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Livingston is a city and the county seat of Park County, Montana, United States. [1] It is in southwestern Montana, on the Yellowstone River , north of Yellowstone National Park . As of the 2020 census , the population of the city was 8,040.
Map of the United States with Montana highlighted. Montana is a state located in the Western United States.According to the 2020 United States Census, Montana is the 8th least populous state with 1,084,225 inhabitants but the 4th largest by land area spanning 145,545.80 square miles (376,961.9 km 2) of land. [1]
Destroyed by the 2022 Montana floods, June 13, 2022. 4: Carter Bridge: Carter Bridge: April 28, 2011 : Milepost 31.6 on MT 540: Livingston vicinity: Reinforced Concrete Bridges in Montana, 1900-1958 MPS: 5: Chicken Creek Farmstead Historic District
This is a list of Superfund sites in Montana designated under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) environmental law. The CERCLA federal law of 1980 authorized the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to create a list of polluted locations requiring a long-term response to clean up hazardous material contaminations. [1]
This is a list of landfills in the United States.A landfill is a site for the disposal of waste materials by burial and is the oldest form of waste treatment.Historically, landfills have been the most common method of organized waste disposal and remain so in many places around the world.
In late 1864, Yellowstone City, consisting of 75 cabins, was in operation. Two miners, John Bozeman and John Jacobs, laid out the Bozeman Trail in 1864 to allow access to western Montana Territory, and it soon became a well-traveled path between Fort Laramie and western Montana. The road ran through the future Livingston area to Bozeman Pass.
The Murray Hotel, originally named the Elite Hotel, is a historic hotel in Livingston, Montana, United States.The original two story hotel was built at the corner of Park and Second St. in 1904 by Josephine Kline to accommodate passengers from the Northern Pacific Railway. [1]
There's access to the forest off Interstate 90 South on U.S. Highway 89 from Livingston, Montana, to Gardiner, Montana, or South on U.S. 191 from Bozeman, Montana, to West Yellowstone. Over 2,290 mi (3,690 km) of hiking trails are located in the forest providing access to wilderness areas and interlinking with trails in Yellowstone National Park.