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Teton Valley is located on the west slope of the Teton Mountain Range in the western United States.Sometimes known as "The quiet side of the Tetons", it is composed of the cities of Victor, Idaho, Driggs, Idaho, Tetonia, Idaho, and Alta, Wyoming. [1]
The Teton River is a 64-mile-long (103 km) [2] tributary of the Henrys Fork of the Snake River in southeastern Idaho in the United States. It drains through the Teton Valley along the west side of the Teton Range along the Idaho-Wyoming border at the eastern end of the Snake River Plain.
Between six and nine million years ago, stretching and thinning of the Earth's crust caused movement along the Teton fault.The west block along the fault line rose to form the Teton Range, creating the youngest mountain range in the Rocky Mountains.
Jackson is a resort town in Teton County, Wyoming, United States.The population was 10,760 at the 2020 census, up from 9,577 in 2010. [5] It is the largest town in Teton County and its county seat. [6]
Teton or The Tetons may refer to: . Teton Basin or Teton Valley, today's names of historic trapper meeting and battle site (1832); Teton Range, part of the Rocky Mountains in Wyoming
Explorer and mountain man John Colter, a member of the earlier Lewis and Clark Expedition, asserted that he passed through the valley in 1808.The Teton River flows northward through the mountain meadows of Pierre's Hole and then conjoins Bitch Creek (once known as the North Fork of the Teton) just before it turns west and into Teton Canyon.
1929 U.S.G.S. Map of Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming - Geographicus - GrandTeton-USGS-1929 [a]. At its formation in 1929, Grand Teton National Park encompassed just six main lakes at the foot of the park's major peaks, but with the expansion of the park there are now 44 named lakes [1] within the boundary, and countless smaller unnamed lakes and ponds.
Aerial view of the Cathedral Group of the Teton Range from the southeast with South Teton, Nez Perce Peak, Middle Teton, Grand Teton, Mount Owen, Teewinot Mountain (from left to right; see the image annotations), Taggart Lake (left), and Bradley Lake (right) The Cathedral Group of the Teton Range from the northeast with Teewinot Mountain at left, Grand Teton center and Mount Owen at right