United States of America
Yosemite National Park
Yosemite National Park is a glacial landscape with geologic features of exceptional beauty.
This landscape was created as a result of repeated periods of glaciation. It holds unique and pronounced landform features, such as deeply incised valleys and granitic domes like Half Dome and El Capitan. The park is also known for its many high waterfalls, alpine meadows and groves of giant sequoias.
Community Perspective: it gets very busy – especially on weekends and national holidays - but if you allow 2 days or more you can get away from the main tourist routes (Kyle provides tips). Both summer and winter visits are rewarding.
Site Info
Official Information
- Full Name
- Yosemite National Park (ID: 308)
- Country
- United States of America
- Status
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Inscribed 1984
Site history
History of Yosemite National Park
- 1984: Inscribed
- Inscribed
- WHS Type
- Natural
- Criteria
- vii
- viii
Links
- UNESCO
- whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
- whc.unesco.org — whc.unesco.org/
Related Resources
- nps.gov — National Park Service
News Article
- Dec. 14, 2023 dailymail.co.uk — Yosemite will bring back reservations for 2024 to limit overcrowding
- July 25, 2018 dailymail.co.uk — Yosemite is EVACUATED as wildfire blankets the valley in smoke and temperatures across the west soar as high as 120F
- June 4, 2018 bbc.com — Yosemite El Capitan: Two climbers fall to death
- Aug. 20, 2015 latimes.com — Yosemite deaths illustrate a tragic but not uncommon risk in nature
- Jan. 29, 2015 msn.com — Rare Sierra Nevada red fox spotted in Yosemite park
- Sept. 8, 2014 usatoday.com — About 100 hikers evacuated by helicopter in Yosemite
- Aug. 25, 2013 washingtonpost.com — Firefighters protect giant sequoias at Yosemite
- Sept. 16, 2012 bbc.co.uk — Yosemite park hantavirus alert to 230,000 campers
- July 21, 2011 bbc.co.uk — Yosemite visitors 'presumed dead' in waterfall accident
- Aug. 27, 2009 sfgate.com — Yosemite's Ahwahnee Hotel closed after rockfall
Community Information
- Community Category
- Natural landscape: Glaciation
Travel Information
One million visitors or more
WHS Commandments Stars
Not for Acrophobes
See www.flickr.com
Recent Connections
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Perfect Inscriptions
1984 -
WHS Commandments Stars
Scores on all except #8 -
Not for Acrophobes
Cliff at Glacier Point Road viewpointSe…
Connections of Yosemite National Park
- Individual People
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Marianne North
Mariposa Grove and Bridal Veil. Painted around 1871. The Grove had been "discovered" in 1857 and the whole area "granted" to California as a "state park" in 1864See www.kew.org
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Works by David Hockney
"Yosemite suite". Series of 29 "Artworks" produced on an iPad in 2010/11 using the "Brushes" AppSee www.hockney.com
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John D Rockefeller Jr
"When commercial loggers threatened to destroy large stands of sugar pines adjacent to Yosemite, he provided more than $1 million to save 15,000 acres of forest" - this "Rockefeller Purchase" was then returned to the NP. Also "a grant of $70,500 to build and equip a museum in Yosemite to serve as a model for this type of facility. The building was completed and presented to the NPS by the American Association of Museums in 1925 and was opened to the public in 1926." (It was superseded by a new Visitor Centre in 1966) -
John Muir
1868: Muir's first trip to Yosemite Valley -
Elias Burton Holmes
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- Geography
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Glaciers
Lyell and Maclure glaciersSee www.nps.gov
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- Trivia
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Depicted in emoji
The National Park emoji was modelled after Yosemite and its Half Dome.See emojipedia.org
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One million visitors or more
In 2023, Yosemite National Park welcomed a total of 3.9 million visitors // 4.3 million (2017) -
In Video Games
Civilization VI -
Fatal Accidents or 'disasters'
18 deaths in 2011 "an unfortunate increase from recent years that has included a few terrifying deaths this summer, including three members of a church group who were swept over a waterfall and a pair of deaths from falling at Half Dome, the park's signature peak." (New York Times 9/6/2011) Plus: 1938 Yosemite TWA crash with 9 fatalitiesSee en.wikipedia.org
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On Coins
America the Beautiful Quarters, 2010See en.wikipedia.org
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Google Doodles
October 1, 2013: 123rd anniversary of Yosemite National ParkSee www.google.com
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- Ecology
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Big Waterfalls
Yosemite Falls (highest in North America) -
Granite rock formations
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Salamanders
Mount Lyell Salamander (Hydromantes platycephalus) - nomination file -
Notable Trees
Sequoia Groves, Mariposa Grove : Grizzly Giant, Wawona Tree -
Bears
American Black Bear -
