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YellowStone National Park

YellowStone National Park. By: Ethan Ehrlich, Drew Tudor, And Devon Nwosu. Geological Origins. It is believed that a hotspot in the upper mantle is responsible for the parks origins The movement of the North American Plate over a hotspot

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YellowStone National Park

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  1. YellowStone National Park By: Ethan Ehrlich, Drew Tudor, And Devon Nwosu

  2. Geological Origins • It is believed that a hotspot in the upper mantle is responsible for the parks origins • The movement of the North American Plate over a hotspot • This formed the YellowStone Caldera, which is considered to be the largest super volcano in North America

  3. Yellowstone Caldera Diagram depicting the Yellowstone Caldera

  4. Natural History • Yellowstone is found in the Taiga biome • The climate ranges between 0-80 degrees throughout the four seasons • Average rain is about 15.4 inches a year • Average snow is about 72.1 inches a year • Dominant Wildlife: • Bison • Bear • Wolves • Elk

  5. Endemic/threatened/Endangered Species • Endemic species • Sand Verbena- plant found on surface of water • American Dipper- an aquatic songbird • Sagebrush lizard- only lizard found in yellowstone • Threatened Species • Canada Lynx • Grizzly Bear • Endangered • Gray Wolf • Wolverine • Bald Eagle

  6. Effects on Human History • First used by native Americans as far as 11,000 years ago • Region hosted fish and materials for shelter • In 19th century, members of the Lewis and Clark expeditions investigated the region • Geothermal activity startled early explorers • People steered clear of the area due to geothermal activity

  7. What Agency protects YellowStone • The National Park Service protects YellowStone

  8. Threats to Yellowstone • Eruption of the Caldera which is a super volcano • thought as a possible destruction of U.S. • Whirling disease(viral) • been tested positive for a little less than a quarter • attacks the cartilage so fish can’t eat normally • Hikers who carry diseases or foreign pesticides • Beatles and other exotic fungi • destroys white pine trees • harms grizzly bears

  9. Bibliography "Human Impact and the Future - Yellowstone National Park." Yellowstone National Park. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Feb. 2014. Online Publications Related to Yellowstone History. "History & Culture." National Parks Service. National Parks Service, 03 Feb. 2014. Web. 19 Feb. 2014. "Yellowstone." - National Wildlife Federation. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Feb. 2014. "Yellowstone National Park History." Yellowstone National Park History. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Feb. 2014. "Yellowstone National Park Wildlife / Animals, Pictures, Viewing & Information." AllTrips. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Feb. 2014.

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