Yosemite National Park ( )
is a national park spanning
eastern portions of Tuolumne
, Mariposa
and Madera
counties in east central California
, United States. The park covers an area of
and reaches across the western slopes of the
Sierra Nevada mountain chain.
Yosemite
is visited by over 3.5
million people each year, many of whom only spend time in the seven
square miles (18 km2) of Yosemite Valley
. Designated a
World Heritage Site in 1984, Yosemite is
internationally recognized for its spectacular
granite cliffs,
waterfalls,
clear
streams,
Giant
Sequoia groves, and
biological
diversity. Almost 95% of the park is designated
wilderness. Although not the first
designated
national park, Yosemite was
a focal point in the development of the national park idea, largely
owing to the work of people like
John Muir
and
Galen Clark.
Yosemite is one of the largest and least fragmented
habitat blocks in the Sierra Nevada, and
the park supports a diversity of
plants and
animals. The park has an elevation range from
and contains five major
vegetation zone:
chaparral/
oak woodland,
lower
montane, upper montane,
subalpine, and
alpine. Of California's 7,000 plant species,
about 50% occur in the Sierra Nevada and more than 20% within
Yosemite. There is suitable habitat or documentation for more than
160 rare plants in the park, with rare local geologic formations
and unique
soils characterizing the restricted
ranges many of these plants occupy.
The
geology of the Yosemite
area is characterized by granitic rocks and remnants of older
rock. About 10 million years ago, the Sierra Nevada was uplifted
and then tilted to form its relatively gentle western slopes and
the more dramatic eastern slopes. The uplift increased the
steepness of stream and river beds, resulting in formation of deep,
narrow
canyons. About 1 million years ago,
snow and
ice accumulated,
forming
glaciers at the higher alpine
meadows that moved down the river valleys. Ice thickness in
Yosemite Valley may have reached during the early glacial episode.
The downslope movement of the ice masses cut and sculpted the
U-shaped valley that attracts so many visitors to its scenic vistas
today.
Geography

Yosemite National Park as seen from
space
Yosemite
National Park is located in the central Sierra Nevada of California
. It takes approximately 3.5 hours to
drive to the park from San Francisco
, approximately 6 hours from Los
Angeles
, and 7 hours from San
Bernardino
. Yosemite is surrounded by wilderness areas:
the Ansel Adams
Wilderness
to the southeast, the Hoover Wilderness
to the northeast, and the Emigrant
Wilderness
to the north.
The park
is roughly the size of the U.S. state of Rhode Island
and contains thousands of lakes
and ponds, of streams, of
hiking trails, and of roads.
Two
federally designated Wild and
Scenic Rivers, the Merced and the
Tuolumne, begin within Yosemite's
borders and flow westward through the Sierra foothills, into the
Central Valley
of California
. Annual park visitation exceeds
3.5 million, with most visitor use concentrated in the seven
square mile (18 km2) area of Yosemite Valley
.
Rocks and erosion
Almost all of the
landforms in the
Yosemite area are cut from the
granitic rock
of the
Sierra Nevada
Batholith (a
batholith is a large mass
of intrusive
igneous rock that formed
deep below the surface).
About 5% of the park's landforms (mostly in
its eastern margin near Mount Dana
) are metamorphosed
volcanic and sedimentary rocks. These rocks are
called
roof pendants because they were once the roof of
the underlying granitic rock.
Erosion acting upon different types of
uplift-created joint and fracture systems is responsible for
creating the valleys, canyons,
domes,
and other features we see today. These joints and fracture systems
do not move, and are therefore not
faults. Spacing between joints is controlled
by the amount of
silica in the granite and
granodiorite rocks; more silica tends
to create a more resistant rock, resulting in larger spaces between
joints and fractures.
Pillars and columns, such as Washington Column and Lost Arrow, are
created by cross joints.
Erosion acting on
master joints is responsible for creating valleys and later
canyons.
The single most erosive force over the last
few million years has been large alpine glaciers, which have turned the previously V-shaped
river-cut valleys into U-shaped glacial-cut canyons (such as
Yosemite
Valley
and Hetch Hetchy Valley
). Exfoliation (caused by the tendency of
crystals in plutonic
rocks to expand at the surface) acting on granitic rock with widely
spaced joints is responsible for creating domes such as Half Dome
and North
Dome
and inset arches like Royal Arches.
Popular features
Yosemite Valley represents only one percent of the park area, but
this is where most visitors arrive and stay.
El Capitan
, a prominent granite cliff that looms over Yosemite
Valley, is one of the most popular rock
climbing destinations in the world because of its diverse range
of climbing routes in addition to its year-round
accessibility. Granite domes
such as Sentinel
Rock
and Half
Dome
rise , respectively, above the valley
floor.
The high
country of Yosemite contains beautiful areas such as Tuolumne
Meadows
, Dana
Meadows
, the Clark Range
, the Cathedral Range
, and the Kuna
Crest. The Sierra crest and the Pacific Crest Trail run through
Yosemite, with peaks of red metamorphic
rock, such as Mount
Dana
and Mount
Gibbs
, and granite peaks, such as
Mount
Conness
. Mount Lyell
is the highest point in the park.
The park
has three groves of ancient Giant
Sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) trees; the Mariposa Grove
(200 trees), the Tuolumne Grove
(25 trees), and the Merced
Grove (20 trees). This species grows larger in volume
than any other and is one of the tallest and longest-lived. These
trees were much more widespread before the start of the last Ice
Age.
Water and ice
Tuolumne and
Merced River systems originate along the crest
of the
Sierra Nevada in the
park and have carved river canyons deep. The Tuolumne River drains
the entire northern portion of the park, an area of approximately .
The
Merced River begins in the park's southern peaks, primarily the
Cathedral
and Clark Ranges
, and drains an area of approximately .
Hydrologic processes, including
glaciation,
flooding, and
fluvial geomorphic response, have been fundamental in creating
landforms in the park. The park also contains approximately 3,200
lakes (greater than 100 m²), two
reservoirs, and of streams, all of which
help form these two large
watershed.
Wetlands in Yosemite occur in valley bottoms
throughout the park, and are often hydrologically linked to nearby
lakes and rivers through seasonal flooding and groundwater
movement.
Meadow habitats, distributed at
elevations from in the park, are generally wetlands, as are the
riparian habitats found on the banks of
Yosemite's numerous streams and rivers.
Yosemite is famous for its
high concentration of waterfalls
in a small area. Numerous sheer drops, glacial steps and
hanging valleys in the park provide many
places for
waterfalls to exist, especially
during April, May, and June (the snowmelt season).
Located in Yosemite
Valley, the 2,425-foot-high (739 m) Yosemite Falls
is the highest in North America.
Also in
Yosemite Valley is the much lower volume Ribbon Falls
, which has the highest single vertical drop,
. Perhaps the most prominent of the Yosemite
Valley waterfalls is Bridalveil Fall
, which is the waterfall seen from the Tunnel View
viewpoint at the east end of the Wawona
Tunnel. Wapama Falls in Hetch Hetchy
Valley
is another notable waterfall. Hundreds of
ephemeral waterfalls also exist in the
park.
All
glaciers in the park are relatively
small glaciers that occupy areas that are in almost permanent
shade, such as north- and northeast-facing
cirques.
Lyell Glacier
is the largest glacier in Yosemite (the Palisades
Glaciers are the largest in the Sierra Nevada) and covers .
None of the Yosemite glaciers are a remnant of the much, much
larger
Ice Age alpine glaciers responsible
for sculpting the Yosemite landscape. Instead, they were formed
during one of the
neoglacial episodes
that have occurred since the thawing of the Ice Age (such as the
Little Ice Age).
Climate change has reduced the number and
size of glaciers around the world. Many Yosemite glaciers,
including Merced Glacier, which was discovered by
John Muir in 1871 and bolstered his glacial
origins theory of the Yosemite area, have disappeared and most of
the others have lost up to 75% of their surface area.
Climate
Yosemite has a
Mediterranean
climate, meaning most precipitation falls during the mild
winter, and the other seasons are nearly dry (less than 3% of
precipitation falls during the long, hot summers). Because of
orographic lift, precipitation
increases with elevation up to where it slowly decreases to the
crest. Precipitation amounts vary from at elevation to at . Snow
does not typically persist on the ground until November in the high
country. It accumulates all winter and into March or early
April.
Mean daily temperatures range from 25 to 53
°F (-3.9 to 11.5
°C)
at Tuolumne Meadows at . At the Wawona Entrance (elevation ), mean
daily temperature ranges from . At the lower elevations below ,
temperatures are hotter; the mean daily high temperature at
Yosemite Valley (elevation ) varies from . At elevations above ,
the hot, dry summer temperatures are moderated by frequent summer
thunderstorms, along with snow that can
persist into July. The combination of dry
vegetation, low relative
humidity, and thunderstorms results in frequent
lightning-caused
fires as well.
