Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Wyoming National Forest was first established July 1, 1908 from part of Yellowstone National Forest with 976,320 acres (3,951.0 km 2). On May 14, 1923, the lands of the first Bridger National Forest were added, and on March 10, 1941, its name was changed to Bridger National Forest .
Former national forests of Wyoming (14 P) A. Ashley National Forest (16 P) B. Bighorn National Forest (15 P) Black Hills National Forest (12 P)
According to Geoffrey O’Gara of High Country News, The Green Mountain Common Allotment was once one of the largest unfenced open ranges in North America. O’Gara claims the allotment contains over 500,000 acres, split north to south by the Continental Divide, spanning 60 miles by 20 miles and is a mix of private and public land.
The forest is managed together with North Carolina's other national forests. [41] Wallowa-Whitman: Oregon, Idaho: May 6, 1905: 2,261,480 acres (9,151.9 km 2) Wallowa-Whitman National Forest stretches from the Blue Mountains to the Snake River.
The most spectacular examples of cross-bedded sandstone and "topple blocks" in North America. NNL area extends across Colorado border. Two Ocean Pass: October 1965 Teton Wilderness: Teton: federal (Bridger-Teton National Forest) A pass located on the continental divide.
In the middle of the forest at the Wapiti Ranger Station, which is 30 mi (48 km) west of the forest headquarters in Cody, Wyoming, January high and low temperatures are 35.8 and 13.2 °F (2.1 and −10.4 °C), while the July highs and lows are 81.4 and 49.1 °F (27.4 and 9.5 °C).
National forests of Wyoming (9 C, 6 P) Pages in category "Forests of Wyoming" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
This ecoregion is located in eastern and central Idaho, south-western and south-central Montana, western and northeastern Wyoming, and southwestern South Dakota.It is centered on the Yellowstone Plateau, extending outward on connected mountain ranges, but the ecoregion also includes the isolated Bighorn Mountains and Black Hills, as well as smaller isolated ranges in central Montana.