'Grand Teton National Park' is a
United States National Park located in western
Wyoming, south of
Yellowstone National Park. The park is named after
Grand Teton, which at 13,770
feet (4,197
m), is the tallest mountain in the
Teton Range.
The mountains were named by a French trapper who viewed them from the
Idaho side of the range and called them ''tétons'',
French slang for "nipples" (presumably referring to the shape of the peaks). It was established as a national park on
February 26 1929. The park covers 484
mi² (1,255
km²) of land and water.
There are nearly 200
miles (320
km) of trails for
hikers to enjoy in Grand Teton National Park.
Geography
Part of the
Rocky Mountains, the north-south-trending
Teton Range rises from the floor of
Jackson Hole without any
foothills along a 40 mile (65 km) long by 7 to 9 miles (11 to 15 km) wide active
fault-block mountain front system. In addition to 13,770 ft (4,197 m) high Grand Teton, another eight peaks are over 12,000 ft (3,660 m) above
sea level. Seven of these peaks between Avalanche and Cascade canyons make up the often-photographed Cathedral Group.
Jackson Hole is a 55 mile (90 km) long by 6 to 13 mile (10 to 20 km) wide
graben valley that has an average elevation of 6,800 ft (2,070 m) with its lowest point near the south park boundary at 6350 ft (1,935 m). The valley sits east of the Teton Range and is vertically displaced downward 30,000 ft (9,100 m) from corresponding rock layers in it, making the Teton Fault and its parallel twin on the east side of the valley normal faults with the Jackson Hole block being the hanging wall and the Teton Mountain block being the footwall. Grand Teton National Park contains the major part of both blocks. A great deal of
erosion of the range and
sediment filling the graben, however, yields a topographic relief of only up to 7,700 ft (2,350 m).
The
glaciated range is composed of a series of
horns and
arêtes separated by U-shaped valleys headed by
cirques and ended by
moraines, making the Tetons a textbook example of
alpine topography. Rubble piles left by
ice age alpine glaciers impounded a series of interconnected
lakes at the foot of the range (
Jackson, Leigh, String,
Jenny, Bradley, Taggart, and Phelps). The largest lake in the valley, Jackson Lake, was impounded by a recessional moraine left by a very large valley glacier as it retreated north out of Jackson Hole. Jackson Lake covers 25,540
acres (103.4 km²) and has a maximum depth of 438 feet (134 m). There are also over 100 alpine and backcountry lakes.
Just to the south is Burned Ridge, the same glacier's terminal or end moraine, which runs down the center of Jackson Hole roughly perpendicular to the range and cut in two by the
Snake River. After exiting its
dammed outlet at the southeast corner of Jackson Lake, the Snake runs down the valley and through the 10 mile (16 km) long glacial outwash plain south of Burned Ridge. The river's headwaters are in a part of the
Teton Wilderness a short distance north in
Yellowstone National Park and its destination is the
Columbia River far to the west, which in turn empties into the
Pacific Ocean. Terraces have been cut by the river into the moraines and outwash plain in the valley. About 50 miles (80 km) of the 1,056 miles (1,699 km) mile long Snake River winds through the park where it is fed by three major tributaries; Pacific Creek, Buffalo Fork, and the Gros Ventre River.
The local
climate is a semi-
arid mountain one with a yearly extreme high of 93°
F (34°
C) and extreme low of −46° F (−43° C). Average annual
snowfall is 191
inches (490
cm) and average rainfall is 10 inches (250
mm). The coldest
temperature ever recorded in Grand Teton National Park was −63° F (−52° C), and snow often blankets the landscape from early November to late April.
Human history
Pre-history
Native American hunting parties from the northern
Rocky Mountains camped along the shore of
Jackson Lake around 12,000 years ago while following game. For thousands of years Jackson Hole was used as a neutral crossroads for
trade and travel routes in the area. One route followed the
Snake River to its source in the Yellowstone area where abundant
obsidian could be found. Another major route traversed the
Teton Pass at the southern end of the range, providing a shortcut to the
Pacific Northwest region of what is now the United States. Also, a southern route led to the
Colorado Plateaus region and the
Great Basin.
White exploration and settlement
The Tetons were named by
French explorers who called the three highest peaks of the range ''Les Trois Tetons'' (the three breasts). In the
18th and
19th centuries, Caucasian
fur trappers and
fur traders called deep
valleys rimmed by high mountains "holes." One such fur trapper was named
David Jackson and his favorite place to 'hole-up' was named after him in 1829.
