America’s National Parks Podcast
Society & Culture:Places & Travel
In the middle of North Dakota, one of the least visited states in the nation, sits one of the smallest and least visited National Park Service Sites. It’s the place where Earthlodge people, the Hidatsa and Mandan, who lived along the Missouri River and it’s tributaries, hunted bison and other game. The site was a major Native American trade center for hundreds of years prior to becoming an important marketplace for fur traders after 1750.
Today on America’s National Parks, the Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, and the story of Buffalo-Bird Woman, one of the last Hidatsas born in the Knife River villages, in her own words, as portrayed by Grace Henry in the park film.
News FromThe Parks | ”Fee Free”Smokies to End, Rabbit Disease, Bird Migration & More
Betty Reid Soskin
Behind The Scene’s of Netflix’s ”Our Great National Parks”
The Women of Lowell
The House on Brattle Street
National Park News | New Mask Rules, Fewer Humpbacks, Missions Damaged, & a New Nat’l Historic Site
Discovering Yellowstone
Steamtown and Pheobe Snow
Ansel Adams
National Park News | 2021 Visitation Shatters Records, New Park Reservations, a First for USS Constitution
Roebling’s Delaware Aqueduct
Imprisoned at Fort McHenry
Changes to National Parks in 2022
Weir Farm
National Park News | New NPS Director, 19% of Giant Sequoias Gone in 2 years, Hiker Remains Found After 38 Years
Mary Colter and the Grand Canyon
Badlands Symbiotic Species — Prairie Dogs and Burrowing Owls
What Makes a National Trail?
National Park News | Monuments Restored, Sequoias Destroyed, Mammoth Grows, Wolves Killed, White Sands Discovery, & More
Climate Change and Glacier National Park
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