By Christine Gianas Weinheimer EBS CONTRIBUTOR
This month
marks the 60-year anniversary of the most famous earthquake in the Greater
Yellowstone area. It was the strongest ever recorded in the Rocky Mountains and
tragically took 28 lives.
On Aug. 17,
1959, the Hebgen Lake Earthquake, measuring 7.5 on the Richter scale, triggered
a massive landslide that moved at 100 miles per hour. In less than 1 minute,
more than 80 million tons of rock crashed into a narrow canyon, blocking the
Madison River and forming Earthquake Lake.
The U.S.
Forest Service’s Earthquake Lake Visitor Center, located 59 miles southwest of
Big Sky on Highway 287, tells the story of that infamous event. It not only
features excellent exhibits, but visitors can also easily see the effects of
the earthquake surrounding them: The visitor center itself sits atop the
landslide debris and overlooks the lake formed by the quake.
The visitor
center’s exhibits illustrate the magnitude of an earthquake’s power and the
devastation it leaves behind. They include displays on earthquake science and a
kid-friendly, interactive 3-D model of the Earthquake Lake area.
When
visiting, be sure to check out the working seismograph that monitors
earthquakes worldwide. If you’re lucky, you’ll even experience how an
earthquake registers on the Richter scale, in real time, whether it is close by
or far away. Greater Yellowstone is one of the most seismically-active areas in
the United States, with a combination of tectonic and volcanic activity
resulting in 1,000 to 3,000 earthquakes each year. Most of these quakes are too
small to be felt.
Also within
the visitor center, a Yellowstone Forever Park Store, operated in partnership
with the U.S. Forest Service, offers a variety of educational items. Outside, a
walking path leads to the Memorial Boulder that honors the 28 victims of the
quake.
When you
arrive, pick up a “Visitor Guide to the Earthquake Lake Geologic Area” and
check the upcoming times for scheduled movies and talks.
The Earthquake Lake Visitor Center is open daily from late May through mid-September, and admission is free. Check the Custer Gallatin National Forest website at fs.usda.gov/detail/custergallatin for exact dates and hours of operation and directions.
The
Custer Gallatin National Forest is hosting a series of events at the Earthquake
Lake Visitor Center through August 18 to remember the earthquake of 1959 and
its victims. For more information on 60th anniversary events, call the center
at (406) 682-7620.
Christine
Gianas Weinheimer lives in Bozeman and has been writing about Yellowstone for
17 years.