John Colter, a member of the
Lewis and Clark Expedition, is the first white American known to have visited the area now know as Jackson Hole as early as 1805-1806. Geologist
F.V. Hayden visited the area in 1860 as part of the
Raynolds expedition. In the summer of 1871 he led the first government-sponsored scientific survey of the Yellowstone area just to the north. One part of that survey, led by geologist
James Stevenson, they traveled into Jackson Hole via the Teton Pass before meeting up with the other half of the expedition in Yellowstone. While passing through, the team, which included Yellowstone's first superintendent
N.P. Longford, photographer
William Henry Jackson, and artist
William Henry Holmes, among others,
mapped the area and surveyed its
geology and
biology.These data were later included in the
Hayden Survey set of reports.
Homesteaders moved into Jackson Hole after the reports were published but the short
growing season along with weeks of being snowed-in each winter kept all but the hardiest individuals away. One of those settlers, a rancher named
Pierce Cunningham, circulated a petition to have Jackson Hole saved for the "education and enjoyment of the Nation as a whole."
Fight for preservation

Mount Moran and Jackson Lake
In 1897 acting Yellowstone superintendent Colonel S.B.M. Young proposed expanding that park's borders south to encompass the northern extent of Jackson Hole in order to protect migrating herds of
elk. Next year,
United States Geological Survey head Charles D. Walcott suggested that the Teton Range should be included as well.
Stephen Mather, director of the newly-created
National Park Service and his assistant
Horace Albright sent a report to Secretary of the Interior
Franklin Lane in 1917 stating much the same. Wyoming Representative
Frank Mondell sponsored a bill that unanimously passed the
United States House of Representatives in 1918 but was killed in the
United States Senate when
Idaho Senator
John Nugent feared that the expansion of Park Service jurisdiction would threaten
sheep grazing permits. Public opposition to park expansion also mounted in and around Jackson Hole. Albright, in fact, was practically run out of
Jackson, Wyoming, by angry townspeople in 1919 when he traveled there to speak in favor of park expansion.

The Rockefellers in Grand Teton area
Local attitudes started to change that same year when proposals to dam Jenny, Emma Matilda, and Two Ocean lakes surfaced. Then on
July 26 1923, local and Park Service representatives including Albright met in Maud Noble's cabin to work on a plan to buy private lands to create a recreation area to preserve the "Old West" character of the valley. Albright was the only person who supported Park Service management; the others wanted traditional hunting, grazing, and dude-ranching activities to continue. In 1927 philanthropist
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. founded the
Snake River Land Company so he and others could buy land in the area incognito and have it held until the National Park Service could administer it. The company launched a campaign to purchase more than 35,000 acres (142 km²) for $1.4 million but faced 15 years of opposition by ranchers and a refusal by the Park Service to take the land.

Park Dedication in 1929
In 1928, a Coordinating Commission on National Parks and Forests met with valley residents and reached an agreement for the establishment of a park. Wyoming Senator
John Kendrick then introduced a bill to establish Grand Teton National Park. It was passed by both houses of the
U.S. Congress and signed into law by U.S. President
Calvin Coolidge on
February 26 1929. The 96,000 acre (388 km²) park was carved from
Teton National Forest and included the Teton Range and six glacial lakes at its foot in Jackson Hole. Lobbying by
cattlemen, however, meant that the original park borders did not include most of Jackson Hole (whose floor was used for
grazing). Meanwhile the Park Service refused to accept the 35,000 acres (142 km²) held by the Snake River Company.
Discouraged by the stalemate, Rockefeller sent a letter to then U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt telling him that if the federal government did not accept the land that he intended to make some other disposition of it or to sell it in the market to any satisfactory buyers. Soon afterward on
March 15 1943 the president declared 221,000 acres (894 km²) of public land as Jackson Hole National Monument. Continued controversy over the Rockefeller gift still made it impossible for the monument to officially include that land, however.
Opposition to the monument by local residents immediately followed with criticism that the declaration was a violation of
states' rights and that it would destroy the local
economy and
tax base. Ranchers drove 500 cattle across the newly created monument in a demonstration designed to provoke conflict. The Park Service did not respond to the stunt but the event brought national attention to the issue nonetheless. Wyoming Representative
Frank Barrett introduced a bill to abolish the monument that passed both houses of Congress but was
pocket vetoed by Roosevelt.
