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Gazetteer
Yellowstone -- U.S. County in Montana
Population (2000): 129352
Housing Units (2000): 54563
Land area (2000): 2635.154295 sq. miles (6825.018002 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 13.898206 sq. miles (35.996187 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 2649.052501 sq. miles (6861.014189 sq. km)
Located within: Montana (MT), FIPS 30
Location: 45.816535 N, 108.460718 W
Headwords:
Yellowstone
Yellowstone, MT
Yellowstone County
Yellowstone County, MT
Wikipedia
Yellowstone (film)

Yellowstone ( 1936) is a 63-minute American film set in Yellowstone National Park, directed by Arthur Lubin and released by Universal Studios.

The film, starring Judith Barrett, Henry Hunter, Ralph Morgan, Alan Hale, Raymond Hatton, and Andy Devine, combines murder mystery, romance, and natural setting. The famous historic building Old Faithful Inn is featured in the film.

Yellowstone (TV series)

Yellowstone is a BBC nature documentary series broadcast from 15 March 2009. Narrated by Peter Firth, the series takes a look at a year in the life of Yellowstone National Park, examining how its wildlife adapts to living in one of the harshest wildernesses on Earth. Yellowstone debuted on BBC Two at 8:00pm on Sunday 15 March 2009 and has three episodes. Each 50-minute episode was followed by a ten-minute film called Yellowstone People, featuring visitors to the Park and locals who had assisted the production team. The series was the channel's highest-rated natural history documentary in over five years with audiences peaking at over four million.

In the USA, an edited version of the series was broadcast under the title Yellowstone: Battle for Life. It aired as a two-hour TV special, and premiered on Animal Planet on 22 March 2009.

The series was one of the most popular titles at BBC Worldwide's annual market for international clients with pre-sales to nine territories including Spain (Canal+), Germany (WDR), Russia (Channel 1) and Italy (RTI).

Yellowstone (disambiguation)

Yellowstone most often refers to Yellowstone National Park in the United States.

Yellowstone may also refer to:

  • Yellowstone (TV series), 2009 BBC documentary series about Yellowstone National Park
  • Yellowstone (film), a 1936 film
  • Yellowstone (supercomputer), at the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center
  • Yellowstone (steamboat), an 1831 side-wheeler packet boat
  • , the name of several United States Navy ships

  • Yellowstone, Alberta, a village
  • Yellowstone, Indiana, an unincorporated community
  • Yellowstone, Wisconsin, an unincorporated community
  • 2-8-8-4, a locomotive type nicknamed "Yellowstone"
  • Boeing Yellowstone Project, a Boeing Company project to replace its entire civil aircraft portfolio with advanced technology aircraft
  • Yellowstone, a fictional planet in Revelation Space novels
Yellowstone (supercomputer)

Yellowstone is the inaugural computing resource at the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center (NWSC) in Cheyenne, Wyoming. It was installed, tested, and readied for production in the summer of 2012. Yellowstone is a highly capable petascale system designed for conducting breakthrough scientific research in the interdisciplinary field of Earth system science. Scientists use this computer and its associated resources to model and analyze complex processes in the atmosphere, oceans, ice caps, and throughout the Earth system, accelerating scientific research in climate change, severe weather, geomagnetic storms, carbon sequestration, aviation safety, wildfires, and many other topics. Funded by the National Science Foundation and the State and University of Wyoming, and operated by the National Center for Atmospheric Research, Yellowstone’s purpose is to improve the predictive power of Earth system science simulation to benefit decision-making and planning for society.

Usage examples of "yellowstone".

Montana, Roy once hiked up Pine Creek Trail into the Absaroka Range, which overlooks Paradise Valley and the Yellowstone River.

He was later to learn that the fort, near the mouth of the Yellowstone River, had lost both horses and men to raiding Assiniboine and Blackfoot warriors.

He had lost an arm in the Confederate service, and was recognized by the gambling fraternity as the gamest man among all the trail drovers, while every cowman from the Rio Grande to the Yellowstone knew him as a poker-player.

He seemed uncomfortable with silence, so, as he and Carter continued walking, he admitted he had never seen an elephant up close, though at his recent trip to Yellowstone, he had hand-fed gingersnaps to a black bear and her cub.

Horses were tendered us, and saddling one I crossed the Yellowstone and started down the river to arouse outlying ranches, while Sponsilier and a number of local cowmen rode south to locate a camp and a deadline.

The major attraction is Yellowstone National Park, where nature-loving visitors may learn about the wilderness by witnessing as federal bears, acting on instinct, rummage through Dodge minivans, tossing tourists aside in their quest for Hostess Twinkles.

He worked it out that three of their probes would come down in the ocean and probably sink without trace, and the other would land in Yellowstone National Park.

Where the other supervolcanoes tend to bubble away steadily and in a comparatively benign fashion, Yellowstone blows explosively.

Yellowstone, thousands of kilometres below, was an ominous yellow-brown backdrop to all this activity.

Partly this was due to Sajaki's lack of fortune in locating Sylveste in the Yellowstone system, condemning the Captain to another half-decade of torment at the very least -- or longer, if Sylveste could not be found on Resurgam either, which struck Volyova as an at least theoretical possibility.

Now, of course, she knew much more: what had happened around Lascaille's Shroud, and how Carine Lefevre's death was not the clear-cut thing he had made it seem upon his return to Yellowstone.

Perhaps he found Carine Lefevre drifting near Lascaille's Shroud -- he might have been looking to salvage something from the wreckage of the SISS facility -- and then rescued her and took her back to Yellowstone.

The Indians inform that the Yellowstone River is navigable for pirogues and canoes nearly to its source in the Rocky Mountains, and that in its course, near these mountains, it passes within less than half a day's march of a navigable part of the Missouri.

Captain Clark, 9July 1806 I had all the canoes put into the water and every article, which was intended to be sent down, put on board, and the horses collected and packed with what few articles I intend taking with me to the Yellowstone, and after breakfast we all set out at the same time and proceeded on down Jefferson's River on the east side through Service Valley and Rattlesnake Mountain and into that beautiful and extensive valley, open and fertile, which we call the Beaverhead Valley which is the Indian name.

In the evening had the two canoes put into the water and lashed together, oars and everything fixed ready to set out early in the morning, at which time I have directed Sergeant Pryor to set out with the horses and proceed on to the entrance of the Bighorn River (which we suppose to be at no great distance), at which place the canoes will meet him and set him across the Yellowstone, below the entrance of that river.