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  • Cascade of mineral deposits and travertine from Canary Spring in the Upper Terrace of Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
    Canary-Spring-Yellowstone-0108.jpg
  • Blue Spring and its travertine mineral deposits in the upper terrace area of Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
    Mammoth-spring-Yellowstone-9297.jpg
  • This lone sentinel stands in the Upper Terrace of Mammoth Hot Springs. It is probably one of the most photographed trees in Yellowstone National Park.
    Mammoth-hot-springs-tree-0092.jpg
  • Evening storm clouds after a rain gave a moody feel to the already eerie terraces at Mammoth Hot Springs
    Mammoth-Hot-Springs-Yellowstone-0081.jpg
  • The Main Terrace of the Mammoth Hot Springs area of Yellowstone National Park, WY, is both colorful and otherworldly.
    Mammoth-Terrace-Yellowstone-9303.jpg
  • Whether you call it a negative edge, an infinity pool, or a vanishing edge, the adjectives and beauty of Yellowstone's Canary Spring in Mammoth Hot Springs are endless.
    Canary-Spring-Yellowstone-9311.jpg
  • The Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad travels 45 miles each way along the Animas River from Durango to Silverton, an old mining town high in the San Juan Mountains. The Animas River is one of the last free-flowing rivers in the western United States and cuts through some of Colorado's most striking canyon scenery. Closer to Silverton, you can see the rocks along the sides of the river are discolored yellow and orange. This is from contaminants of the mining operations there.
    Durango-Silverton-railroad-8468.jpg
  • With a depth 53 feet (and a temp of 172°F), Abyss Pool is the deepest pool known in Yellowstone. The dark blue/green-colored hot spring is one of the most colorful in the West Thumb Geyser Basin.
    Abyss-Pool-Yellowstone-9663.jpg
  • Black Pool is a hot spring in the West Thumb Geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park. It was cool enough up until 1991 for dark orange-brown cyanobacteria to grow throughout the pool. When combined with the blue of the water, the pool appeared to be an exceptionally dark green to almost black, hence the name.
    Black-Pool-Yellowstone-9646.jpg
  • With a depth 53 feet (and a temp of 172°F), Abyss Pool is the deepest pool known in Yellowstone. The dark blue/green-colored hot spring is one of the most colorful in the West Thumb Geyser Basin, situated with picturesque Yellowstone Lake as a backdrop.
    Abyss-Pool-Yellowstone-9665.jpg
  • Mineral flow into Yellowstone Lake at Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
    Yellowstone-Lake-minerals-WY-9650.jpg
  • A haunting whistle. The clickity-clack of wheels on twin ribbons of steel. The intrigue of traveling the same tracks miners, cowboys and settlers of the old west took over a century ago. With billows of stream huffing from its authentic, coal-fired engine, the old 486 iron horse meanders through Colorado's stunning and remote wilderness on the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad.
    The Romance of Steam-8422.jpg
  • Mineral runoff from Sapphire Pool in Biscuit Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
    Sapphire-Pool-Yellowstone-9874.jpg
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Rozanne Hakala Photography

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