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57 images of geothermal features from Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, including a detailed presentation of the multi-chromatic Mammoth Hot Springs.
Yellowstone National Park contains over one half of the world's geothermal features, fueled by the energy released from magma below Yellowstone Caldera, the largest supervolcano in North America.
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Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Geyser Eruption Assorted Yellowstone Scenic
Rivers and Waterfalls of Yellowstone Grand Teton National Park
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Images in this section are in a number of different Galleries on the Photoshelter website. The Banner below leads to the Photoshelter Scenic Collection where a Gallery can be selected.
Direct Links:
Yellowstone Geothermal Scenery Grand Tetons
Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Lamar Valley & Misc Scenics Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces
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Geothermal Mist Geyser Creek 1262
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Geothermal Mist Geyser Creek 1264
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Geothermal mist at sunrise in the Geyser Creek area, halfway between Norris Junction and Gibbon Falls on the Grand Loop Road in the “goosenecks” area of the Gibbon River. There are 300 geysers in Yellowstone National Park, among the 10,000 geothermal features.
Midway Geysers Firehole River 0458
The Midway Geyser Basin on the Firehole River contains two of Yellowstone's largest geothermal features: Excelsior Geyser Crater and Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park.
A geyser is a hot spring which intermittently discharges water and steam. Water is heated by magma near the surface. The boiling water raises the internal pressure, forcing superheated steam and water through the internal plumbing (fractures and fissures) of the geyser, from which it then violently erupts. If the internal plumbing is damaged by especially explosive eruptions, the geyser becomes inactive.
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Midway Geysers Firehole River 0416
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Midway Geysers Firehole River 0438
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The Firehole River was named by early trappers for the geothermal steam which made it appear to be on fire. One of two major tributaries of the Madison River, the Firehole is a fly-fishing paradise with brown and rainbow trout.
Midway Geysers Firehole River 0420 16x9
Geothermal steam rises above the Midway Geyser Basin off the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park.
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Excelsior Geyser Firehole River 0462
Steam rising above the Excelsior Geyser Crater, an inactive geyser that still manages to release 4500 gallons of 200 degree F. water per minute (6 million gallons per day) into the Firehole River. When it was active between 1878 and 1890, eruptions would reach from 100 to 300 feet high. The geyser awoke after 95 years for a 46 hour period in September 1985, with eruptions of 30-75 feet.
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Excelsior Geyser Boardwalk Firehole River 9542 (908 KB)
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Excelsior Geyser Runoff Firehole River 9541 (1022 KB)
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There are a number of runoff channels to the Firehole River from Excelsior Geyser. Above is a large-volume channel surrounded by spectacular bacteria mats which enters the river alongside the Midway boardwalk.
Excelsior Geyser Runoff Firehole River 0429
Small-volume channels carrying runoff from the Excelsior Geyser into the Firehole River. The runoff channels are surrounded by colorful thermophilic (heat-loving) cyanobacteria mats.
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Excelsior Geyser Runoff Firehole River 0433 (1043 KB)
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Excelsior Geyser Runoff Firehole River 9532 (739 KB)
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Excelsior Geyser was once the largest active geyser in the world, but the explosive eruptions in the 1880s are thought to have damaged its internal plumbing, and aside from some small eruptions in 1946 and 2000 and the somewhat larger ones in 1985, it has become a large hot spring, releasing 200 degree F. water.
Excelsior Geyser Runoff Firehole River 9533
Steam rises above near-boiling runoff water from Excelsior Geyser as it enters the Firehole River.
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Images in this section are in a number of different Galleries on the Photoshelter website. The Banner below leads to the Photoshelter Scenic Collection where a Gallery can be selected.
Direct Links:
Yellowstone Geothermal Scenery Grand Tetons
Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Lamar Valley & Misc Scenics Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces
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Fountain Paint Pot Yellowstone 7139
Fountain Paint Pot is a mud pot in the Lower Geyser Basin north of Midway Geyser Basin. This part of the Lower Geyser Basin has all four types of geothermal features in Yellowstone (mudpots, hot springs, geysers and fumaroles). Fumaroles are basically steam geysers, and are the driest of the features. If a little more water is present, the hydrogen sulfide gas emitted from underground sources becomes sulfuric acid, which breaks down the stone into clay. The mud, driven by subterranean gases, erupts from below and forms small mud-cones.
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Silex Spring Yellowstone 7143
Silex Spring is a hot spring below Fountain Paint Pot. The blue pool is is surrounded by silica shallows and a rim of silica mixed with thermophilic bacteria mats which become more colorful in the runoff areas.
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Mud Volcano Hayden Valley 0612
The geothermal area at Mud Volcano and Sulfur Cauldron in the Hayden Valley, Yellowstone National Park. The features in this area are mostly mud pots and fumaroles, as there is little water available for geysers or hot springs. Fumaroles are steam vents, caused by ground water boiling away before it can be refreshed.