At the park headquarters, normal January temperatures range from
47.2°F to 25.6°F and normal July temperatures range from 89.9°F to
53.2°F. There are an average of 47.7 days with highs of or higher
and an average of 137.5 days with lows of or lower. Freezing
temperatures have been recorded in every month of the year. The
record high temperature was 115°F on July 20, 1915. The record low
temperature was -6°F on January 2, 1924. Average annual
precipitation is 36.57 inches; there an average of 69 days
with measurable precipitation. The wettest year was 1983 with
68.94 inches and the dryest year was 1976 with
14.84 inches. The most precipitation in one month was
29.61 inches in December 1955 and the most in one day was
6.92 inches on December 23, 1955. Average annual snowfall is
65.6 inches. The snowiest year was 1967 with
154.9 inches. The most snow in one month was 140.8 inches
in January 1993.
History
Ahwahneechee and the Mariposa Wars
Paiute and
Sierra Miwok peoples lived in the
area for ages before the first white explorations into the region.
A band of
Native
Americans called the Ahwahneechee
lived in Yosemite
Valley
when the first non-indigenous people entered
it.
The
California Gold Rush in the
mid-19th century dramatically increased white travel in the area.
United States Army Major
Jim Savage led the
Mariposa Battalion into the west end of
Yosemite Valley in 1851 while in pursuit of around 200
Ahwahneechees led by
Chief Tenaya as
part of the Mariposa Wars. Accounts from this battalion were the
first well-documented cases of Caucasians entering Yosemite Valley.
Attached to Savage's unit was Dr.
Lafayette Bunnell, the company
physician, who later wrote about his awestruck
impressions of the valley in
The Discovery of the
Yosemite. Bunnell is credited with naming Yosemite Valley from
his interviews with Chief Tenaya. Bunnell wrote that Chief Tenaya
was the founder of the Pai-Ute Colony of Ah-wah-nee. The Miwoks
(and most white settlers) considered the Ahwahneechee to be
especially violent because of their frequent territorial disputes,
and the Miwok word "yohhe'meti" literally means "they are killers".
Correspondence and articles written by members of the battalion
helped to popularize Yosemite Valley and surrounding area.
Tenaya
and the rest of the Ahwahneechee were eventually captured and their
village burned; they were removed to a reservation near Fresno,
California
. Some were later allowed to return to
Yosemite Valley, but got in trouble after attacking a group of
eight gold
miners in the spring of 1852.
The band
fled eastward to Mono
Lake
, and took refuge with the nearby Mono tribe; but after stealing some horses from
their hosts, the Ahwahneechees were tracked down and killed by the
Mono Paiutes in 1853. In the attack Chief Tenaya was killed
and the survivors were taken back to Mono Lake and absorbed into
the Mono Lake Paiute tribe. A reconstructed "Indian Village of
Ahwahnee" is now located behind the
Yosemite Museum, which is next to the
Yosemite Valley Visitor Center.
Early tourists
In 1855, entrepreneur
James Mason
Hutchings, artist
Thomas Ayres and
two others were the first to tour the area. Hutchings wrote
articles and books about this and later excursions in the area, and
Ayres' sketches became the first accurate drawings of many
prominent features. Photographer
Charles Leander Weed took the first
photographs of Yosemite Valley in 1859.
Later photographers included
Ansel
Adams.
Wawona
was an Indian encampment in what is now the
southwestern part of the park. Settler Galen Clark discovered the Mariposa
Grove
of Giant Sequoia in
Wawona in 1857. Simple lodgings were built, as were roads to
the area.
In 1879, the Wawona Hotel
was built to serve tourists visiting Mariposa
Grove. As tourism increased, so did the number of trails and
hotels.
The
Wawona Tree, also known as the
Tunnel Tree, was a famous giant sequoia that stood in the Mariposa
Grove. It was tall, and was in circumference. A tunnel was cut
through the tree in 1881, which made it a popular tourist photo
attraction. Everything from horse-drawn carriages in the late
nineteenth century, to automobiles in the first part of the
twentieth century, traveled the road which passed through that
tree. The
Wawona Tree fell in 1969 under
a heavy load of snow. It was estimated to have been 2,300 years
old.
Yosemite Grant
Concerned by the effects of commercial interests, prominent
citizens including
Galen Clark and
Senator
John Conness advocated for
protection of the area. A park bill passed both houses of the
U.S. Congress, and was signed by
President Abraham Lincoln on June 30, 1864, creating
the Yosemite Grant.
