- Trails of Yellowstone National Park
Yellowstone National Park has over 1,100 miles (1,770 km)"Hiking in the Park" page of Yellowstone:Plan Your Visit section of National Park Service website [http://www.nps.gov/yell/planyourvisit/hiking.htm] , retrievedMay 19 , 2007.] of blazed and mapped hiking trails, including some which have been in use for hundreds of years. Several of these trails were the sites of historical events. Yellowstone's trails are noted for variousgeyser s,hot spring s, and other geothermal features, and for viewing ofbald eagle s,osprey s,grizzly bear s, black bears, wolves,coyote s,bighorn sheep ,pronghorn antelope s, and free-ranging herds of bison andelk .Prehistoric times
In the Middle Prehistoric era, humans appear to have continued living in mountain areas through droughts severe enough for plains populations to disappear.Earl H. Swanson, Jr., "Cultural Relations Between Two Plains", "Archaeology in Montana" 7, no. 2 (April-June 1966), pp. 1-2, cited in Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One".] Evidence suggests that the Yellowstone Plateau was occupied continuously, with seasonal movement among preferred places. Foragers wintered in protected valleys along the edges of the plateau, and summered in higher hunting grounds which might extend fifty to one hundred miles away.Aubrey L. Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One", Yellowstone Library and Museum Association / Colorado Associated University Press, 1977, ISBN 0-87081-104-5.] Some of the seasonal routes developed into often-used trails. Artifacts from this era are found throughout the park, with large enough concentrations around Lake Yellowstone to suggest a substantial population.Carling Malouf, "Preliminary Report, Yellowstone National Park Archaeological Survey, Summer 1958", mimeographed, Montana State University, Missoula,
January 5 ,1959 , cited in Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One".]Pre-parkhood years
First white discoverer used Indian trail sections
John Colter (or Coulter), a former member of theLewis and Clark Expedition , spent the winter of 1806-1807 trapping along the middleYellowstone River . With the information he learned there, he was hired by the Missouri Fur Trading Company to invite Indian tribes to the trading post which the company built at the mouth of the Big Horn River in October 1807.M.O. Skarsten, "George Drouillard", in "The Mountain Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West", volume 4, Arthur A. Clark Co., 1966, cited in Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One".] In the winter of 1807-1808, soliciting trade with the Crow and other native tribes, Colter traveled alone on a five-hundred-mile route that included the Yellowstone Plateau, making him the first white man to seeYellowstone Lake and some of the area's unique features.William Clark's Map of the West, in Nicholas Biddle, "History of the Expedition Under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark", volume 2, Bradford and Inskeep, 1814, cited in Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One".] Colter's route included Indian trails both inside and outside the current park, such as over Pryor Gap nearCody, Wyoming ; around the west shore of Yellowstone Lake and down Yellowstone River to the crossing near Tower Fall (a geothermal area on the east bank is "Hot Spring Brimstone" on Clark's map); and continuing up Lamar River and Soda Butte Creek and Clarks Fork to return to the Pryor Gap trail.Merrill J. Mattes, "Behind the Legend of Colter's Hell: The Early Exploration of the Yellowstone National Park", "Mississippi Valley Historical Review" 36, number 2 (September 1949), pp. 253-54, cited in Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One".]Bannock Trail
By 1840, bison ("the Buffalo") had been hunted and trapped to extinction west of the
Continental Divide . TheShoshone and Bannock tribes had established a plains-style culture based on the buffalo on theSnake River plains, but the regional extinction forced them to organize hunting migrations across the Yellowstone Plateau. These tribes established a route that became known as the Bannock Trail.Aubrey L. Haines, "The Bannock Indian Trails of Yellowstone National Park", cited in Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One".] The route began at Camas Meadows inIdaho , went overTarghee Pass , followed the Madison River basin, went over the Gallatin Mountains nearMount Holmes , down Indian Creek to the Gardner River, through Snow Pass to Mammoth Hot Springs, up Lava Creek, through the meadows of Blacktail Deer Creek, to the "Bannock Ford" crossing of theYellowstone River near Tower Falls, up the Lamar Valley, and over the Absaroka Range into the Clarks Fork Valley. From there, Bannock and Shoshone (often withFlathead andNez Perce ) would choose between the Yellowstone Valley and the Wyoming Basin to hunt bison. For forty years ending in1878 with theBannock War , tribes used the Bannock Trail for access to drainages such as the Madison, Gallatin, Yellowstone, Stillwater, Clarks Fork, and Shoshone valleys, and through them to a more distant arc of buffalo ranges.Folsom party used Indian trails
The most organized of the numerous explorations into Yellowstone in the 1860s was the 1869
Folsom Expedition . It was particularly well documented as having traveled on existing Indian trails. From the Bozeman Pass area, the three-man group rode on a former Indian trail up Meadow Creek from the Gallatin drainage to the Yellowstone drainage, and down Trail Creek (named for its old trail) to the Yellowstone Valley, as miners had done since 1864. They followed Indian trails up the Yellowstone River the rest of the way south to the mouth of the Gardner River, where the trail forked. The party used the fork over Blacktail Deer Creek Plateau to the head of Rescue Creek.Charles W. Cook, David E. Folsom, and William Peterson, "The Valley of the Upper Yellowstone", University of Oklahoma Press, 1965, cited in Haines, "The Yellowstone Story, Volume One".] Portions of their later travels used other trails long used by natives. An article by Charles W. Cook and David E. Folsom describing the expedition was published in a Chicago magazine in 1870, raising popular attention. David Folsom worked with Walter W. deLacy, another explorer of Yellowstone, to revise deLacy's 1865 map; the 1870 edition aided that year'sWashburn-Langford-Doane Expedition . They followed the same route into the area as far as Rescue Creek, then used the Bannock Trail eastward. Like the Folsom party, Washburn's group used other Indian trails around parts of Yellowstone Lake and elsewhere in the future Park.First years as a national park
Yellowstone's first superintendent,
Nathaniel P. Langford , served without salary from 1872 to 1877. He also worked without funds, and entered the Park only twice in his five years of service. Under Langford, no trails were developed, and existing trails were maintained only by their users and guides.Trail development by P.W. Norris
Yellowstone's second superintendent,
Philetus W. Norris , served from 1877 to 1882. His administration, unlike Langford's, had a budget for roadbuilding and trailbuilding. In his five years, the Park trail system was increased from 108 miles to 204 miles, many miles of existing trails were improved into roads, and wooden signboards were added at many trail intersections and natural features.Superintendent Norris added the trail (later a road) east through Lamar Valley and out the Park's northeast corner, in 1878. He discovered, explored, and cleared a trail over the Washburn Range through Rowland Pass, in 1878.Lee H. Whittlesey, "Yellowstone Place Names", Montana Historical Society Press, Helena, Montana, USA, 1988, ISBN 0-917298-15-2.]
Current trail system
Morning Glory trail
The Morning Glory trail is an approximately 2.6 mile long walkway that starts very close to the
Old Faithful Geyser . It goes past a series of geysers - big, small, and colorful.References
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