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Dragon’s Mouth Spring 9095
A column of steam rises above Dragon’s Mouth Spring in the Mud Volcano area in the Hayden Valley of Yellowstone National Park. Dragon’s Mouth Spring has had a number of names over the years, such as the Gothic Grotto and The Belcher. The local Crow Indians saw the steam as the snorting of an angry bull bison. In 1912, an unknown visitor gave the feature its current name based upon a tongue-like wave of water which surges out of the mouth of the cave. This wave used to splash water as far as the boardwalk. Activity has decreased since 1994.
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Mud Volcano Hayden Valley 0613 16x9
The hydrogen sulfide gas dissolved in the water, metabolized by cyanobacteria, is converted to sulfuric acid which dissolves the surface soil, creating pools of clay and mud. Gases exploding through the mud form cones and craters, making the Mud Volcano area smell like rotten eggs.
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Mud Volcano Hayden Valley 0615 pano
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Mud Volcano Hayden Valley 0620
Some of the grasses in the mud pool are stained a reddish orange by colonies of cyanobacteria.
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Mud Volcano Hayden Valley 0629
Pools of clay and mud, craters and unearthly vegetation in the Mud Volcano area in Hayden Valley.
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Mud Volcano Hayden Valley 9092
Cracked mud surrounds craters in the mud pools, while sulphuric steam rises from waters which are rimmed with brightly colored grasses stained by colonies of cyanobacteria in the Mud Volcano area.
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Images in this section are in a number of different Galleries on the Photoshelter website. The Banner below leads to the Photoshelter Scenic Collection where a Gallery can be selected.
Direct Links:
Yellowstone Geothermal Scenery Grand Tetons
Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Lamar Valley & Misc Scenics Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces
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Mammoth Hot Springs
Mammoth Hot Springs is a group of nearly 100 hot springs and travertine terraces adjacent to Fort Yellowstone near the north entrance of Yellowstone National Park. The travertine deposits range in age from the late Pleistocene to the present, and most of the current major hot springs have been intermittently active since 1871.
Mammoth Hot Springs is located 5 miles inside the north entrance of Yellowstone National Park, at the site of historic Fort Yellowstone. Yellowstone was formed in 1872, but after several years it became obvious that the Interior Department could not administer the park effectively. For the first five years, there were no funds or staff and poaching of bison, elk and pronghorn antelope and vandalism of park resources were rampant. In 1886 the Army took over administration of the park and built a camp next to Mammoth Hot Springs, later expanding the camp into Fort Yellowstone. The Army developed many practices which were later adopted by the National Park Service in 1916. The Army turned over the administration of Yellowstone to the newly formed National Park Service in 1918.
Liberty Cap Mammoth Hot Springs 0529
Liberty Cap is a 45 foot cone at the northern end of Mammoth Hot Springs. It is the remains of a hot spring whose plumbing remained open for hundreds of years. Its internal pressure was high enough to raise water to a great height, allowing mineral deposits to build continuously, creating dense layers of travertine.
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Liberty Cap Mammoth Hot Springs 0534
Liberty Cap was named by the 1871 Hayden Survey party for the Phrygian caps worn in the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire and during the French Revolutionary War. The soft conical caps came to symbolize freedom and the pursuit of liberty, thus the name Liberty Cap. At some point, either the water found a more convenient channel to erupt through or the travertine sealed the surface opening and the spring became inactive. It is not known when it became extinct.
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 9230
Palette Spring is named for the colorful hillside of amber, brown and orange caused by the presence of different thermophilic (heat-loving) cyanobacteria. Water flows from the terraces above down a steep ridge, depositing deep layers of travertine in several interesting and colorful patterns along the hillside.
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6667
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6770
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Collapse feature in the travertine at the base of Palette Spring in soft light on an overcast day (above left), in partial overcast with some direct sunlight (above right), and in full sunlight in the late afternoon (below).
Collapse features are formed when water flowing through near-surface channels weaken the overlying travertine until the undercut deposits collapse under their own weight. These are common at Mammoth. Water flowing over the edge deposits small stalactites along the edge of the opening. Notice at the left center that there is a large conical stalagmite formation growing at the bottom of the cavern.
Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 0543 (905 KB)
Different levels of mineral content and different bacteria affect the color of the travertine at Palette Spring. This image was taken four months after the two above. Note the difference in the length of the stalactites to the left of the stalagmite growing at the bottom. Eventually they will meet and close the cavern mouth.
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6670
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6767
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The chromatic travertine face of Palette Spring in soft diffused light and in partial sunlight. Note the dead trees which have been buried in travertine along the edges of Palette Spring.
Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6671
A collapse feature forming at the base of Palette Spring at Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone National Park.
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6672
Steam rises above the multicolored travertine face of Palette Spring on an overcast day.
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Images in this section are in a number of different Galleries on the Photoshelter website. The Banner below leads to the Photoshelter Scenic Collection where a Gallery can be selected.
Direct Links:
Yellowstone Geothermal Scenery Grand Tetons
Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Lamar Valley & Misc Scenics Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6674
Close detail of travertine at the base of Palette Spring at the northern end of Mammoth Hot Springs.
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6685
Dead bushes embedded in travertine on the face of Palette Spring on an overcast day.
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Palette Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6764
Sunlight reflects off steam rising from the chromatic face of Palette Spring at Mammoth Hot Springs.
