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English Pages 64 Year 2019
YELLOWSTONE THROUGH THE AGES
by ARTHUR D. HOWARD, Ph.D.
COLUMBIA U N I V E R S I T Y NEW YORK : 1 9 3 8
PRESS
COPYRIGHT COLUMBIA
UNIVERSITY
1938 PRESS,
FIRST PRINTING, J U N E
NEW
YORK
1938
SECOND PRINTING, AUGUST
1938
Foreign agents: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, Humphrey Milford, Amen House, London, E.C. 4, England, AND B. I. Building, Nicol Road, Bombay, India;
KWANG HSUEH PUBLISHING HOUSE, 140
China;
Peking
MARUZEN COMPANY, LTD., 6 Nihonbashi,
Tokyo,
Road,
Shanghai,
Tori-Nichome,
Japan
M A N U F A C T U R E D IN T H E U N I T E D S T A T E S O F A M E R I C A
To D R . Chief Naturalist
C. M A X of Yellowstone
BAUER National
Park
The author is indebted to the following reproduce the photographs:
BEARTOOTH MOUNTAINS, MONTANA;
Johnson
of Columbia
to
U.
the
S.
University
Geological
A B S A R O K A R A N G E ; and S E R , for
MORNING
to
GLORY
Hodnett
to Professor
Douglas
for YELLOWSTONE PLATEAU ;
Survey
for
Haynes, POOL,
of Columbia
TABLE
Inc.,
for
MOUNTAIN,
RIVERSIDE
GEY-
for
MAMMOTH
HOT
is made
as well
and
SPRINGS TERRACE. Acknowledgment
Edward
for permission to
to the U. S. Army Air Corps for
University
Press
to Dr.
for
the
pen-and-ink drawings. The author desires also to acknowledge his debt to Professor Richard University
and to Professor
M. Field of
Douglas Johnson
Princeton for
and encouraging him in his researches in the Yellowstone
region.
aiding
FOREWORD By C. MAX B A U E R , Ph.D., Park Naturalist
OUR national parks are not only scenic wonderlands, but many of them contain unique examples of the work of nature and are therefore of great interest to the student and to the scientist. For this reason, the National Park Service encourages competent investigators to study the natural features in our national parks and through their research work to contribute to the knowledge of the origin and history of these interesting phenomena. It is the function of the Naturalist Division of the National Park Service to coordinate and correlate the scientific material and facts gathered by the many scientific workers and to make the knowledge available and understandable to the public. For the past several years, many investigators have been interested in Yellowstone National Park in order to obtain a better understanding of the events of its past history which have brought about its beautiful canyons, waterfalls, lakes, hot springs, geysers, and accumulations of volcanic materials. Dr. Arthur D. Howard has spent five seasons studying the geology of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. In the following pages he has told in popular language the story of Yellowstone through the ages, and I am sure that the reader will find it fascinating, enjoyable, and profitable.
By courtesy of the U.