Yellowstone National Park Museum
With several million items, Yellowstone has one of the largest collections in the National Park Service. It is National Park Service policy to collect, protect, preserve, provide access to, and use objects, specimens, and archival and manuscript collections to aid understanding and advance knowledge. She was killed by wolves of the Geode Creek pack in Its distinctive stone-and-log architecture, known as “parkitecture,” became a prototype for park buildings all around the country.
Museum of the National Park Ranger

The asymmetrical boulders and gnarled logs display the irregularities of nature. Rockefeller and the guidance of Dr. Bumpus, the American Association of Museums built four such museums in Yellowstone.
The Museum of Thermal Activity, constructed at Old Faithful inwas razed and replaced by a visitor center in It opened in to acclaim for its quality materials and construction, and for the way it blended into its surroundings. The exteriors of the other museums have changed little since their completion bybut the interiors have undergone small and large alterations in design and use. Only the Norris Geyser Basin Museum still has its original name. The Fishing Bridge Visitor Center, Yellowstone National Park Museum Fishing Bridge Museum, Now called the Fishing Bridge Visitor Center, the building was designed so that visitors approaching from the parking lot could see through it to Yellowstone Lake, where stone steps lead down to the shore.
No longer used, the fireplace beneath the Yellowstone National Park Museum stone chimney is concealed from public view in a small area used for offices. Other changes include the linoleum tiles over the concrete floor, fluorescent lighting, plywood covers on some of the windows to allow removable walls for the exhibits, and replacement of the window glass with green plastic to accommodate lighting for exhibits. Norris Geyser Basin Museum breezeway. One of the two rooms on either side of the foyer originally contained bird specimens; both now have Glacier National Park To Great Falls Mt explaining geothermal activity and life in thermal areas.
NPS Madison Museum, Overlooking a meadow beyond which the Gibbon and Firehole rivers join to form the Madison River, the Madison Museum was intended to focus on park history, especially the nearby site where the Washburn expedition was thought to have originated the idea of a national park as a way to protect the thermal areas from commercial development.
and Research Center

Montana Memory Project : Collections include Superintendent’s Annual and Monthly reports, maps and drawings, oral histories, and photographs. With several million items, Yellowstone has one of the largest collections in the National Park Service. NPS Fishing Bridge Museum, Now called the Fishing Bridge Visitor Center, the building was designed so that visitors approaching from the parking lot could see through it to Yellowstone Lake, where stone steps lead down to the shore.