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Palette Spring Dead Trees Mammoth Hot Springs 6768
Close detail of dead trees and a dead bush embedded in the multi-hued travertine on the face of Palette Spring at Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park.
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Geothermal Shadows Mammoth Hot Springs 0552
Shadows on the multi-colored bacteria mats in the terrace above Palette Spring.
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Travertine Scream Mammoth Hot Springs 6751
An interesting formation in the travertine face below Mound Terrace. The expression of agony reminds me of The Scream by Edvard Munch.
The circular mouth is an elongated collapse feature like those shown further above.
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Minerva Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 0556
Multiple layers of travertine atop the underlying limestone at Minerva Terrace at Mammoth Hot Springs. Minerva Terrace, like many terraces at Mammoth Hot Springs, is formed of multitudes of scallop-shaped terracettes where small pools formed behind fissure ridges at the edge of a face and gradually grew. The water flowing over the edge forms stalactites which gradually fills in the base of the projecting terracettes.
Minerva Terrace was named for the Roman goddess of wisdom and the arts. Derived from the Etruscan goddess Menrva, from the 2nd c. BC on, Minerva was equated with the Greek goddess Athena, and was a part of the Capitoline Triad of Jupiter, Juno and Minerva, which replaced the Etruscan Archaic Triad of Menrva, Tinia and Uni. Minerva sprang full-sized from the head of Jupiter, with weapons. A painful birth.
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Images in this section are in a number of different Galleries on the Photoshelter website. The Banner below leads to the Photoshelter Scenic Collection where a Gallery can be selected.
Direct Links:
Yellowstone Geothermal Scenery Grand Tetons
Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Lamar Valley & Misc Scenics Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces
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Minerva Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6758
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Minerva Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6761
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Minerva Terrace is built up of travertine deposited when the hot water dissolves the underlying limestone. The water deposits the calcium carbonate in small crystals on the surfaces over which it flows, forming the travertine. Early tourists used to leave behind objects in the pools to allow them to be coated with travertine.
Minerva Terrace has been dormant for several years. Its once colorful surfaces are now monochromatic.
Cleopatra Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6695 16x9
Cleopatra Terrace is in the Lower Terraces, just above Palette Spring and just below Minerva Terrace. Confusion related to the intermittent nature of springs at Mammoth has caused three different springs to be called Cleopatra Spring and Terrace (the original Cleopatra Spring is now called Minerva Spring).
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Cleopatra Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6701
Note the well-defined stalactite formations on the multi-colored face at the upper left of the image above. The colored area from the upper left to the lower right is where water is flowing and bacteria thrive. The monochrome area at right center is dry. As the travertine dries it loses its color and begins to crumble.
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Jupiter Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6714
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Main Terrace Face Mammoth Hot Springs 6702
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On the left is Jupiter Terrace, and at right is the travertine covered face below the edge of the Main Terrace.
Main Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6742
A series of terracettes forming on the Main Terrace at Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park.
In flat areas like these, small pools form and travertine precipitates around the edge, holding the water in the slowly rising pool. Algae forming in the groups of large scallop-shaped terracettes turn the water reddish-brown.
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Main Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6745
Detail of the runoff areas and terracettes on the Main Terrace at Mammoth Hot Springs.
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Main Terrace Mammoth Hot Springs 6747
Close detail of travertine terracettes on the Main Terrace of Mammoth Hot Springs.
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Images in this section are in a number of different Galleries on the Photoshelter website. The Banner below leads to the Photoshelter Scenic Collection where a Gallery can be selected.
Direct Links:
Yellowstone Geothermal Scenery Grand Tetons
Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Lamar Valley & Misc Scenics Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces
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New Blue Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6736
New Blue Spring on the Main Terrace is a highly variable feature that can be active or inactive several times during the course of a year.
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New Blue Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6706
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New Blue Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6741
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Detail shots of New Blue Spring on the Main Terrace and the central pool which gives it its name.
Canary Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6720 (713 KB)
Located on the Main Terrace, Canary Spring is named for yellow sulfur-dependent filamentous bacteria growing in the spring. Canary Spring is one of the most regularly active springs in the Main Terrace Group.
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Canary Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6722 (1310 KB)
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Canary Spring Mammoth Hot Springs 6723 (930 KB)
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Yellow filamentous bacteria in Canary Spring gave it its name. The sulfur-dependent cyanobacteria can form interesting patterns. These two images and the image at left below are highly detailed (note file sizes).
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Bacteria Mats Mammoth Hot Springs 6718 (854 KB)
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Bacteria Mats Mammoth Hot Springs 6728 (607 KB)
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Bacteria mats above Canary Spring arrayed in interesting patterns.
Bacteria Mats Mammoth Hot Springs 6724
Filamentous ends of bacteria mats above Canary Spring, on the Main Terrace of Mammoth Hot Springs.
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Images in this section are in a number of different Galleries on the Photoshelter website. The Banner below leads to the Photoshelter Scenic Collection where a Gallery can be selected.
Direct Links:
Yellowstone Geothermal Scenery Grand Tetons
Geothermal Scenery Old Faithful Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Lamar Valley & Misc Scenics Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces
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