By Ruffin Prevost One of the most popular visitor destinations in Yellowstone National Park in 1919 was a spot called the Lunch Counter, about a 10-minute walk from the Old... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
Yellowstone Quarterly
By Neala Fugere Far from the paved roads and drive-through entrance gates of more developed areas, the Bechler region is tucked away in the park’s southwest corner. This region can... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
by Chelsea DeWeese For summer visitors to Yellowstone National Park, perhaps nothing is more refreshing than spending an afternoon at one of the area’s idyllic waterfalls. With about 290... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
by Jenny Golding On a clear night in July, dozens of park visitors are standing in the dark at a large pullout along the road between Mammoth Hot Springs and... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
Evan Hubbard is one of more than 100 rangers providing interpretation in Yellowstone each summer season. We recently sat down with Evan, now a year-round park ranger in the Division... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
By Ruffin Prevost In 1962, pioneering wildlife biologists Frank and John Craighead attached a radio tracking collar to a grizzly bear in Yellowstone National Park. It was the first... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
Pat Bigelow intended to spend just one summer in Montana—until she landed a seasonal job working on Yellowstone Lake. Several decades and a Ph.D. in fish and wildlife management later,... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
An extended version of this article originally appeared in the Spring 2018 issue of Yellowstone Quarterly. The Fires of 1988 that burned 1.4 million acres in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem—including 793,880... read more →
Yellowstone Quarterly
Originally published in the Spring 2018 issue of Yellowstone Quarterly Colleen Curry, museum curator for the Yellowstone Heritage and Research Center (HRC), got her start cataloging Civil war artifacts at... read more →