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Natural Highlights of the West Thumb &
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West Thumb of Yellowstone Lake Resembling a large thumb, Yellowstone Lake’s western bay was first reported with the arrival of the 1870 Washburn Expedition. The party members likened the lake to a human hand with large fingers and a thumb-shaped western bay. Although the Washburn Party subsequently referred to the area as “West Thumb,” the 1878 Hayden Survey renamed the area “West Arm.” When Philetus W. Norris assumed the park superintendent position, he created a map in 1880 designating the area as “West Thumb.” Park officials in the early 1900s later attempted to resurrect the “West Arm” title, but popular opinion refused to budge from the well-recognized “West Thumb” distinction. West Thumb Geyser Basin Trapper Daniel T. Potts sent a letter to his brother in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania describing the unique features of what is now known as Potts Basin. His edited letter subsequently appeared in the September 27, 1827 issue of the Philadelphia Gazette. Further reports of the area were not available until after the 1869 Folsom-Cook-Peterson Expedition. Later, stagecoaches escorted tourists eager to see the area’s pale violet waters and deep springs. As the park became more modernized, traffic to West Thumb Geyser Basin increased, and a campground, cabins, cafeteria, gas station, and photo shop were added to capitalize on the growing number of visitors. Eventually, however, park officials noted that the increased traffic and area services were actually destroying what people had come to see. In the mid 1980s, the National Park Service removed all buildings and services from the West Thumb Geyser Basin in an effort to protect and preserve the beautiful area. Today, boardwalks in the basin protect the area’s features and its visitors. Abyss Pool Nineteenth century observers were impressed with the pool’s beauty. In 1871, F.V. Hayden reported that this spring’s "ultramarine hue of the transparent depth in the bright sunlight was the most dazzlingly beautiful sight I have ever beheld" (Preliminary Reports, p. 101). And W.W. Wylie observed in 1882 that the spring’s walls, "coral-like in formation and singular in shape, tinted by the water’s color, are surely good representations of fairy palaces". Fishing Cone When Philetus W. Norris assumed the park superintendent position in 1877, he turned “Fish Pot” into a major tourist attraction. Visitors decked out in chef’s hats and aprons assembled around the hot spring anxiously seeking boiling fish demonstrations. The site was so popular that newspaper articles declared no Yellowstone Park tour was complete without a visit to “Fish Pot.” Over time, “Fish Pot” was changed to its present “Fishing Cone” title, and interest in the hot spring died out. Park officials capitalized on the loss of interest, declaring the boiling fish practice unhealthy and inhumane. Today, Fishing Cone draws attention for its unusual name and close proximity to Yellowstone Lake. |
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