News

Slip and slide Laser-mapping of the Yellowstone area uncovered over 1,000 landslides (outlined in yellow), most within the national park. This topographical map (red denotes higher elevations ...
This geological map of Yellowstone National Park was based on work by William Henry Holmes in 1878 as part of Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden’s United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the ...
A map showing how the ground around the Yellowstone supervolcano has deformed over the last two years has been released by the U.S. Geological Survey. The map, by USGS geophysicist Chuck Wicks ...
Henry Wood Elliott was a dedicated conservationist and explorer who, in 1871, helped create the first bathymetric map of Yellowstone Lake. Unlike many of his contemporaries, however, he declined to ...
These maps are available on waterproof, tearproof paper at major retail outlets and can be downloaded for offline navigation in several mobile apps, including Gaia GPS, Topo Maps+, and Avenza Maps.
Scientists have unveiled a map that shows where volcanic ash would fall if a Yellowstone supereruption were to occur today. There have been graphic depictions of the devastation and the impact on ...
Flood basalts appear to form during the initiation of hotspot magmatism. The Columbia River basalts (CRB) represent the largest volume of flood basalts associated with the Yellowstone hotspot, yet ...