Yellowstone closed for first time in 34 years amid flooding, mudslides
Send a link to a friend
[June 14, 2022]
By Ruffin Prevost
CODY, Wyo. (Reuters) -Record flooding and
rockslides unleashed by an unprecedented burst of heavy rains prompted
the rare closure on Monday of all five entrances to Yellowstone National
Park at the start of the summer tourist season, the park superintendent
said.
The entire park, spanning parts of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, will
remain closed to visitors, including those with lodging and camping
reservations, at least through Wednesday, as officials inspect damage to
roads, bridges and other facilities.
The closures come as Yellowstone was gearing up to celebrate its 150th
anniversary year, and as local communities heavily dependent on tourism
were counting on a rebound following COVID-19 travel restrictions over
the past two summers.
All five park entrances were closed to inbound traffic for the first
summer since a series of devastating wildfires in 1988. The National
Park Service said it was working to evacuate visitors and staff
remaining at various locations, especially in the hardest-hit northern
flank of Yellowstone.
"It is likely that the northern loop will be closed for a substantial
amount of time," the park superintendent, Cam Sholly, said in a
statement.
The "gateway" community of Gardiner, Montana, just beyond the park's
northern boundary and home to many of Yellowstone's workers, was cut off
by a mudslide to the north and washed-out road surfaces to the south,
according to the National Park Service.
Aerial footage released by the Park Service showed large swaths of the
winding North Entrance Road between Gardiner and park headquarters in
Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyoming, carved away by surging floodwaters along
the Gardner River - washouts that will likely take months to fully
repair.
[to top of second column]
|
A house falls into the Yellowstone river due to flooding in
Gardiner, Montana, U.S., June 13, 2022 in this screen grab obtained
from a social media video. Angie Lilly/via REUTERS
Power outages were scattered throughout the park, and
preliminary assessments showed numerous roadways across Yellowstone
either washed away or covered in rocks and mud, with a number of
bridges also damaged, the agency said.
Various roads in the park's southern region were on the verge of
being flooded, with more rain in the forecast.
The flooding and slides were triggered by days of torrential showers
in the park and steady rains across much of the wider Intermountain
West following one of the region's wettest springs in many years.
The park service characterized the rainfall and floods sweeping the
park as unprecedented, with the Yellowstone River topping its banks
beyond record levels.
A sudden spike in summer temperatures during the past three days
also has hastened melting and runoff of snow accumulated in the
park's higher elevations from late-winter storms.
The heavy rains and rapid runoff of snow melt converged to create
treacherous conditions in the park just two weeks after the
traditional Memorial Day holiday weekend kickoff of the U.S. summer
tourist season, which accounts of the bulk of Yellowstone's annual 4
million visitors.
Yellowstone, established as the world's first national park in 1872
and treasured as one of America's top outdoor travel destinations,
occupies some 2.2 million acres (890,308 hectares)famed for its
geysers, abundant wildlife and spectacular scenery.
(Reporting by Ruffin Prevost in Cody, Wyoming; Writing and
additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by
Sandra Maler)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |