Twelve-year-old Jack and his family go to Yellowstone National Park, where Jack's mother, a wildlife veterinarian, is investigating the report that wolves reintroduced to the park have killed a dog there.
Describes the forest fire that burned eighty percent of Yellowstone National Park in the summer of 1988, including park history, causes of the fire, how the blaze was put out, and how the park recovered.
Tells the story of the Yellowstone National Park wolf recovery project in 1995, in which fourteen gray wolves were transported from the Canadian wilderness and released in Yellowstone, marking the restoring of wolves to an area from which they had been absent for almost 100 years.
Twelve-year-old Jack, his younger sister, and the family's teenage foster child Troy go to Yellowstone National Park, where Jack's mother, a wildlife veterinarian, is investigating the report that wolves reintroduced to the park have killed a dog there.
Alexandria Bartram, a high-spirited medical student with a passion for botany, and other members of a field study group working in Yellowstone National Park in 1898, tell the story of their adventures and tragedies in a series of letters to friends and loved ones at home.
Christina, Grant, Mimi, and Papa snowmobile into Yellowstone National Park to encounter mud pots, geysers, bison, beauty, bears, volcanic action, and a mystery of historic proportions.
While taking one last driving tour of Wyoming before moving out of state, eleven-year-old Angela accompanies her beloved seventy-eight-year-old great-aunt Hil to Yellowstone National Park, where Hil's strange behavior suggests she may be losing her sanity.