Infos querbeet zu NPs, NMs, SPs, etc.

  • Halle der Aufzeichnungen
    Der geheime Raum im Mount Rushmore


    Link

  • Katmai National Park, AK

    Dieser Livestream zeigt Bären beim Lachsfischen

    Zitat

    Der Juli ist für Bären in Alaska ein großartiger Monat. Dann wandern nämlich leckere Lachse zum Laichen flussaufwärts – und die Bären müssen einfach nur entlang der Flüsse und Bäche an Stromschnellen und Wasserfällen warten, bis einer vorbeispringt.
    Für Bären ist der Sommer in Alaska ein einziges Lachs-Büffett – und der Katmai National Park zeigt das im Livestream.
    In dem Park leben mehr als 2000 Braunbären. Wo sich Bären vielerorts zurückziehen und vom Menschen verdrängt werden, bleibt die Population dort – in Alaskas hohem Norden – stabil.
    Weil die Parkleitung weiß, wann die Bären wo jagen gehen, haben sie Livestreams aus dem Katmai National Park eingerichtet. Vor allem an den "Brooks Falls"-Wasserfällen versammeln sich täglich Dutzende Bären – und auch süße Bärenbabys – um Lachse zu jagen.


    Link

  • Chimney Rock State Park closed for road repairs


    Link

  • Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park

    Volcanic activity and earthquakes keep most of park closed


    Link mit Bildern

  • Glacier National Park


    Lightning Ignites Several Fires in Glacier National Park


    Link


    Zitat

    Evacuation Order
    Evacuations are in effect for Lake McDonald Lodge, North Lake McDonald Road, and the Avalanche and Sprague Campgrounds. The Going-to-the-Sun Road is closed between the foot of Lake McDonald (near Apgar) and Logan Pass.


    Link

  • Horseshoe Bend Undergoes Changes To Manage Growing Crowds


    Link

  • Wildfire moves closer to Glacier National Park's scenic road


    Link

  • ... bereits an anderer Stelle erwähnt: das "Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks" N. M. ist bis auf Weiteres gesperrt: Link BLM :(


    Viele Grüße,

    Nick (:hutab:)

    "Drivin' in the sun ... looking out for #1"

  • Grand Teton NP
    Gros Ventre Roundabout Update


    Link

  • Hawaii Volcanoes National Park prepares for partial reopening

    Zitat

    The National Park Service is planning to reopen sections of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park next month following the lull in activity from the Kilauea volcano.
    The reopening date has been set for Sept. 22 after the May eruption prompted the Big Island park closure, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Thursday.
    The U.S. Geological Survey downgraded the volcano’s alert level to “watch” last week. It had maintained the “warning” level since May 3.
    The pause in seismicity and other activity allowed staff to assess damages and repair water lines, park spokeswoman Jessica Ferracane said. While park hours upon reopening are expected to be limited, the Kilauea Visitor Center near the entrance will likely be among the areas, she said.
    Officials are also looking for a possible viewing area for the public to be able to see the changes to Halemaumau Crater.
    “We’re working really hard to determine where that will be because we know that’s what visitors will want to see,” Ferracane said. “That’s a priority.”


    Link

  • America's best urban national parks


    Link mit Bildern

  • 50 Years National Trails System Hikes

    These 10 National Trail System Hikes Are America’s Favorite, According to Google


    Link mit Bildern

  • Hawaii Volcanoes National Park Produces Reopening Map


    Link mit Map

  • Glacier Park Re-Opens Scenic Roadway to Private Vehicles

    Zitat

    Officials in Glacier National Park have re-opened the full length of the Going-to-the-Sun Road to private vehicle traffic as crews work to contain the fire that forced the closure.
    The National Park Service closed the west side of the scenic highway on Aug. 12 due to a lightning-caused fire on the northwest side of Lake McDonald.
    The road from Apgar to Logan Pass was initially re-opened to shuttle traffic two weeks ago.
    The Howe Ridge fire has burned nearly 23 square miles (59 square kilometers) of land and 13 homes and forced the closure of Lake McDonald Lodge for the season. Officials say up to a half inch (13 millimeters) of rain fell on the fire Sunday. It is 35 percent contained.
    Park officials say access to Logan Pass will close for the season on or before Oct. 15.