This is the first instance of park land
being set aside specifically for preservation and public use by
action of the U.S. federal government, and set a precedent for the
1872 creation of Yellowstone
as the first national
park. Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove were
ceded to California
as a state park, and a
board of commissioners was proclaimed two years later.
Galen Clark was appointed by the commission as the Grant's first
guardian, but neither Clark nor the commissioners had the authority
to evict
homesteaders (which included
Hutchings). The issue was not settled until 1875 when the
homesteader land holdings were invalidated. Clark and the reigning
commissioners were ousted in 1880, and Hutchings became the new
park guardian.
Access to the park by tourists improved in the early years of the
park, and conditions in the Valley were made more hospitable.
Tourism significantly increased after the
First Transcontinental
Railroad was completed in 1869, but the long horseback ride to
reach the area was a deterrent. Three
stagecoach roads were built in the mid-1870s to
provide better access for the growing number of visitors to
Yosemite Valley.
Scottish-born
naturalist John Muir wrote articles popularizing the area and
increasing scientific interest in it. Muir was one of the first to
theorize that the major landforms in Yosemite Valley were created
by large alpine
glaciers, bucking
established scientists such as
Josiah
Whitney, who regarded Muir as an amateur. Muir wrote scientific
papers on the area's biology.
Increased protection efforts

Fallen Monarch and F Troop, 6th
U.S.
Overgrazing of
meadows (especially by
sheep),
logging of
Giant Sequoia, and other damage caused Muir to become an advocate
for further protection. Muir convinced prominent guests of the
importance of putting the area under federal protection; one such
guest was
Robert Underwood
Johnson, editor of
Century
Magazine. Muir and Johnson lobbied Congress for the Act
that created Yosemite National Park on October 1, 1890. The State
of California, however, retained control of Yosemite Valley and
Mariposa Grove. Muir also helped persuade local officials to
virtually eliminate grazing from the Yosemite high country.
The newly created national park came under the jurisdiction of the
United States Army's
Fourth Cavalry Regiment
on May 19, 1891, which set up camp in Wawona. By the late 1890s,
sheep grazing was no longer a problem, and the Army made many other
improvements. The Cavalry could not intervene to help the worsening
condition of Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove.
Muir and his
Sierra Club continued to
lobby the government and influential people for the creation of a
unified Yosemite National Park.
In May 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt camped with Muir near
Glacier
Point
for three days. On that trip, Muir convinced
Roosevelt to take control of Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove
away from California and return it to the federal government. In
1906, Roosevelt signed a bill that did precisely that.
U.S National Park Service
The
National Park Service was
formed in 1916, and Yosemite was transferred to that agency's
jurisdiction. Tuolumne Meadows Lodge,
Tioga Pass Road, and campgrounds at Tenaya
and Merced lakes were also completed in 1916. Automobiles started
to enter the park in ever-increasing numbers following the
construction of all-weather highways to the park. The
Yosemite Museum was founded in 1926 through
the efforts of
Ansel Franklin
Hall.
In 1903, a dam in the northern portion of the park was proposed.
Located
in the Hetch Hetchy
Valley
, its purpose was to provide water and hydroelectric power to San
Francisco
. Preservationists like Muir and his
Sierra Club opposed the project, while
conservationists like
Gifford Pinchot supported it. In 1913, the
U.S.
Congress authorized the O'Shaughnessy Dam
through passage of the Raker
Act.
More recently, preservationists persuaded Congress to designate ,
or about 89% of the park, as the
Yosemite
Wilderness—a highly protected
wilderness area.
The Park Service has
reduced artificial inducements to visit the park, such as the
Firefall, in which
red-hot embers were pushed off a cliff near Glacier Point
at night. Traffic congestion in Yosemite Valley
during the summer months has become a concern. Two electric buses
commenced service in September 1995. The buses are quiet and don't
emit pollutants. Eventually, all the buses in Yosemite will be
electric. Plans to exclude all automobiles in the summer that are
not registered at a hotel or campground within Yosemite Valley have
been investigated; this would put summer day-use visitors in the
valley on free shuttle buses, bicycles, or on foot.
Hotels and concessioners
In the early years of the park, different companies ran multiple
hotels and resorts.
These resorts included the Wawona Hotel
, the Yosemite Park
Lodge, and Camp
Curry
, a tent cabin site in Yosemite Valley. The
Yosemite Park & Curry Company was formed in 1925 to consolidate
those often-competing concessions. The Park Service granted the
newly formed company exclusive right to operate hotels, restaurants
and most stores in Yosemite.
