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Hundreds may have been exposed to rabies at bat-infested cabins in Grand Teton National Park
Health officials are working to alert hundreds of people in dozens of states and several countries who may have been exposed ...
Wyoming public health agencies are conducting rabies risk assessments after a bat colony was discovered inside a lodge in ...
7hon MSN
Hundreds of National Park Visitors Potentially Exposed to Rabies, Officials Scrambling to Find Them
The National Park Service says that, since June 2, the Grand Teton Lodge Company has received eight reports involving overnight guests who may have been exposed to bats in Jackson Lake Lodge rooms. As ...
Officials believe at least 200 people may have been exposed to rabies while visiting a hotel in Grand Teton National Park.
Teton County will decide on Monday to recommend renaming Mount Woodring to either Raven Peak or Equality Peak. The peak is ...
A colony of bats recently took up residence at the storied Jackson Lake Lodge, where central bankers and economic ...
An iconic peak at Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming is being renamed, and an Ogden, Utah, man's 'aspirational' idea for a ...
The highest of the peaks, Grand Teton, rises to height of 13,770 feet. The peak was given the name Grand Teton, or "large breast" in French, by Iroquois or French-Canadians settlers.
MISSOULA, Mont. — One woman is recovering from serious injuries after an avalanche pulled her some 1,500 down a slope in Grand Teton National Park. Park rangers say she was with four other men ...
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East Idaho News on MSNThe bull elk and bears made our trip to Grand Teton National Park a memorable one
Hurry, jump in the van, there is a herd of bull elk coming from Mormon’s Row,” yelled the driver of a sight-seeing group in ...
Grand Teton is about a tenth of the size of Yellowstone, which at 2.2 million acres is almost impossible to explore in a single visit. The smaller of the two parks, with its easy access and more ...
The monument and park were combined in 1950. Address: Grand Teton National Park, Moose, Wyo., 83012 Visitor info: (307) 739-3300 Of note: The Tetons rise at a rate of about 4.5 inches every 100 years.
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