Yellowstone Super Volcano Melts Park Road

Yellowstone volcanoUnderground heat from the park's super volcano combined with the warm summer sun have melted a section of a road in Yellowstone National Park, forcing its temporary closure.

The 3.3-mile-long Firehole Lake Drive is closed because the road has turned into a soupy mess, said park spokesman Dan Hottle. Yellowstone spans portions of Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.

The road itself is off Grand Loop Road between Old Faithful and Madison Junction in the park's Lower Geyser Basin, and takes visitors past Great Fountain Geyser, White Dome Geyser and Firehole Lake. The same heat that feeds the geysers softened the pavement too much to drive on.

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Montana Wildfires and Drones

drones in MontanaWhen it comes to analyzing dangerous wildfires, could a sensor attached to a drone ever replace a human eye connected to an intellect shaped by experience and intuition?

That’s one of the many questions federal wildland firefighting officials are asking as drones become increasingly popular in warfare and commerce.

The wildfire drone conversation comes on the heels of a national reminder about the human cost of firefighting after one of the deadliest seasons in recent memory. Nineteen firefighters died a year ago Monday at the Yarnell Hill fire in Arizona. In all last year, 38 firefighters were killed in the line of duty as fire burned 4.1 million acres and more than 1,000 homes.

Drones with infrared capability could help where thick smoke keeps manned helicopters from gathering fire information. They also could keep people out of risky situations, provide real-time information to firefighters on the ground and alert officials when conditions change or the fire jumps the line.

While drones have been used in rare cases already, managers with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service say the headlines are ahead of technology and the agencies’ comfort zone and pocketbooks.

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Butte BIG Folk Festival Ready to Rock

Butte Folk Festival

Organizers of the Montana Folk Festival in Butte are gearing up for their seventh annual event which promises to be the biggest music festival yet.

This year's folk festival will include 21 musical groups performing on six different stages around the Uptown area.

Crews were already getting tents and staging areas set up this morning for the three-day music event that begins on Friday and also features arts, crafts and food. Event coordinator George Everett said the free festival will include a wide range of roots-style music.

"Traditional genres, so there's blues, there's Cajun, there's zydeco, there's reggae this year, we haven't had since 2008, there's all kinds of different music and somethings, Mariachi music with an all-female Mariachi band that's going to be a lot of fun," said Everett.

The event is expected to draw about 150,000 people from around the region and Canada. A list of performers can be viewed at the Montana Folk Festival website.

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