News

Millions of people visit Yellowstone National Park’s hot springs. There’s Grand Prismatic, the park’s largest and brightest spring known for its deep orange, yellow and turquoise colors ...
According to the National Park Service, more people have been injured by Yellowstone’s hydrothermal springs than any of the park’s other natural threats. Hot springs-related injuries currently ...
The three were trying to navigate the geyser basin in the darkhours after sunset and before the moon ... Lucky SurvivorsYellowstone’s hot springs are often surrounded by thin, fragilecrusts ...
Yellowstone officials have stressed that the ground beneath hot springs and hot geothermal features can be fragile, and there is a high risk that those who stray from park-approved boundaries end ...
Minerals and algae form patterns in the scalding hot water at Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National ... filled with steam vents and hot springs. It was research that could prove ...
Scientists have revealed two never-before-seen groups of microbes that live in the hot springs of Yellowstone National Park. Researchers from Montana State University made the discovery ...
Tom Howarth is a Newsweek reporter based in Bristol, U.K. His focus is reporting on nature and science. He covers climate change, biodiversity, extreme weather, zoonotic diseases and more.