Wyoming
Video of Wyoming Flooding Near Yellowstone’s Devastating to See
Over the previous weekend, now we have positively lucked out in southeast Wyoming and that’s placing it extraordinarily flippantly. For some on the northwestern aspect of the state, issues have been terribly heartbreaking and devastating for some. By now, you could have heard how all the entrances to Yellowstone Nationwide Park are at the moment closed. Whereas that is at the moment stated to be solely momentary, some movies present unbelievable disasters close by.
The flooding that has surrounded Yellowstone Nationwide Park has created hazardous situations for roads and performed loads of harm. The park has posted loads of video and photographs on their Fb web page to indicate what precisely is going on across the park.
As Yellowstone Nationwide Park posted on their Fb web page, the above video impacts the north entrance highway between Mammoth Scorching Springs in Wyoming and Gardiner, MT by way of Gardner Canyon.
One other video of the flooding from Monday (June thirteenth) was posted within the Mammoth/Gardiner Neighborhood Message Board on Fb. It reveals simply how excessive the water has gotten and how briskly it is touring as effectively. This occurred to be alongside 89 South in Yankee Jim Canyon, simply off to the north in Montana.
Most likely the worst of footage posted within the Mammoth/Gardiner Neighborhood Message Board was the video beneath in Gardiner, MT because the flood took a home with it.
The footage is devastating to have a look at and you may hear the identical sentiment from onlookers close by within the background.
Whereas the footage is definitely heartbreaking, there have been a number of posts and feedback in that message board which have been suggesting methods to assist these affected by the floods in northwest Wyoming and southwestern Montana. Regardless of the robust instances for some, the neighborhood has been very benevolent in a number of posts that give info on native locations serving to and the place these affected can attain out.
Yellowstone Nationwide Park is protecting the general public replace as a lot as attainable about what’s occurring on their Fb web page and thru their web site.
Wyoming Fireplace Crews Battle Wildfires
Wildland firefighting crews in Wyoming had been busy all through the weekend. Fires have popped up within the Bighorn and Bridger-Teton Nationwide Forest together with Campbell County
– Wyoming Fireplace Crews Battle Wildfires
30 Methods To Say You are From Wyoming With out Saying You are From Wyoming
These are probably the most talked about methods to say you are from Wyoming, with out truly saying you are from Wyoming.
– 30 Methods To Say You are From Wyoming With out Saying You are From Wyoming
Code Of The West: Wyoming State Code of Ethics
“The Code of the West” was declared the official state code of Wyoming, and the act was signed into regulation on March third, 2010. Wyoming is the primary state to undertake a code of ethics. The laws selected ten ethics derived from the e-book “Cowboy Ethics” by James P. Owen
Wyoming
Wyoming Legislature to Convene 2025 General Session Tuesday
The 68th Wyoming Legislature will convene for the 2025 General Session on Tuesday at Noon. The bodies will hold opening ceremonies as their first order of business, and newly elected members of the Legislature and legislative leadership will be sworn in. Following a brief recess, the bodies will begin introduction and referral of bills Tuesday afternoon. All floor proceedings and committee meetings during the 2025 General Session will be broadcast live via the Legislature’s YouTube channel.
The Legislature will then convene in a joint session of the Wyoming Senate and House of Representatives on Wednesday at 10 am, during the second day of legislative proceedings. At that time, Gov. Mark Gordon will deliver his State of the State message, followed by the State of the Judiciary message, delivered by Wyoming Supreme Court Chief Justice Kate M. Fox in the House Chamber at the Wyoming State Capitol.
Wyoming
230 Million-Year-Old Fossil From Wyoming Challenges Dinosaur Origin Theories
Though paleontologists have been discussing the origin and spread of dinosaurs for decades, the widely accepted theory was that they emerged in the southern part of the ancient continent of Pangea over 200 million years ago, and only spread northward millions of years later. A new study dramatically changes the conversation.
University of Wisconsin–Madison (UW–Madison) paleontologists announced the discovery of a new dinosaur that challenges the conventional theory about the dinosaurs’ origin and spread. The location and age of the newly-described fossils suggest that dinosaurs prowled the northern regions of Pangea millions of years earlier than previously hypothesized. The findings were detailed in a January 8 study published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
“We’re kind of filling in some of this story, and we’re showing that the ideas that we’ve held for so long — ideas that were supported by the fragmented evidence that we had — weren’t quite right,” Dave Lovelace of the University of Wisconsin Geology Museum, who co-led the study, said in a UW–Madison statement. “We now have this piece of evidence that shows dinosaurs were here in the northern hemisphere much earlier than we thought.”
The paleontologists uncovered the theory-defying fossils in present-day Wyoming in 2013. Due to Earth’s shifting tectonic plates, this region was located near the equator over 200 million years ago on Laurasia, the northern half of Pangea (the southern half was called Gondwana). While the remains were fragmented, the paleontologists were able to attribute the fossils to a new dinosaur species they named Ahvaytum bahndooiveche, which was likely an early sauropod relative. Ahvaytum, however, looked very different from the iconic long-necked herbivores.
“It was basically the size of a chicken but with a really long tail,” said Lovelace. “We think of dinosaurs as these giant behemoths, but they didn’t start out that way.” The adult specimen was just over a foot tall (30.5 centimeters) and about three feet long (91.4 cm).
Perhaps most shockingly, however, is the age of the fossil. Lovelace and his colleagues used radioisotopic dating (a method for determining the age of materials by measuring radioactive decay) to determine that the rock layers where they’d found the Ahvaytum fossils—and thus roughly the remains themselves—were about 230 million years old. This makes Ahvaytum the oldest known Laurasian dinosaur, and about equivalent in age to the earliest known Gondwanan dinosaurs, according to the study. Dinosaurs first emerged during the Triassic period, around 230 million years ago. This era, which lasted from about 252 to 201 million years ago, saw the rise of the earliest dinos, before they became dominant in the Jurassic period.
“We have, with these fossils, the oldest equatorial dinosaur in the world — it’s also North America’s oldest dinosaur,” Lovelace added. The fact that the oldest known Laurasian dinosaur is about as old as the earliest known Gondwanan dinosaurs consequently challenges the theory that dinosaurs originated in the south of the ancient continent and only spread north millions of years later.
The site of the discovery is within the ancestral lands of the Eastern Shoshone Tribe. As a result, the researchers partnered with tribal members throughout their work, and included Eastern Shoshone elders and middle school students in choosing the new dinosaur’s name. Ahvaytum bahndooiveche roughly translates to “long ago dinosaur” in the Eastern Shoshone language.
The region also yielded additional finds. The team identified an early dinosaur-like footprint in older rock layers, meaning that dinosaurs or dinosaur-related creatures were calling Laurasia home even before Ahvaytum. The paleontologists also uncovered the fossil of a newly described amphibian, which was also named in the Eastern Shoshone language.
In challenging long-standing theories about how dinosaurs spread across Pangea, the discovery of the chicken-sized Ahvaytum ultimately paints a clearer picture of the creatures that walked the Earth—and where—millions of years before us.
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