Two years later, the new company was
headquartered on the mezzanine level of its new property, the
Ahwahnee
Hotel
. The Yosemite Park & Curry Company ran
the concessions in the park for over 50 years, until the company
was sold in the late 1970s to United States Natural Resources, and
a couple of years later to
MCA Inc.. During
those ownership changes, the Curry Company name continued.
In 1993,
Matsushita Electric
Works acquired MCA.
United States Secretary
of the Interior Manuel Lujan,
Jr. objected to a Japanese firm operating concessions in a U.S.
national park. To avoid delay of federal approval of the
acquisition, Matsushita sold the concessions company, transferred
ownership of the concession properties to the U.S. government, and
the Yosemite Park & Curry Company name was retired.
The park concessions are now operated by DNC Parks and Resorts at
Yosemite, Inc., part of the
Delaware North Companies Parks and
Resorts division.
Geology
Tectonic and volcanic activity

Generalized geologic map of the
Yosemite area (USGS image)
The area of the park was astride a
passive continental margin during
the
Precambrian and early
Paleozoic. Sediment was derived from continental
sources and was deposited in shallow water. These rocks have since
been
metamorphosed.
Heat generated from the
Farallon
Plate subducting below the
North American Plate led to the
creation of an
island arc of volcanoes on
the west coast of proto-North America between the late
Devonian and
Permian
periods. Later volcanism in the
Jurassic
intruded and covered these rocks in what may have been magmatic
activity associated with the early stages of the creation of the
Sierra Nevada Batholith. 95%
of these rocks were eventually removed by uplifted-accelerated
erosion.
The first phase of regional
pluton started 210 million years ago in
the late Triassic and continued throughout the Jurassic to about
150 million years before present (
BP). Around the same time, the
Nevadan orogeny built the Nevadan mountain
range (also called the Ancestral Sierra Nevada) to a height of .
This was directly part of the creation of the Sierra Nevada
Batholith, and the resulting rocks were mostly
granitic in composition and emplaced about below the
surface. The second major pluton emplacement phase lasted from
about 120 million to 80 million years ago during the
Cretaceous. This was part of the
Sevier orogeny.
Starting 20 million years ago (in the
Cenozoic) and lasting until 5 million years ago, a
now-extinct extension of
Cascade Range
volcanoes erupted, bringing large amounts of
igneous material in the area. These igneous deposits blanketed the
region north of the Yosemite region.
Volcanic activity
persisted past 5 million years BP
east of the current park borders in the Mono Lake
and Long Valley
areas.
Uplift and erosion
Starting 10 million years ago, vertical movement along the Sierra
fault started to uplift the Sierra Nevada. Subsequent tilting of
the Sierra block and the resulting accelerated uplift of the Sierra
Nevada increased the
gradient of
western-flowing streams. The streams consequently ran faster and
thus cut their valleys more quickly.
Additional uplift
occurred when major faults developed to the east, especially the
creation of Owens
Valley
from Basin and
Range-associated extensional forces. Uplift of the
Sierra accelerated again about two million years ago during the
Pleistocene.
The uplifting and increased erosion exposed granitic rocks in the
area to surface pressures, resulting in
exfoliation (responsible for the
rounded shape of the many domes in the park) and mass wasting
following the numerous fracture joint planes (cracks; especially
vertical ones) in the now solidified plutons. Pleistocene glaciers
further accelerated this process and the larger ones transported
the resulting
talus and
till from valley floors.
Numerous vertical joint planes controlled where and how fast
erosion took place. Most of these long, linear and very deep cracks
trend northeast or northwest and form parallel, often regularly
spaced sets. They were created by uplift-associated pressure
release and by the unloading of overlying rock via erosion.
Sculpting by glaciers
A series of
glaciations further modified
the region starting about 2 to 3 million years ago and ending
sometime around 10,000
BP. At least
four major glaciations have occurred in the Sierra Nevada, locally
called the Sherwin (also called the pre-Tahoe), Tahoe, Tenaya, and
Tioga. The Sherwin glaciers were the largest, filling Yosemite and
other valleys, while later stages produced much smaller glaciers. A
Sherwin-age glacier was almost surely responsible for the major
excavation and shaping of Yosemite Valley and other canyons in the
area.

View from Glacier Point
Glacial systems reached depths of up to and left their marks in the
Yosemite area.
The longest glacier in the Yosemite area ran
down the Grand Canyon of the Tuolumne
River for , passing well beyond Hetch Hetchy Valley
. Merced Glacier flowed out of Yosemite
Valley and into the
Merced River Gorge.
