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In June 2022, the U.S. state of Montana was hit by heavy, damaging floods in multiple major watersheds including the Yellowstone River. [1] Heavy rain and melting snow over the weekend June 10–13 caused large areas of Yellowstone National Park to be evacuated. [2] On June 14, the water plant in Billings was temporarily shut down. [3]
With Yellowstone National Park pushing to reopen to tourists more quickly than anticipated after record floods pounded southern Montana, some of those hardest hit in the disaster live far from the ...
Massive floodwaters ravaged Yellowstone National Park and nearby communities Monday, washing out roads and bridges, cutting off electricity and forcing visitors to evacuate parts of the iconic ...
More than 10,000 visitors were moved out of Yellowstone National Park after severe floods that washed out roads, destroyed bridges and sent a house into a Yellowstone floods cause 'severe' damage ...
The road was destroyed in the 2022 Montana floods. [6] Most of the road was washed away by the river. [7] On October 30, 2022, Old Gardiner Road was opened to regular visitor traffic between Gardiner and Mammoth Hot Springs, to bypass the damaged North Entrance Road. [8]
The night before the world’s first National Park reopened, people on the quiet streets of west Yellowstone weren’t sure what to expect after unprecedented flooding shut down the park for more ...
It flows through the town of Red Lodge before entering the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River, which is not to be confused with the Clark Fork of the Columbia River which is what the other Rock Creek flows into. The 2022 Montana floods at Rock Creek caused catastrophic damage to parts of Red Lodge. [5] [6]
Historic floodwaters raged through Yellowstone National Park, tearing out bridges and pouring into nearby homes.