The Year Yellowstone Burned
A Twenty-Five-Year Perspective
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
The Yellowstone fires of 1988 consumed nearly 800,000 acres—36 percent of the park. In the years following, spectacular wildflowers rose from the ashes and trees rapidly reclaimed the landscape. In this twenty-five-year look back at the fires, author and photographer Jeff Henry recalls not only the summer of 1988, when he witnessed and photographed nearly every aspect of the fires, but also the years since as nature healed the charred landscape. A beautiful book that depicts nature as simultaneously malevolent and beneficent, The Year Yellowstone Burned demonstrates the resilience of one of our continent’s most dynamic ecosystems.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Park ranger, writer, and photographer Henry (Yellowstone's Rebirth by Fire) revisits the 1988 Yellowstone National Park wildfires, which burned for at least three months and affected more than 35% of the park. According to Henry, the fires in Yellowstone National Park in the summer of 1988 were not unexpected, but they nonetheless wreaked havoc. He charts the fires' progress from the end of June through the middle of September, when light rain and snow finally began to fall. Climate conditions played a large role: the fires, touched off by lightning strikes, endured because of "extremely hot weather that developed early and persisted throughout the entire summer, along with abnormally strong winds, and an almost complete lack of significant precipitation." Henry describes the ways in which firefighters tried to manage the spread of the fires, the camps that were set up for work crews, and the overwhelming smoke clouds that formed. He reminds audiences that fires, as part of a cycle of rebirth and renewal, are "an integral element in natural ecosystems." Though Henry's writing lacks fluidity, his wonderful photographs included in the book help to convey the extraordinary power such wildfires contain and the massive impact they had on the landscape. Photos.