Yellowstone National Park is beautiful year-round, but winter means smaller crowds to let you appreciate the views.
This winter saw the most wolves from Yellowstone National Park killed in about a century. That's because states neighboring the park changed hunting rules in an effort to reduce the animals' numbers.
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Yellowstone Wolves Thrive Inside the Park — but Here's Why Many Don't Survive After Crossing the Border
Yellowstone National Park is home to several wild animals. Tourists are allowed to spot them only from a distance to ensure their safety and the animals' protection. The national park goes above and ...
The accompanying footage, captured by guide Andrea Baratte of Yellowstone Adventure Tours, shows one wolf’s pursuit of a bull ...
Bald eagles might be regarded as the most fearsome predators of the sky, but like any other wild creature, they do whatever it takes to survive ...
These Yellowstone interior wolves, considered bison-killing specialists, often use groomed park roads to get around in winter, at times walking right by snowmobilers buzzing down the road on their way ...
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. — It is a sunny winter afternoon, and Simond Raymond has a problem. His flight home to Yverdon-les-Bains in Switzerland leaves this evening from Bozeman, Mont. But at ...
Embark upon a thrilling wintertime expedition to Yellowstone National Park for a unique opportunity to witness packs of wolves in their pristine natural habitat. Aboard specially equipped vehicles ...
It’s no secret that Yellowstone National Park can be jampacked in the summer, when up to 1 million people jockey for space each July. But February typically draws fewer than 50,000 visitors. That ...
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