Lee
Vining Glacier carved Lee Vining Canyon and emptied into Lake
Russel (the much-enlarged ice age version of Mono Lake
). Only the highest peaks, such as Mount Dana
and Mount
Conness
, were not covered by glaciers. Retreating
glaciers often left recessional
moraines
that impounded lakes such as the long Lake Yosemite (a shallow lake
that periodically covered much of the floor of Yosemite
Valley).
Biology
Habitats
With its scrubby sun-baked
chaparral,
stately groves of pine, fir, and sequoia, and expanses of alpine
woodlands and meadows, Yosemite National Park preserves a Sierra
Nevada landscape as it prevailed before Euro-American settlement.
In contrast to surrounding lands, which have been significantly
altered by logging, the park still contains some of
old-growth forest. Taken together, the
park's varied
habitats support
over 250 species of
vertebrates, which
include fish,
amphibians,
reptiles, birds, and mammals.
Along much of Yosemite's western boundary, habitats are dominated
by mixed
coniferous forests of
Ponderosa Pine,
Sugar Pine,
Incense-cedar,
White
Fir, and
Douglas Fir, and a few
stands of
Giant Sequoia, interspersed
by areas of
Black Oak and
Canyon Live Oak. A relatively high
diversity of wildlife species are supported by these habitats,
because of relatively mild, lower-elevation climate and the mixture
of habitat types and plant species. Wildlife species typically
found in these habitats include
American Black Bear,
Bobcat,
Gray Fox,
Mule deer,
Mountain
Kingsnake,
Gilbert's Skink,
White-headed Woodpecker,
Brown Creeper,
Spotted Owl, and a wide variety of bat species.
In the case of bats, large snags are important as roost
sites.
Going higher in elevation, the coniferous forests become purer
stands of
Red Fir,
Western White Pine,
Jeffrey Pine,
Lodgepole Pine, and the occasional
Foxtail pine. Fewer wildlife species tend to be
found in these habitats, because of their higher elevation and
lower complexity. Species likely to be found include
Golden-mantled Ground
Squirrel,
Chickaree,
Fisher,
Steller's
Jay,
Hermit Thrush, and
Northern Goshawk. Reptiles are not common,
but include
Rubber Boa,
western fence lizard, and
Northern Alligator Lizard.
As the landscape rises, trees become smaller and more sparse, with
stands broken by areas of exposed
granite.
These include
Lodgepole Pine,
Whitebark Pine, and
Mountain Hemlock that, at highest
elevations, give way to vast expanses of granite as treeline is
reached. The climate in these habitats is harsh and the growing
season is short, but species such as
Pika,
Yellow-bellied Marmot,
White-tailed Jackrabbit,
Clark's Nutcracker, and
Black Rosy Finch are adapted to these
conditions. Also, the treeless alpine habitats are the areas
favored by
Sierra Nevada
Bighorn Sheep. This species, however, is now found in the
Yosemite area only around Tioga Pass, where a small, reintroduced
population exists.
At a variety of elevations, meadows provide important, productive
habitat for wildlife. Animals come to feed on the green
grasses and use the flowing and standing water found
in many meadows.
Predators, in turn, are
attracted to these areas. The interface between meadow and forest
is also favored by many animal species because of the proximity of
open areas for foraging and cover for protection. Species that are
highly dependent upon meadow habitat include
Great Grey Owl,
Willow Flycatcher,
Yosemite Toad, and
Mountain Beaver.
Management issues
Despite the richness of high-quality habitats in Yosemite, the
California golden bear,
California Condor, and
Least Bell's Vireo have become
extinct in the park within historical time, and
another 37 species currently have special status under either
California or federal
endangered
species legislation. The most serious current threats to
Yosemite's wildlife and the ecosystems they occupy include loss of
a natural fire regime,
exotic
species,
air pollution,
habitat fragmentation, and
climate change. On a more local basis,
factors such as
road kills and the
availability of human food have affected some wildlife species.
The black bears of Yosemite were once famous for breaking into
parked cars to steal food. They were also an encouraged tourist
sight for many years at the park's
garbage
dumps, where bears congregated to eat park visitors' garbage
and tourists gathered to photograph the bears. Increasing
encounters between bears and humans and increasing damage to
property led to an aggressive campaign to discourage bears from
relying on human food or interacting with people and their
property. The open-air dumps were closed; all trash receptacles
were replaced with
bear-proof
receptacles; all campgrounds were equipped with bear-proof food
lockers so that people would not leave food in their vehicles,
which were easy targets for the powerful and resourceful bears.
