Earlier this week, heavy rains and melting snow near Yellowstone National Park combined, causing rivers to overflow, flooding farms and ranches, washing out roads and bridges, and forcing the park to close. The Yellowstone River hit its highest level in decades, and the surge is now moving through nearby Billings, Montana. When Yellowstone National Park reopens—possibly as soon as next week—it will likely open only the southern half. Park officials are still assessing the amount of work needed to safely reopen the northern half.
Photos: Devastating Floods Hit the Yellowstone Region
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High water levels in the Lamar River erode Yellowstone National Park's Northeast Entrance Road, where the park was closed because of heavy flooding, rockslides, and other extremely hazardous conditions, near Gardiner, Montana, on June 13, 2022. #
NPS via Reuters -
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Residents of Red Lodge, Montana, are seen clearing mud, water, and debris from the small city's Main Street on June 14, 2022, after floodwaters ran through a residential area with hundreds of homes. #
Matthew Brown / AP -
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A windshield view shows rocks sliding down the side of a hill and hitting a car at the North Entrance of Yellowstone National Park on June 12, 2022, in this still image obtained from a social-media video. #
Anne Leppold / Reuters -
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A house is pulled into Rock Creek in Red Lodge, Montana, by raging floodwaters, photographed on June 14, 2022. Officials said more than 100 houses in the small city were flooded when torrential rains swelled waterways across the Yellowstone region. #
Matthew Brown / AP -
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