Glacier National Park- Yellowstone National Park Information

Fact Sheets for Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks

 
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Yellowstone Contacts:
MAILING ADDRESS

National Park Service

P.O. Box 168

Yellowstone National Park, WY 82190-0168

Internet Website: www.nps.gov/yell/

By Phone
Visitor Information
307-344-7381

Information for the Hearing Impaired (TDD)
307-344-2386

By Fax
307-344-2014

 

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Glacier Contacts:
By Mail
Glacier National Park
Park Headquarters
PO Box 128
West Glacier, MT 59936

 

Internet Website:

http://www.nps.gov/glac/

By Phone
Visitor Information
(406) 888-7800
Telecommunication Device for the Deaf (TDD)
(406) 888-7806

By Fax
406-888-7808

 

 

 

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Yellowstone Information
GENERAL
  • World’s First National Park
  • A designated World Heritage Site
  • A designated Biosphere Reserve Site
  • 3,472 square miles or 8,987 square km
  • 2,219,789 acres or 898,317 ectares
  • 63 air miles north to south (102 km)
  • 54 air miles east to west 87 km)
  • 96 % in Wyoming
  • 3 % in Montana
  • 1 % in Idaho
  • Highest Point: 11,358 ft / 3,462 m (Eagle Peak)
  • Lowest Point: 5,282 ft / 1,610 m (Reese Creek)
  • Larger than Rhode Island and Delaware combined
  • Approximately 5% of park is covered by water; 15% is grassland; and 80% is forested
  • Precipitation ranges from 10 inches (26 cm) at the north boundary to 80 inches (205 cm) in the southwest corner
  • Temperatures (average) range from 9° F / -13 C in January to 80° F / 27 C in July at Mammoth Hot Springs
  • Record High Temp: 98° F / 37 C (Lamar 1936)
  • Record Low Temp: -66° F / -54 C (Madison 1933)

WILDLIFE

  • 7 species of native ungulates
  • 2 species of bears
  • Approximately 50 species of other mammals
  • 311 recorded species of birds (148 nesting species)
  • 18 species of fish (6 non-native)
  • 6 species of reptiles
  • 4 species of amphibians
  • 5 species protected as "threatened or endangered"Threatened: bald eagle, grizzly bear, lynxEndangered: whooping crane, gray wolf

FLORA

  • 8 species of conifers
  • Approximately 80% of forest is comprised of lodgepole pine
  • More than 1,700 species of native vascular plants
  • More than 170 species of exotic (non-native) plants
  • 186 species of lichens

GEOLOGY

  • An Active Volcano
  • Approximately 2,000 earthquakes annually
  • Approximately 10,000 thermal features
  • More than 300 geysers
  • One of the world’s largest calderas, measuring 45 by 30 miles (72 by 48 km)
  • One of the world's largest petrified forests
  • Approximately 290 waterfalls, 15 ft. or higher, flowing year-round
  • Tallest waterfall: Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River at 308 ft. (94 m)

YELLOWSTONE LAKE

  • 136 sq. miles (35,400 hectares) of surface area
  • 110 miles (177 km) of shoreline
  • 20 miles (32 km) north to south
  • 14 miles (23 km) east to west
  • Average depth: 140 feet (43 m)
  • Maximum depth: about 400 feet (122 m)

CULTURAL RESOURCES

  • 1,000+ documented archeological sites
  • 1,106 historic structures
  • 6 National Historic Landmarks (Obsidian Cliff & 5 buildings)
  • Nearly 200,000 museum objects
  • 20,000 titles in Park Research Library
  • 2,500 linear feet of historic documents
  • About 90,000 photographic prints and negatives
  • 21 Affiliated American Indian tribes
LATITUDE / LONGITUDE / UTM(NOTE: ALL UTMS ARE "Nad83")

1. Center of the park:

44 36 53.25 (Lat) -110 30 03.93 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4940281 N, 539584 E

2. Old Faithful:

44 27 37.31 (Lat) -110 49 41.59 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4923021 N, 513665 E

3. Mammoth:

44 58 34.79 (Lat) -110 42 03.37 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4980364 N, 523580 E

4. Entrances:

East Entrance:

44 29 18.42 (Lat) -110 00 13.80 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4926609 N, 579209 E

North Entrance:

45 01 46.39 (Lat) -110 42 31.32 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4986275 N, 522949 E

Northeast Entrance:

45 00 12.09 (Lat) -110 00 04.62 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4983809 N, 578510 E

South Entrance:

44 07 56.97 (Lat) -110 39 52.83 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4886643 N, 526824 E

West Entrance:

44 39 30.27 (Lat) -111 05 49.87 (Long)UTM Zone 12: 4945010 N, 492295 E


ROADS AND TRAILS

  • 5 park entrances
  • 466 mi / 750 km of roads (310 mi/499 km paved miles)
  • 950 mi / 1,529 km of backcountry trails
  • 97 trailheads
  • 287 backcountry campsites

VISITATION

  • 2000 - 2,838,233 visitors
  • Record year: 1992 – 3,144,405 visitors
  • Winter visitors: Approximately 140,000

FACILITIES

  • 9 visitor centers and museums
  • 9 hotels/lodges (2,238 hotel rooms/cabins)
  • 7 NPS-operated campgrounds (454 sites)
  • 5 concession-operated campgrounds (1,747 sites)
  • 2,000+ buildings (NPS and concessions)
  • 49 picnic areas
  • 1 marina

EMPLOYEES

  • During the summer:Approximately 800 National Park Service (about 380 year-round)
  • Approximately 3,700 work for concessions

MAILING ADDRESS

National Park Service

P.O. Box 168

Yellowstone National Park, WY 82190-0168

Internet Website: www.nps.gov/yell/

 
"Yellowstone Fact Sheet." Yellowstone National Park. 10 Aug 2006. National Park Service. 30 Jan 2008 <http://www.nps.gov/yell/planyourvisit/factsheet.htm>.

 

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Glacier Information

 

History

  • Established as a park on May 11, 1910.
  • Established as Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park in 1932.
  • Going- to- the-Sun Road completed in 1932.
  • Established as an International Biosphere Reserve, 1974.
  • Waterton Lakes National Park established in 1895.
  • Established as Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park
  • World Heritage Site, 1995.

Water

  • Number of lakes: 653
  • Acres of lakes: 27,023
  • Miles of shoreline: 392
  • Largest lake: Lake McDonald (10 miles long; 6,680 wide; 440' deep; 6823 acres)
  • Number of streams: 563
  • Total length of streams: 1,606 miles
  • Longest stream: Upper McDonald Creek (25.8 miles)

Land

  • Acreage: 1,013,594 acres...500+ in private ownership
  • Square miles: 1,583
  • Miles of exterior boundary: 205
  • Shared with Waterton National Park: 21 miles
  • Shared with British Columbia: 31 miles
  • Shared with U.S. Forest Service: 130 miles
  • Acres of defacto wilderness: 963,155...or 1,489.3 sq. miles
  • Acreage in Hudson Bay District:
  • Belly River: 162,766
  • Many Glacier: 211,610
  • St. Mary: 94,463
  • Two Medicine: 72,320
  • Acreage in West Lakes District:North Fork: 240,234Lake McDonald: 178,890Walton: 195,612
  • Elevation at Logan Pass: 6,646 feet
  • Number of mountains: 175
  • Highest mountain: 10,448 ft...Mt. Cleveland
  • Number of glaciers: 37 named; all shrinking in size
  • Largest glacier: Blackfoot Glacier - .7 sq. miles

Facilities

  • Number Class A campgrounds: 8, with 943 sites
  • Number Class B campgrounds: 5, with 61 sites
  • Number of trails: 151; total length - 743.3 miles
  • Miles of Continental Divide Trail in Glacier: 106
  • Wheelchair accessible walkways and corduroyTrail of the Cedars (.3 mile...1,584 feet)Logan Pass Boardwalk (2,300 feet)Oberlin Bend OverlookRunning Eagle Nature Trail
  • Number backcountry campgrounds: 61, with 208 sites
  • Miles paved bicycle path: 2 miles...Apgar to West Glacier/HQ
  • Number designated picnic areas: 8...with 175 sites
  • Number of (‘snowshoe’) patrol cabins: 30
  • Number of visitor contact stations: 4
  • Number of boat access points: 6

Plants and Animals

  • Number of fish species : 22...10 sport and 12 non- sport

  • Number of species of animals: 57...from mice to moose

  • Number of species of birds: 210 documented

  • Number of species of plants: 1,200 documented

Mailing Address:

 

P.O. Box 128

West Glacier, MT 59936

http://www.nps.gov/glac/home.htm

406 888-7800 phone

406 888-7808 fax

 

"Glacier National Park Press Kit." Glacier National Park. National Park Service. 30 Jan 2008 <http://www.nps.gov/archive/glac/pdf/press_FactSheet.pdf>.