Western Wyoming’s Green River drains 4,000 miles of forested mountains and high desert, home to migrating wildlife, grazing cattle, a few thousand people, and in recent decades a booming natural-gas business. Since prehistoric times, people have worked to balance the basin’s resources for their own benefit — and that struggle continues today.
Sedimentary record of seismic events in the Eocene Green River Formation and its implications for regional tectonics on lake evolution (Bridger Basin, Wyoming) - ScienceDirect
Upper Green River Conservancy™
Borealosuchus wilsoni fossil crocodilian (Green River Form…
A Career Worth Digging Into: Ken Bradbury Retires After 40 Years with the Wisconsin and Geological Natural History Survey – Natural Resources Institute
Names Hill, Oregon Trail Inscription Site
Colorado River
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John Wesley Powell: Explorer, Thinker, Scientist and Bureaucrat
Unraveling the Geologic History of the Greater Green River Basin in Wyoming
Fremont County, Wyoming