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A reminder that images helped to make the case. |
"Yellowstone was named a national park on
this date in 1872. Written descriptions of Yellowstone began to appear
in the East Coast media over the next few decades, but
most of them were
dismissed as tall tales. Mountain man Jim Bridger insisted over and
over that he had seen petrified trees and waterfalls shooting upward
into the sky. Trapper Joe Meek, describing the Norris Geyser basin,
recounted stories of steaming rivers, boiling mud, and fire and
brimstone. Because of the Native American wars and the Civil War, the
United States Geological Survey did not come in to investigate
Yellowstone until 1871. The crew submitted a 500-page report to
Congress, and on March 1, 1872, President Ulysses S. Grant signed the
Act of Dedication to preserve more than 2 million acres of wilderness as
the world's first national park."
This from the
Writer's Almanac for March 1, 2012
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