Waterfall Makers

Here the Yellowstone River plunges 308 feet over the Lower Falls. Hot springs have weakened the rock jut downstream, where you might see several geysers spouting into the river. As falling water pounds the thermally softened rock, it continues to undercut the falls and deepen the gorge.

In this geologically active landscape, the park’s riverbeds drop abruptly in more than a hundred locations. A half-mile upstream, the Upper Falls formed at a junction of a lava flow and glacial lake sediments — one dense and hard, the other brittle and easily eroded.

Marker can be reached from North Rim Drive 0.7 miles east of Grand Loop Road.

Courtesy hmdb.org

Credits and Sources:

HMDB