    Link

  • Six of the best US national trails – chosen by experts


    Mehr Infos hier

  • Going-to-the-Sun Road Closed in Logan Pass Area for Season


    Link

  • Wildtiere bitte nicht füttern!


    Visitors Feed Black Bears: Adult Bear Euthanized and Cubs Relocated


    Link

  • Joshua Tree National Park

    Clean-up Continues After Heavy Rains

    Zitat

    Staff continues clean up of roads and facilities at the park caused by heavy rains Friday night and in the early hours of Saturday morning. Pinto Basin Road is closed and probably will be for the next couple of days. Cottonwood Campground and Visitor Center are closed as well as access in and out of the park through the south entrance. All dirt roads are currently closed throughout the park. While the west entrance remains open, park officials are not recommending going in or out of the west entrance while debris is being cleared in the area. Electrical power is currently off at Black Rock.


    Link

  • Bears Ears National Monument

    Inside the new battle for the American West
    The push to cut back federally protected lands is fueling a dispute rooted in our history and culture. The big question: Whose land is it?

    Zitat

    Deep in a box canyon in Utah, in the heart of the fractured land known as Bears Ears National Monument, there is a cave—a swooping, mineral-streaked alcove in a sandstone cliff.
    In December 1893 a rancher-explorer named Richard Wetherill pushed his way through dense reeds and discovered inside that alcove a stacked-stone ruin where a prehistoric group of Native Americans once lived. He named the site Cave Seven. Some would later condemn him as a vandal and a looter—but Cave Seven proved to be one of the most important finds in the archaeology of the American Southwest.
    It’s easier to get there today than it was in Wetherill’s era, but it’s not easy. You bump along a dirt road that twists long miles through arroyos and canyons, past jagged crags and sandstone domes. Then you are on foot. You clamber through a dry watercourse clogged with bitterbrush and poison ivy; you sidle along a rock ledge. Look up: A dissolving jet contrail is the only sign of the time in which we live. Look down: What seem like stones at your feet are in fact remnants of cooking vessels. Such relics are everywhere, if you know how to look: A saltbush-covered mound conceals a ceremonial kiva; a subtle line in the earth marks a road connecting ancient villages. All around is evidence of things made, laid, and lived in centuries ago.
    Wetherill excavated the surface ruin at Cave Seven, selling the artifacts to museums and collectors, leaving only a bit of masonry wall and smoke smudges. Then he kept digging. He had recently learned the novel concept of archaeological stratigraphy: the idea that prehistory is recorded in successive layers of sediment. Earlier remains lie beneath later ones—ruins under ruins, cultures under cultures. At Cave Seven, Wetherill found below the visible ruins a burial site that predated them by hundreds of years. He dug up 98 skeletons from a previously unknown Basketmaker society. Deep in this forgotten canyon, deep in time, one culture had given way to another.
    Bears Ears National Monument is now a battleground in another collision of cultures. Across the American West, from the desert canyons of Utah to the towering conifers of the Pacific Northwest, and in the mountains and sagebrush basins between, Americans are engaged in bitter disputes over public lands. Nowhere has the battle been fiercer than around national monuments, particularly Bears Ears, which then President Barack Obama created in December 2016.

    Last December, President Donald Trump reduced the 1.35-million-acre monument by 85 percent and divided it into two smaller units, Indian Creek and Shash Jáa. He cut nearby Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument by 46 percent. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke also recommended shrinking other monuments, including Cascade Siskiyou in Oregon. He declined to be interviewed.
    When Congress passed the Antiquities Act in 1906, authorizing the creation of such monuments, it was partly in reaction to the theft of Native American artifacts by people like Wetherill. The law gives presidents broad discretion to protect “historic landmarks … and other objects of historic or scientific interest” on federal land. Designating a monument requires no input from Congress. “A president could literally scratch something out on a bar napkin,” says University of Colorado law professor Charles Wilkinson. There is no language in the law, however, granting subsequent presidents the power to amend monuments created by their predecessors. In the days after Trump slashed the two Utah monuments, five lawsuits challenged the legality of the move. Those suits are pending too.


    Mehr mit tollen Bildern hier

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