Because bears who show aggression towards people usually are
eventually destroyed, park personnel have continued to come up with
innovative ways to have bears associate humans and their property
with unpleasant experiences, such as being hit with
rubber bullets. Today, about 30 bears a year
are captured and
ear-tagged and their
DNA is sampled so that, when bear damage occurs,
rangers can ascertain which bear is causing the problem.
Increasing
ozone pollution is causing tissue
damage to the massive
Giant Sequoia
trees in the park. This makes them more vulnerable to
insect infestation and
disease. Since the
cones
of these trees require fire-touched soil to
germinate, historic
fire suppression has reduced these
trees' ability to reproduce. The current policy of setting
prescribed fires is expected to help the
germination issue.
Yosemite National Park has documented more than 130 non-native
plant
species within park boundaries. These
non-native plants were introduced into Yosemite following the
migration of early
Euro-American settlers
in the late 1850s. Natural and human-caused disturbances, such as
wildland fires and construction activities, have contributed to a
rapid increase in the spread of non-native plants. A number of
these species aggressively invade and displace the native plant
communities, resulting in impacts on the park's resources.
Non-native plants can bring about significant changes in park
ecosystems by altering the native plant communities and the
processes that support them. Some non-native species may cause an
increase in the fire frequency of an area or increase the available
nitrogen in the soil that may allow more
non-native plants to become established. Many non-native species,
such as
Yellow Star Thistle
(
Centaurea solstitialis), are able to produce a long
tap root that allows them to out-compete
the native plants for available water.
Bull Thistle (
Cirsium
vulgare), Common Mullein (
Verbascum thapsus), and Klamath Weed
(
Hypericum perforatum)
have been identified as noxious
pests in Yosemite since the 1940s.
Additional species that have been recognized more recently as
aggressive and requiring control are Yellow Star Thistle
(
Centaurea
solstitialis), Sweet Clover (
Melilot spp.), Himalayan Blackberry
(
Rubus armeniacus),
Cut-leaved Blackberry (
Rubus
laciniatus) and Large Periwinkle (
Vinca major).
Activities

The Yosemite Hybrid Shuttle,
Yosemite's free shuttle bus system
Yosemite Valley is open year-round, but much of the remaining park
is closed because of snow in late autumn and re-opens in mid to
late spring.
Open-air tours around Yosemite Valley and
the Mariposa
Grove
of Giant Sequoias are
available. Many people enjoy short walks and longer hikes to
waterfalls in Yosemite Valley, or walks amongst Giant Sequoias in
the Mariposa, Tuolumne, or Merced Groves.
Others like to drive
or take a tour bus to Glacier Point
(summer-fall) to see a spectacular view of Yosemite
Valley and the high country, or drive along the scenic Tioga Road to Tuolumne Meadows
(summer-fall) and go for a walk or
hike.

A open-air tram in the Yosemite
Valley
Most park visitors stay just for the day, and only visit locations
within Yosemite Valley that are easily accessible by automobile.
There is a
US$20 per automobile
user fee to enter the park.
Traffic
congestion in the valley is a serious problem during peak
season, in summer. A free
shuttle bus
system operates year-round in the valley, and
park rangers encourage people to use this system
since parking within the valley during the summer is often nearly
impossible to find.
In addition to exploring the natural features of the park, visitors
can also learn about the
natural and
cultural history of Yosemite Valley at a
number of facilities in the valley: the Yosemite Valley Visitor
Center, the adjoining
Yosemite
Museum, and the
Nature Center at Happy
Isles.
There are also two National Historic Landmarks: the
LeConte Memorial Lodge (Yosemite's first public visitor center),
and the world-famous Ahwahnee Hotel
. Camp 4 was added to the National Register
of Historic Places in 2003.
Hiking
Over of trails are available to hikers—anything from the easy
stroll, to the grueling hikes up several park mountains, to
multiple-day
backpack
trips.
The park can be divided into 5 sections for the day-user—Yosemite
Valley, Wawona/Mariposa Grove/ Glacier Point, Tuolumne Meadows,
Hetch Hetchy, and
Crane Flat/
White Wolf. Numerous books describe park trails,
and free information is available from the Park Service in
Yosemite. Park rangers encourage visitors to experience portions of
the park in addition to Yosemite Valley.
Between late spring and early fall, much of the park is open to
multiple-day backpack trips. All overnight trips into the back
country require a wilderness permit and most require approved
bear-resistant
food storage.
