Wyoming is home to a portion of the Rocky Mountains, including the Teton Range and Wind River Range. Gannett Peak, in the Wind River Range, is the highest mountain in Wyoming at 13,809 feet. The state also features unique geological formations like the Devils Tower, a famous igneous intrusion.
There are both Black Bears and Grizzlies in the Wind River Mountains. The Grizzlies are just moving in but you better be ready for them.
Backpackers who have seen Wyoming's famous backcountry sights insist that the Wind River mountains have better scenery and hiking opportunities than Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. The 90-mile long Wind River Mountain range form the Continental Divide of the Rocky Mountains in western Wyoming. These rugged and scenic mountains contain four wilderness areas and over 2,900 lakes and ponds. Wyoming's highest mountain, Gannett Peak, is in this mountain range. Favorite destinations include Gannett Peak, Cirque of the Towers, Green River Lakes, Square Top Mountain and Photographer's Point.
This special dry warm wind is called a Chinook wind. It forms when air descends down the leeward side of a mountain range, such as the Rocky Mountains, causing it to warm and dry as it descends.
Different types of weathering changed the Rocky Mountains, including water, wind, and chemical. It has caused the mountains to change shape and erode in places.
Wyoming.
It called the Monsoon Wind which was used to depict the wind in the Arabian sea.
It called the Monsoon Wind which was used to depict the wind in the Arabian sea.
Chinook
Chinook
The Rocky Mountains (or Rockies) are a major mountain range in western North America. The Rocky Mountains stretch more than 4,800 kilometres (2,980 mi) from the northernmost part of British Columbia, in Canada, to New Mexico, in the United States. The range's highest peak is Mount Elbert in Colorado at 14,440 feet (4,401 m) above sea level. Though part of North America's Pacific Cordillera, the Rockies are distinct from the Pacific Coast Ranges (as named in Canada) or Pacific Mountain System (as known in the United States), which are located immediately adjacent to the Pacific coast.The eastern edge of the Rockies rises impressively above the Interior Plains of central North America, including the Front Range of Colorado, the Wind River Range and Big Horn Mountains of Wyoming, the Absaroka-Beartooth ranges and Rocky Mountain Front of Montana, and the Clark Range of Alberta. In Canada geographers define three main groups of ranges: the Continental Ranges, Hart Ranges and Muskwa Ranges (the latter two flank the Peace River, the only river to pierce the Rockies, and are collectively referred to as the Northern Rockies). Mount Robson in British Columbia, at 3,954 metres (12,972 ft), is the highest peak in the Canadian Rockies. The Muskwa and Hart Ranges together comprise what is known as the Northern Rockies (the Mackenzie Mountains north of the Liard River are sometimes referred to as being part of the Rockies but this is an unofficial designation).The western edge of the Rockies includes subranges such as the Wasatch near Salt Lake City and the Bitterroots along the Idaho-Montana border. The Great Basin and Columbia River Plateau separate these subranges from distinct ranges further to the west, most prominent among which are the Sierra Nevada, Cascade Range and Coast Mountains. The Rockies do not extend into the Yukon or Alaska, or into central British Columbia, where the Rocky Mountain System (but not the Rocky Mountains) includes the Columbia Mountains, the southward extension of which is considered part of the Rockies in the United States. The Rocky Mountain System within the United States is a United States physiographic region; the Rocky Mountain System is known in Canada as the Eastern System.
Chinook