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AS IT IS 2016-06-17 In Yellowstone, Don't Step in the Boiling Water
This is What’s Trending Today…
This year is the 100th anniversary1 of the U.S. National Park Service.
Millions of people from across the United States and around the world will spend part of this summer visiting one or more of America’s national parks.
One place to enjoy the great outdoors is Yellowstone National Park, in northwestern Wyoming and parts of two other states: Idaho and Montana.
Yellowstone is the country’s first national park. It is also one of the most-visited and most-recognized wilderness2 areas.
Yellowstone has found itself in the news a lot this year -- and not just because of the 100th anniversary.
The park has seen several incidents and accidents involving humans. Many of the events have been reported on social media.
Last month, a visitor to Yellowstone put a baby bison in his car because he thought it looked cold. Park officials later asked wildlife experts to kill the baby bison. They said its mother and other bison rejected the animal because of human contact.
Then, on June 7, a 23-year-old visitor fell into an acidic hot spring after leaving a marked walkway.
This week, another Yellowstone tourist made the park a trending topic on social media. The National Park Service said it fined a Chinese man $1,000 for leaving a boardwalk path in Yellowstone’s Mammoth3 Hot Springs area. A park service press release4 says the man admitted to trying to collect water in a bottle from the hot springs.
“Yellowstone” trended Thursday on Facebook.
People on social media reacted to yet another incident at the park. Many cheered park rangers5 for making the tourist pay for breaking rules.
One Twitter user6 wrote, “Sounds like Yellowstone visitors are pretty unruly. If anything, this Chinese tourist was lucky to be unhurt.”
News reports say that the Chinese man also admitted to not reading park safety information before his visit.
Yellowstone does provide visitor information in many languages, including Mandarin7 and Cantonese.
The National Park Service urges all visitors to “leave no trace8” in the protected nature. That includes not leaving the trails and walkways.
And that’s What’s Trending Today.
Words in This Story
trace - n. something (such as a mark or an object) which shows that someone or something was in a particular place
1 anniversary | |
n.周年(纪念日) | |
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2 wilderness | |
n.杳无人烟的一片陆地、水等,荒漠 | |
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3 mammoth | |
n.长毛象;adj.长毛象似的,巨大的 | |
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4 release | |
vt.发布,发表,发行;释放,放开 | |
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5 rangers | |
护林者( ranger的名词复数 ); 突击队员 | |
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6 user | |
n.用户,使用者 | |
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7 Mandarin | |
n.中国官话,国语,满清官吏;adj.华丽辞藻的 | |
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8 trace | |
n.痕迹,踪迹,微量;vt.追踪,找出根源,描绘;vi.追踪 | |
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