Biking
Bicycle rentals are available in Yosemite Valley spring through
fall. Over of paved bike paths are available in Yosemite Valley. In
addition, bicyclists can ride on regular roads.
Helmets are required by law for children
under 18 years of age. Off-trail riding and
mountain biking are not permitted in
Yosemite National Park.
Rafting/Swimming
Water activities are plentiful during warmer months. Rafting can be
done through the Yosemite Valley on the Merced River. There is also
a swimming pool available at Curry Village.
Driving destinations

Dana Fork of the Tuolumne River, near
the Tioga Pass entrance
While some locations in Yosemite require hiking, other locations
can be observed via automobile transportation. Driving locations
also allow guests to observe the night sky in locations other than
their campsite or lodge. All of the roads in Yosemite are scenic,
but the most famous is the
Tioga Road,
typically open from late May or early June through November.
As an alternative to driving, bicycles are allowed on the roads.
However, bicycles are only allowed off-road on of paved trails in
Yosemite Valley itself; mountain biking is not allowed.
Climbing
Rock climbing is an important part of
Yosemite.
Camp 4
—a walk-in campground in Yosemite Valley—was
instrumental in the development of rock climbing as a sport, and is
listed on the National Register of
Historic Places. Climbers can generally be spotted in the
snow-free months on anything from ten-foot-high (3 m) boulders
to the face of El
Capitan
. Classes are offered by numerous groups on
rock climbing.
Winter activities
Many of the roads in the park close because of heavy snow in
winter; however, Yosemite Valley is open all year long.
Downhill skiing is available at the Badger Pass
Ski Area
—the oldest downhill skiing area in California,
offering downhill skiing from mid-December through early
April. Much of the park is open to
cross-country skiing and
snowshoeing, with several backcountry ski huts open
for use. Wilderness permits are required for backcountry overnight
ski trips.
The
Bracebridge dinner is an annual
holiday event, held since 1927 at the Ahwahnee Hotel
, inspired by Washington Irving's descriptions of Squire
Bracebridge and English Christmas
traditions of the 1700s in his Sketch Book. Between
1929 and 1973, the show was organized by
Ansel Adams.
See also
Notes
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed), p.
324.
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed), page
329
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed.), p.
331.
- Kiver, Geology of U.S. Parklands (5th ed.), p.
220.
- Kiver, Geology of U.S. Parklands (5th ed), page
227
- Kiver, Geology of U.S. Parklands (5th ed.), p.
228.
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed.), p.
340.
- Wuerthner, Yosemite: A Visitor's Companion (1st ed.),
p. 8.
- Western Regional Climate Center website
- ISBN 0-93966-658-8.
- Harris, Geology of the National Parks (5th ed.), p.
326.
- Schaffer, Yosemite National Park (4th ed.), p.
46.
- Schaffer, Yosemite National Park (4th ed.), p.
48.
- Schaffer, Yosemite National Park (4th ed.), p.
49.
- Schaffer, Yosemite National Park (4th ed.), p.
50.
- Schaffer, Yosemite National Park (4th ed.), p.
52.
- National Park Service, Yosemite: Official National Park
Handbook, p. 117.
- Schaffer, Yosemite National Park (4th ed.), p.
51.
- http://www.energyquest.ca.gov/transportation/electric.html
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed.), p.
328.
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed.), p.
337.
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed.), p.
339.
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed.), p.
332.
- Harris, Geology of National Parks (5th ed.), p.
333.
- National Park Service: Yosemite National Park. Retrieved on
October 27, 2007.
References
- Harris, Ann G. Geology of National Parks: Fifth
Edition. (Iowa, Kendall/Hunt Publishing; 1998) ISBN
0-7872-5353-7.
- Kiver, Eugene P. and David V. Harris. Geology of U.S.
Parklands: Fifth Edition. (Jonh Wiley & Sons; New
York; 1999) ISBN 0-471-33218-6.
- National Park Service:
Yosemite National Park (adapted public domain text)
- Schaffer, Jeffrey P. Yosemite National Park: A Natural
History Guide to Yosemite and Its Trails. (Wilderness Press,
Berkeley; 1999) ISBN 0-89997-244-6.
- Wuerthner, George. Yosemite: A Visitor's Companion.
(Stackpole Books; 1994) ISBN 0-8117-2598-7.
- Yosemite: Official National Park Service Handbook (no.
138), Division of Publications, National Park Service.
External links