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Yellowstone
Designation U.S. National Park
Location Idaho, Wyoming and Montana
Nearest City Billings, Montana
Latitude 44° 40' N
Longitude 110° 28' W
Area 2,219,799 acres
8,983 kmē
Date of Establishment March 1, 1872
Visitation 2,969,868 (2002)
Governing Body National Park Service
IUCN category II (National Park)

Yellowstone National Park is a United States National Park located in the states of Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. Yellowstone is the first and oldest national parkThis article is about national parks. For the articles about the towns of National Park, see National Park, New Jersey and National Park, New Zealand. National parks are reserves of land, usually owned by national governments, that are protected from most in the world and covers 3,470 square miles ( 8,980 kmēTo help compare orders of magnitude of different geographical regions, we list here areas between 1,000 kmē and 10,000 kmē. See also areas of other orders of magnitude. areas less than 1000 kmē 1,000 kmē is equal to: 1 E9 mē in scientific notation 100,000), mostly in the northwest corner of Wyoming. The park is famous for its various geyserA geyser is a special type of hot spring that erupts periodically, ejecting a column of hot water and steam into the air. The name geyser comes from Geysir the name of the best-known geyser in Iceland; that name, in turn, comes from the word gjosa "to guss, hot springA warm spring or hot spring is a place where warm or hot groundwater issues from the ground on a regular basis for at least a predictable part of the year, and is significantly above the ambient ground temperature (which is usually around 55~57°F or 13~14s, and other geothermal features and is home to grizzly bears and wolves, and free-ranging herds of bison and elk. It is the core of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the largest intact temperate zone ecosystems remaining on the planet.

Long before any recorded human history in Yellowstone, a massive volcanic eruption spewed an immense volume of ash that covered all of the western U.S., much of the Midwest, northern Mexico and some areas of the eastern Pacific Coast. The eruption dwarfed that of Mt. St. Helens in 1980 and left a huge caldera (see Geology section and Yellowstone Caldera). The park was named for the yellow rocks seen in the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone - a deep gash in the Yellowstone Plateau that was formed by floods during previous ice ages and by river erosion from the Yellowstone River.



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