![]() Original Post: The National Park Service is investigating after a Yellowstone park employee discovered a shoe with a partial human foot floating in a hot spring, the agency said. The NPS indicated that its investigation had concluded, and that it did not plan on sharing any additional information. The park service believes that Ro, 70, fell into the spring in what it called “an unwitnessed incident,” and said that it did not believe that foul play was involved in his death. In a press release, the National Park Service said DNA analysis had indicated the foot belonged to Il Hun Ro, of Los Angeles. 19, 2022: Yellowstone National Park officials have identified the visitor whose foot an employee found in a hot spring in August. ![]() ![]() From it, you’ll have a fantastic view of the spring.Heading out the door? Read this article on the new Outside+ app available now on iOS devices for members! If you want an aerial-type view of Grand Prismatic, you can take the Fairy Falls trail for. Tip: Get there early or late in the day to avoid the tour bus crowds at this justifiably popular spot. Or, from the West Entrance, drive about 25 miles on the West Entrance Road and Grand Loop Road to the Midway Geyser Basin parking area. ![]() The Midway Geyser Basin is a short distance north from the Old Faithful area and the west side of the Grand Loop Road. Though it’s a quiet pool now, Yellowstone’s constantly changing thermal landscape could revive Excelsior Geyser to its former glory once again. It went dormant for much of the 20th century, only to suddenly erupt for two days in 1985-some of its blasts reached 80 feet in height. But in its heyday in the late 1800s, Excelsior erupted to heights of about 300 feet. Today, this steaming, bright blue pool is essentially a hot spring. Excelsior Geyser Crater Runoff from Excelsior Geyser dumping in the Firehole River Jeff Vanuga It is illegal and very dangerous to walk in the geyser basin. You can get up close by strolling across the Firehole River and along the short boardwalk that snakes through the thermal area. Yellowstone’s Midway Geyser Basin may be small, but it packs a big punch: In addition to Grand Prismatic Spring, see Excelsior Geyser, an enormous geyser crater, Turquoise Pool, and Opal Pool. More Pools and Geysers at Midway Geyser Basin Directory Sign at Yellowstone’s Midway Geyser Basin. Read more about things stuffed down geysers and hot springs. When a tourist from the Netherlands accidentally-and illegally-flew a drone into the ecologically fragile Grand Prismatic in 2014, the drone disappeared and has never been recovered. Yellowstone’s Grand Prismatic Hot Spring from the boardwalk Photo: David Krause A Foreign Object in Grand Prismatic These microbes even led to the development of the PCR test, which has been instrumental in creating COVID-19 rapid test to slow the spread of the virus. In the years since, research on Yellowstone’s microbes has led to major medical and scientific advances, including the sequencing of the entire human genome. In 1968, researcher Thomas Brock discovered a microbe living in one of Yellowstone’s extremely hot springs. What living thing in Yellowstone has helped investigators solve crimes and NASA search for extraterrestrial life on seemingly inhospitable planets? Heat-loving microbes living in the Yellowstone’s thermal pools. And the deep blue center? That’s because water scatters the blue wavelengths of light more than others, reflecting blues back to our eyes. The multicolored layers get their hues from different species of thermophile (heat-loving) bacteria living in the progressively cooler water around the spring. The hot spring has bright bands of orange, yellow, and green ring the deep blue waters in the spring. A gridiron is 360 feet long and 160 feet wide. The third largest spring in the world, the Grand Prismatic is bigger than a football field at 370 feet in diameter. Extremely hot water travels 121 feet from a crack in the Earth to reach the surface of the spring.
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