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Drilling Yellowstone
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Yellowstone National Park is a national treasure. The United States
has tussled with a fair share of trouble in keeping its first, and
therefore oldest, national park protected from industry. However,
there was a time in the early twentieth century when the National
Park Service gave way to science in the hopes of unlocking seemingly
forbidden secrets to the inner-workings of geysers and the earth
beneath the surface.
In 1872, Congress issued the Yellowstone Act to prevent the violation
of Yellowstone in an address to the Secretary of the Interior. The
Act stated that the Secretary must make rules to “provide
for the preservation, from injury or spoliation, of all timber,
mineral deposits, natural curiosities, or wonders within, and their
retention in their natural condition.”
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(Above) Scientific drilling by the Geophysical Laboratory at Yellowstone National Park, 1930.
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(Above) Drilling site near "Old Faithful." Yellowstone National Park, 1929. Photograph by C. N. Fenner.
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Another Act followed in 1916 mandating that “no curiosities,
wonders, or objects of interest shall be leased, rented, or granted
to anyone on such terms as to interfere with free access to them
by the public.” This Act was also instrumental in establishing
the National Park Service.
Blocked by these two Acts, scientific research
was at best difficult. This trend was soon to change. Aid came in
1919 when Horace Albright became the first National Park Service
superintendent. A true friend to science, he permitted academic
institutions and government agencies to collect geological specimens
from Yellowstone.
Geophysical Laboratory scientists Arthur
L. Day and E. T. Allen quickly pounced on this incredible opportunity.
The Yellowstone caldera was, and still is, one of the most complex
in the country. It is the largest and most active seismically and
geothermally in the western United States. Every scientist dreamt
of the chance to study such a location. Day
and Allen had recently published the book The Volcanic Activity
and Hot Springs of Lassen Peak on the volcanic geology of California’s
Lassen Peak and wished to conduct the same study at Yellowstone
to honor and complete the work of United States Geological Survey’s
Dr. Arnold Hague from the 1880’s.
Albright willingly issued Day
a permit “to collect geological specimens of all kinds in
Yellowstone Park and also specimens of plant life growing in or
near any of the geyser basins or other areas affected by subterranean
heat.” Day and Allen were essentially
allowed full authority to take specimens of any kind that suited
their scientific studies.
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In addition to excavation rights,
Day and Allen were permitted to ride in and
have freight hauled by government vehicles, given reduced rates for
park accommodations, allotted laboratory space in the basement of
the Mammoth Hot Springs canteen building, and provided field assistance
by a specially assigned park ranger.
In 1927, Yellowstone bought
the Geophysical Laboratory a Dodge sedan from Blair Motor Company
of Livingston, Montana to be used by the researchers. The Geophysical
Laboratory later reimbursed the $1,100 purchase.
Between 1929 and 1930, the Geophysical Laboratory
drilled the first boreholes ever permitted in Yellowstone in order
to obtain a better understanding of the park’s underground structures,
temperatures, and circulation in the geyser basins. The holes reached
depths of 123.8 meters at the Upper Geyser Basin and 75 meters at
Norris Basin. Bottom temperatures in the boreholes reached up to 205
degrees Celsius.
Drilling was completed by 1935. Soon after, Day
and Allen published their classic book, Hot Springs of the Yellowstone
National Park, to detail the findings. The book proved to be
the definitive literature on Yellowstone’s thermal environment
for years after the study, as the Geophysical Laboratory was the last
institution to drill at the park until the 1980s.
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(Above) Workers at the "Old Faithful" geyser drill site. Yellowstone National Park, 1929. Photograph by C. N. Fenner.
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References:
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Allen, E. T., The hot springs of the Yellowstone National Park, Carnegie Institution of Washington News Service Bulletin Staff Edition, 4 (no. 1), 1 - 20, 1936.
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Biel, Alice Wondrak, The bearer has permission, Montana, 54 (no. 4), 15 – 31, Winter 2004.
Further Reading:
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Allen, E. T. and Arthur L. Day, Hot Springs of the Yellowstone National Park, Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 466, Washington, D.C., 1935.
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Day, Arthur L. and E. T. Allen. The Volcanic Activity and Hot Springs of Lassen Peak, Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication, 360, Washington, D.C., 1925.
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Fenner, Clarence Norman, Borehole investigations in Yellowstone Park, Journal of Geology, 44 (no. 2), 225 - 315, 1936.
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