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Fossil Butte National Park. By: Joey Luciani. Question #1. 1. What year did the park become an official National Park and why? It became a National park in 1972. It became a national park to protect some of the green river and Wasatch formations. Questions #2.
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Fossil Butte National Park By: Joey Luciani
Question #1 • 1. What year did the park become an official National Park and why? It became a National park in 1972. It became a national park to protect some of the green river and Wasatch formations.
Questions #2 • 2. How was the park formed? The park was formed from ancient lake sediments.
Question #3 • 3. What type of rocks can be found inside the park? Some Rocks in the park are the shale, sandstone, limestone and dolomite.
Question # 4 • 4. What special landforms or features are inside your park? More than 100 snakes, birds, mammals and amphibians are in the park. There are a lot of fossils located in the park.
Question #5 • How is the land inside the park currently changing? It is becoming more desert like.
Question #6 • What environmental issue are effecting your park? Global warming is causing an increase in surface temperature which is expected to cause a disruption in the ecosystem in the park.
Question #7 • How is technology used to preserve and maintain the park? They monitor where they find cool stuff to show visitors.
Question #8 • Map of the park:
Question #9 • Pictures and diagrams that will help promote or explain geological features inside the park. • In a encyclopedia I found that the definition of fossils is….. fossils are remains, prints, or traces of a plant that lived a long time ago.
Bibliography (Question #10) • http://www.nps.gov/fobu/naturescience/geologicformations.htm • http://www.nps.gov/fobu/naturescience/index.htm • http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/fobu/sec1.htm • http://www.georgewright.org/0744dunn.pdf • http://www.nps.gov/fobu/naturescience/naturalfeaturesandecosystems.htm • Ambrose, Peter D. Fossil Butte National Monument: along the Shores of Time. Vernal, Utah: Dinosaur Nature Association, 1996. Print. • Agnes, Michael. Webster's New World Children's Dictionary. New York: Macmillan, 1999. Print.