Nature’s resiliency is on full display here at Yellowstone National Park, where new growth has emerged among the trees charred by the massive 1988 wildfires. More than 1 million acres in the greater Yellowstone area were affected by the blazes that summer, scarring 36 percent of the park. Today marks the 30-year anniversary of Black Saturday, a day when the park saw some of the worst damage, with smoke and ash blackening the skies. But when cool, moist weather brought an end to the devastating fires in late autumn, the ecosystem immediately began to recover. Fire has long been part of the complex ecosystem at Yellowstone and many species have even adapted to rely on fire to open up the canopy, spread seeds, and diversify the habitat.
Looking back at Yellowstone, 30 years after the fires
Today in History
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Happy Arbor Day!
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International Lighthouse Lightship Weekend
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This grizzly has Napping Day down
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Badlands National Park in South Dakota
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A tree of many memories
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World Meteorological Day
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National Hummingbird Day
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Great wildebeest migration at Mara River, Kenya
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Pollinator Week
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Acadia transformed
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Bridge of Hillsborough County
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Rocky mountain pi
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Bonsai Rock, Lake Tahoe, Nevada
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National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day
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Festivus
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International Day for Biological Diversity
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A Festivus for the rest of us
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Jan van Eyckplein in Bruges, Belgium
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Happy Fat Tuesday!
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Go Fly a Kite Day
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Thomas Edison s bright idea
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Frog Month
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The Feathers at Frenchman Coulee near Vantage, Washington
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