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Okla-homey
3/1/2007, 09:09 AM
March 1, 1872 : Yellowstone Park established

http://aycu15.webshots.com/image/10574/2005407310816604755_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2005407310816604755)

135 years ago today, President U.S. Grant signs the bill creating the nation's first national park at Yellowstone.

Indians had lived and hunted in the region that would become Yellowstone for hundreds of years before the first white explorers arrived. Abundant game and mountain streams teaming with fish attracted the Indians to the region, though the awe-inspiring geysers, canyons, and gurgling mud pots also fascinated them.

http://aycu38.webshots.com/image/8757/2005491478346876378_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2005491478346876378)
A brown bear sow and her cubs at Yellowstone. Cute, but don't approach the cubs unless you want mama to rip your face off.

John Colter, the famous mountain man, was the first white to travel through the area. After journeying with Lewis and Clark to the Pacific, Colter joined a party of fur trappers to explore the wilderness. In 1807, he explored part of the Yellowstone plateau and returned with fantastic stories of steaming geysers and bubbling cauldrons. Some doubters accused the mountain man of telling tall tales and jokingly dubbed the area "Colter's Hell."

http://aycu36.webshots.com/image/12395/2005456946651935258_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2005456946651935258)

Before the Civil War, only a handful of trappers and hunters ventured into the area, and it remained largely a mystery. In 1869, the Folsom-Cook expedition made the first formal exploration, followed a year later by a much more thorough reconnaissance by the Washburn-Langford-Doane expedition.

http://aycu28.webshots.com/image/9547/2005409551271824554_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2005409551271824554)
A Yellowstone hot spring

The key to Yellowstone's future as a national park, though, was the 1871 exploration under the direction of the government geologist Ferdinand Hayden. Hayden brought along William Jackson, a pioneering photographer, and Thomas Moran, a brilliant landscape artist, to make a visual record of the expedition. Their images provided the first visual proof of Yellowstone's wonders and caught the attention of the U.S. Congress.

Early in 1872, Congress moved to set aside 1,221,773 acres of public land straddling the future states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho as America's first national park.

http://aycu18.webshots.com/image/9777/2005483498195042742_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2005483498195042742)
Yellowstone River thru the park

President Grant signed the bill into law on this day in 1872. The Yellowstone Act of 1872 designated the region as a public "pleasuring-ground," which would be preserved "from injury or spoilation, of all timber, mineral deposits, natural curiosities, or wonders within."

For a nation bent on settling and exploiting the West, the creation of Yellowstone was surprising. Many congressmen gave it their support simply because they believed the rugged and isolated region was of little economic value.

http://aycu28.webshots.com/image/10387/2005472483782518924_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2005472483782518924)
Artist's depiction of a panoramic view of the whole Yellowstone dealio.

Yet the Yellowstone Act of 1872 set a precedent and popularized the idea of preserving sections of the public domain for use as public parks. Congress went on to designate dozens of other national parks, and the idea spread to other nations around the world.

http://aycu17.webshots.com/image/9176/2005422501138556751_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2005422501138556751)

TUSooner
3/1/2007, 09:39 AM
One thing photos of Yellowstone fail to convey is the sulphury smell.

Bad news: The Supervolcano under Yellowstone could blow catastrophically in 10 minutes or 10,000 years.
Good news: No one will talk about global warmng after that, because the monstrous dust cloud will plunge the Northern Hemisphere (at least) into a couple of years of 365-day winter.

Okla-homey
3/1/2007, 09:41 AM
One thing photos of Yellowstone fail to convey is the sulphury smell.

Bad news: The Supervolcano under Yellowstone could blow catastrophically in 10 minutes or 10,000 years.
Good news: No one will talk about global warmng after that, because the monstrous dust cloud will plunge the Northern Hemisphere (at least) into a couple of years of 365-day winter.

I guess sulphur is what gave the river and park its name. Does the place generally smell like Sulphur, OK?

TUSooner
3/1/2007, 10:14 AM
I guess sulphur is what gave the river and park its name. Does the place generally smell like Sulphur, OK?
I've never been to Sulphur, OK. But I wanna go back to Yellowstone before the Big One. :)

royalfan5
3/1/2007, 10:32 AM
What happened by 5 years earlier on this date was way cooler.

