THE YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
GREATEST ANIMAL REFUGE
HE Yellowstone National Park is by far the largest
and most successful wild-animal preserve in the world. Since it was
established in 1872 hunting has been strictly prohibited, and elk, bear,
deer of several kinds, antelope, bison, moose, and bighorn mountain
sheep roam the plains and mountains in large numbers. Thirty thousand
elk, for instance, live in the park. Antelope, nearly extinct elsewhere,
here abound.
These animals have long since ceased to fear man as
wild animals do everywhere except in our national parks. While few
tourists see them who follow the beaten roads in the everlasting
sequence of stages, those who linger in the glorious wilderness see them
in an abundance that fairly astonishes.
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IN WINTER WHEN THE SNOWS ARE DEEP PARK RANGERS LEAVE HAY IN CONVENIENT
SPOTS Photograph by S. N. Leek
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THIRTY THOUSAND ELK ROAM THIS SANCTUARY WILDERNESS copyright by S. N. Leek
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IT IS THE NATURAL HOME OF THE CELEBRATED BIGHORN, THE ROCKY-MOUNTAIN
SHEEP Photograph by Schlechten
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DEER MAKE UNEXPECTED SILHOUETTES AT FREQUENT INTERVALS Photograph by G. Swanson
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yard1/yell5.htm
Last Updated: 30-Oct-2009
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