U.S. Forest Service officials did not want to cede another large part of the Teton National Forest to the Park Service so they fought against transfer. One final act was to order forest rangers to gut the Jackson Lake Ranger Station before handing it over to park rangers. Residents in the area who supported the park and the monument were
boycotted and harassed.
Other bills to abolish the monument were introduced between 1945 and 1947 but none passed. Increases in
tourism money following the end of
World War II has been cited as a cause of the change in local attitudes. A move to merge the monument into an enlarged park gained steam and by April, 1949, interested parties gathered the Senate Appropriation Committee chambers to finalize a compromise. The Rockefeller lands were finally transferred from private to public ownership on
December 16 1949, when they were added to the monument. A bill merging most of Jackson Hole National Monument (except for its southern extent, which was added to the
National Elk Refuge) into Grand Teton National Park was signed into law by President
Harry S. Truman on
September 14 1950. One concession in the law modified the
Antiquities Act, limiting the future power of a president to proclaim National Monuments in Wyoming. The scenic
highway that extends from the northern border of Grand Teton National Park to the southern entrance of
Yellowstone National Park was named the
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial Parkway to recognize Rockefeller's contribution to protecting the area.
A
meteor on a path over the
Rocky Mountains from the U.S. Southwest to Canada passed above the park area on
August 10,
1972, and was filmed by a tourist with an 8-millimeter color film camera. The object was in the range of size from a car to a house and should have ended its life in a
Hiroshima-sized blast, but there was never any explosion, much less a crater. Analysis of the trajectory indicated that it never came much lower than 58 kilometers off the ground, and the conclusion was that it had grazed Earth's atmosphere for about 100 seconds, then skipped back out of the atmosphere to return to its orbit around the Sun.
Geology
Main articles: Geology of the Grand Teton area
The rock units that make up the east face of the
Teton Range are around 2500 million years old and made of
metamorphosed sandstones,
limestones, various
shales, and interbeded
volcanic deposits. Buried deep under
Tertiary volcanic,
sedimentary, and
glacial deposits in
Jackson Hole, these same
Precambrian rocks are overlain by
Paleozoic and
Mesozoic formations that have long since been
eroded away from atop the Tetons.
The Paleozoic-aged sediments were deposited in warm shallow seas and resulted in various
carbonate rocks along with sandstones and shales. Mesozoic deposition transitioned back and forth from marine to non-marine sediments. In later Mesozoic, the
Cretaceous Seaway periodically covered the region and the
Sierran Arc to the west provided volcanic sediments.
A mountain-building episode called the
Laramide orogeny started to uplift western North America 70 million years ago and eventually formed the
Rocky Mountains. This erased the seaway and created
fault systems along which highlands rose. Sediment eroded from uplifted areas filled-in subsiding
basins such as Jackson Hole while reverse faults created the first part of the Teton Range in the Eocene epoch. Large Eocene-aged
volcanic eruptions from the north in the Yellowstone-
Absaroka area along with later
Pleistocene-aged
Yellowstone Caldera eruptions, left thick volcanic deposits in basins (see
geology of the Yellowstone area).
The
Teton Range started to grow along a north-south trending fault system next to Jackson Hole some 9 million years ago in the
Miocene epoch. Then starting in the
Pliocene, Lake Teewinot periodically filled Jackson Hole and left thick lakebed sediments. The lake was dry by the time a series of
glaciations in the Pleistocene epoch saw the introduction of large
glaciers in the Teton and surrounding ranges. During the coldest
ice age these glaciers melded together to become part of the
Canadian Ice Sheet, which carried away all soil from Jackson Hole and surrounding basins. Later and less severe ice ages created enough locally-deposited dirt in the form of
moraines and
till to repair much of this damage. Since then,
mass wasting events such as the 1925
Gros Ventre landslide, along with slower forms of
erosion, have continued to modify the area. On the floor of the
Jackson Hole valley rise several landforms, one of the most conspicuous being
Blacktail Butte.
Biology
Over 1000 species of
vascular plants grow in Grand Teton National Park and the surrounding area. Some trees, such as the
Whitebark Pine,
Limber Pine,
Subalpine fir, and
Engelmann Spruce can survive the cold windy slopes and alpine zone high up in the Tetons to around 10,000 feet (~3000 m). Other evergreens, like the
Lodgepole Pine,
Douglas Fir, and
Blue Spruce, are more commonly found on the valley floor, while the
aspens,
cottonwoods,
alders, and
willows prefer the moist soils found along the rivers and lakeshores.
