Grand Teton National Park - Wyoming

Located in northwestern Wyoming, Grand Teton National Park lies in the heart of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem - the largest, intact natural environment outside of Alaska. Adorned with glaciers and snowfields, the Teton Range is unquestionably the park's central feature. As the mountains abruptly rise above the sagebrush valley of Jackson Hole, they create a rugged, picturesque backdrop. Photographed by millions of visitors each year, this world-renowned western scenery also offers opportunities for a variety of recreational pursuits.

A diverse array of wildlife complements the impressive mountain landscape. Visitors often see moose, elk, bison, pronghorn antelope, wolves, coyotes, and bears (black and grizzly). Twelve distinct, biotic communities host more than 900 species of flowering plants. These plant communities provide habitat for 60 species of mammals such as marmots, snowshoe hares, pikas, and chipmunks, and 300+ species of birds such as peregrine falcons, trumpeter swans, sand hill cranes, and ravens.

Pristine lakes and the meandering Snake River add to the natural beauty of the area. A 50-mile-long section of river winds its way through the park on its 1,056-mile-long journey to the Pacific Ocean, providing habitat for one of the last wild, inland populations of native cutthroat trout. Braided river channels create wetlands that support beavers, otters, white pelicans, ospreys, and bald eagles.

First established in 1929, today's Grand Teton National Park emerged only after a complicated and controversial series of events. Through a visionary plan by Yellowstone Superintendent Horace Albright, and the generosity of John D. Rockefeller, Jr., legislation passed in 1950 that merged the original 1929 park with lands from the Jackson Hole National Monument, creating a present-day size of 310,000 acres.

Grand Teton Trivia

1. Grand Teton National Park celebrates its 75th anniversary on February 26, 2004. The highest peak in the Teton Range is the Grand Teton at an elevation of 13,770 feet. The range also includes 12 peaks over 12,000 feet and 12 mountain glaciers.

2.The coldest temperature ever recorded in the park was -63