A large bull Bison plows his way through deep winter snow of Yellowstone National Park's Lamar Valley. A dominant bull such as this one stands roughly six feet tall at the shoulder and can weigh close to 2,000 pounds. Thirty million or more bison once roamed the Plains before the slaughter of the 1800's reduced their number to only 1091 by 1889. Yellowstone represents the only place in the continental United States where a wild Bison population has existed since prehistoric times. Though fewer that 50 individuals remained by 1902, the park now supports between 3,000 to 5,000. These represent the largest free roaming herds of the plains Bison in North America.
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