FaninAma
3/1/2007, 10:40 AM
1867 Most of Nebraska becomes 37th US state (expanded later)

And then the population immediately began moving to other states so they could set up Nebraska Cornhusker(Bugeater before the name change) fan clubs in those states. I am totally convinced that there are more Nebraskan fans living out of state than for any pther program.

royalfan5
3/1/2007, 10:42 AM
1867 Most of Nebraska becomes 37th US state (expanded later)

And then the population immediately began moving to other states so they could set up Nebraska fan clubs in those states. I am totally convinced that there are more Nebraskan fans living out of state than for any pther program.
Nebraskan's didn't really start migrating until the Dust Bowl, just like Oklahomans. Were just so damn likeable that anyone with a remote Nebraska connection stays a fan. And our shade of red is more visually pleasing.

FaninAma
3/1/2007, 10:46 AM
Nebraskan's didn't really start migrating until the Dust Bowl, just like Oklahomans. Were just so damn likeable that anyone with a remote Nebraska connection stays a fan. And our shade of red is more visually pleasing.

Since my wife and inlaws are from Nebraska I tend to agree with you. When I lived in Grand Island I really thought Nebraskans were great people. The high number of red headed kids kind of freaked me out since I had watched Children Of The Corn and all of the last names that were mainly consonants with no vowels also took some getting used to.

royalfan5
3/1/2007, 10:50 AM
Since my wife and inlaws are from Nebraska I tend to agree with you. When I lived in Grand Island I really thought Nebraskans were great people. The high number of red headed kids kind of freaked me out since I had watched Children Of The Corn and all of the last names that were mainly consonants with no vowels also took some getting used to.
Grand Island is a nice place, my Aunt and Uncle have lived there for while. The mostly consonants thing shifts depending on where you are at. The heavily German areas tend to have a higher vowel ration than the Czech's who just like to slap an A on the end of a name and call it good.

SoonerStormchaser
3/1/2007, 10:54 AM
May 13, 2005:

SoonerStormchaser kills Bullwinkle with 2005 Toyota Sienna near aforementioned First National Park.

FaninAma
3/1/2007, 10:55 AM
Grand Island is a nice place, my Aunt and Uncle have lived there for while. The mostly consonants thing shifts depending on where you are at. The heavily German areas tend to have a higher vowel ration than the Czech's who just like to slap an A on the end of a name and call it good.

Yeah, it was a nice place. Schools were great. Lots of parks. Just too darned far from Oklahoma and family. (My wife's family had moved to Amarillo 15 years earlier.)

SoonerJack
3/1/2007, 10:58 AM
One thing photos of Yellowstone fail to convey is the sulphury smell.

Bad news: The Supervolcano under Yellowstone could blow catastrophically in 10 minutes or 10,000 years.
Good news: No one will talk about global warmng after that, because the monstrous dust cloud will plunge the Northern Hemisphere (at least) into a couple of years of 365-day winter.

We need to get the U.N. working on this ASAP. Take part of the Comet-Earth Collision Prevention Team (CECPT) and get them to start the Keep Yellowstone from Plunging Us Into Yet Another Ice-Age team (KYPYUIAIA). Al Gore should be tapped as the lead facilitator.

Jimminy Crimson
3/1/2007, 11:18 AM
I am totally convinced that there are more Nebraskan fans living out of state than for any pther program.

I'd guess Notre Dame.

royalfan5
3/1/2007, 11:44 AM
I'd guess Notre Dame.
I would put Notre Dame in a slightly different catergory than a state school though.

Jimminy Crimson
3/1/2007, 12:26 PM
I would put Notre Dame in a slightly different catergory than a state school though.

I agree with you, but I'd think their percentages are much higher of out of staters.

royalfan5
3/1/2007, 12:34 PM
I agree with you, but I'd think their percentages are much higher of out of staters.
Definately. As state schools go, Nebraska's out of state fan network is probably better organized than most.

Boomer_Sooner_sax
3/1/2007, 12:46 PM
Nebraska is a state?? I thought is wa just a vast wasteland to the north..Hmm. Just kidding. I actually like Nebraska, very pretty place, although I have only been there once. Anyways, back on the National Park thing, one of the coolest things ever, although anymore, they seem to be over commercialized, but you just can't beat being out there. I love the Grand Canyon, one of the greatest places on Earth. Yah for National Parks!

TUSooner
3/1/2007, 01:09 PM
May 13, 2005:

SoonerStormchaser kills Bullwinkle with 2005 Toyota Sienna near aforementioned First National Park.
You bastard. That was my favorite cartoon.