social Justice Activist, Socialist, ...
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK — In an area severely burned here by the 1988 North Fork fire, a Park Service interpretive sign notes that the area surrounding the boardwalk may be a meadow for ...
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 ...
In 'A Place Called Yellowstone,' environmental historian Randall K. Wilson traces the natural forces and the human clashes ...
In 'A Place Called Yellowstone,' environmental historian Randall K. Wilson traces the natural forces and the human clashes that created the world's first national park.