Grand Teton forests generally contain two or three different types of trees growing together in a specific
habitat type. These forests merge into one another in zones called
ecotones, which creates edge habitat for various species of wildlife. Some animals, like the
red squirrel,
pine marten, and
black bear spend most of their time in the forests. Others, such as
moose,
elk (also known as the ''wapiti''), and
wolves, seek the forest for shade and shelter during the day and move out to the sagebrush or meadows to feed in the early mornings and evenings.
Soil conditions, availability of moisture, slope, aspect, and elevation all determine where
plants grow. Plants that require similar conditions are often found growing in the same area. These associations form various plant communities. It is useful to divide the plants of Grand Teton National Park into the following communities:
forests, sagebrush flats, riparian corridors and wetlands, and alpine areas.
Evergreen forests composed of 7 coniferous tree
species and over 900 species of
flowering plants dominate the
mountainous part of the Teton Range below the
tree line and extend into Jackson Hole on top of moraines. These compact piles of unsorted rubble have good
clay content and retain moisture better than the
quartzite-rich outwash plain and are thus able to support large stands of
Lodgepole Pines along with many other plants.
The loose soil of the outwash plain has a poor ability to hold moisture, resulting in a sparse
vegetation cover primarily made of
sagebrush and coarse
grasses. Abundant
aspens,
cottonwoods, and willows thrive along
streams in riparian zones outside of the barren outwash plain. Wet
meadows provide the conditions suited to grasses, sedges, and
wildflowers.
Coyotes and
badgers dig burrows in patches of
loesses, which were blown into the valley between ice ages. Although they appear gray and lifeless, the high alpine reaches of the park support plants specially adapted to the harsh growing conditions found there.
Wind, snow, lack of soil, increased
ultraviolet radiation, rapid and dramatic shifts in temperature, and a short growing season all challenge the hardy plants that survive here. Most plants adapt by growing close to the ground in mats like the
Alpine Forget-me-not.
Selected wildlife
Grand Teton National Park is located in the heart of the
Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the largest intact
temperate zone ecosystems remaining on the planet. This means that many of the animals in the Teton area travel between the two parks and the numerous adjacent
National Forests.
★ 5 species of
Amphibians:
Spotted Frog,
Boreal Chorus Frog,
Boreal Toad,
Tiger Salamander,
Northern Leopard Frog (believed to be locally
extinct), and
Bullfrog (introduced just outside the park).
★ 6 species of
bats
★ 300+ species of
birds: including
Bald Eagle,
Calliope Hummingbird,
Golden Eagle,
Osprey,
Sage Grouse,
Trumpeter Swan,
Western Tanager
★ 17 species of
carnivores: including
Grizzly and
Black Bear,
Mountain Lion,
Wolf and
Coyote.
★ 16 species of
fishes: including
Yellowstone cutthroat trout,
Snake River cutthroat trout,
Mountain Sucker,
Utah Chub, and
Mountain Whitefish
★ 6 species of
hoofed mammals: including
American Bison,
Moose,
Pronghorn,
elk, and
Mule Deer
★ numerous
invertebrates (no poisonous
spiders)
★ 3 species of
rabbits/
hares
★ 4 species of
reptiles (none poisonous):
Wandering Garter Snake,
Valley Garter Snake,
Rubber Boa, and
Northern Sagebrush Lizard
★ 22 species of
rodents: including
Yellow-Bellied Marmot,
Least Chipmunk,
Muskrat,
Red Squirrel, and
Uinta Ground Squirrel
References
★ ''Geology of National Parks: Fifth Edition'', Ann G. Harris, Esther Tuttle, Sherwood D., Tuttle (Iowa, Kendall/Hunt Publishing; 1997) ISBN 0-7872-5353-7
★ National Park Service: Grand Teton National Park (includes some adapted public domain text in biology section)
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
★
National Park Service Publication: Creation of Grand Teton National Park by Jackie Skaggs
★
A Place Called Jackson Hole, , John, Daugherty, Grand Teton Natural History Association, ,
External links
★
Grand Teton National Park Official Website
★ A
Jackson Hole & Grand Tetons Guide is available for travel planning assistance.
★
Earth Observatory: Grand Tetons National Park
★
John D. Rockefeller Jr. Memorial Parkway