Reintroduced Species
Bighorn sheep: Bighorn were first reintroduced to Yosemite National Park in 1986. These small herds still persist, and can sometimes be seen summering along the Sierra crest, on such peaks as Mount Dana and Mount Gibbs. However, the areas inhabited today represent only a fraction of the bighorn sheep's former range, and until a more robust population is established, one of Yosemite's greatest wilderness icons will remain at risk. Between March 26 and March 29, 2015, nine ewes (females) and three rams (males) were moved from the Inyo National Forest and Sequoia National Park to the Cathedral Range in Yosemite National Park. In addition, seven ewes were moved to the Laurel Creek area of Sequoia National Park; the CDFW will attempt to move an additional three rams to that area on March 30.See www.nps.gov
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Virgin Forests
See en.wikipedia.org
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Eagles
bald eagles and golden eagles -
Preserved by notable Conservationists
John Muir (1838-1914) “Scottish-born American naturalist, author, environmental philosopher, botanist, zoologist, glaciologist, and early advocate for the preservation of wilderness in the US”. "Muir threw himself into the preservationist role…..He envisioned the Yosemite area and the Sierra as pristine lands. He thought the greatest threat to the Yosemite area and the Sierra was domesticated livestock—especially domestic sheep…..In June 1889…….Robert Underwood Johnson, camped with Muir in Tuolumne Meadows and saw firsthand the damage a large flock of sheep had done to the grassland. Johnson agreed to publish any article Muir wrote on the subject of excluding livestock from the Sierra high country. He also agreed to use his influence to introduce a bill to Congress to make the Yosemite area into a national park, modeled after Yellowstone National Park.” (Wiki)See en.wikipedia.org
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Oldest National Parks
Yosemite National Park: 1890
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- Architecture
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Parkitecture
LeConte Memorial Lodge http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LeConte_Memorial_Lodge and Ahwahnee hotel http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahwahnee_Hotel
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- World Heritage Process
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Perfect Inscriptions
1984
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- Human Activity
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Indigenous groups expelled
Ahwahneechee. “in 1851, California soldiers "discovered" the valley while pursuing the Ahwahneechee.” The soldiers expelled the Ahwahneechee and renamed their valley "Yosemite." But the Ahwahneechee returned, and worked humiliating jobs entertaining tourists as "Indian performers" to remain in their homeland. The national park finally evicted the last of them and burned down their remaining homes in a fire-fighting drill in 1969.” (USNP-IP)
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- Constructions
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Notable Hotels
Wawona Hotel & Ahwahnee Hotel (Both listed as National Historic Landmarks) -
Via Ferrata
Half Dome
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- WHS on Other Lists
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Centres of Plant Diversity
NA16 California Floristic Province - "three groves of giant sequoia" -
World Heritage Forest Programme
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IUGS Geological Heritage Sites
Yosemite Valley
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- Timeline
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Holocene
Yosemite as seen today is primarily a "post glacial" creation. "When the last glacier finally melted approximately 10,000 years ago, rock debris dammed the valley and created Lake Yosemite. Tributary creeks plummeted off sheer cliffs and gave birth to the Park's famed waterfalls. Sediment continued to fill the lake through natural processes until it eventually formed the Yosemite Valley floor."
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- Visiting conditions
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WHS Commandments Stars
Scores on all except #8 -
Not for Acrophobes
Cliff at Glacier Point Road viewpointSee www.flickr.com
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- 18
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Location for a classic documentary
Free Solo (2018)See www.imdb.com
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Indiana Jones movie
Temple of Doom
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News
- dailymail.co.uk 12/14/2023
- Yosemite will bring back reservati…
- dailymail.co.uk 07/25/2018
- Yosemite is EVACUATED as wildfire …
- bbc.com 06/04/2018
- Yosemite El Capitan: Two climbers …
Recent Visitors
Visitors of Yosemite National Park
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Community Reviews
Show full reviews
Yosemite is one of a handful of US sites that readily meet OUV requirements. It has stunning scenery and has provided an impetus to the overall American (and indirectly world) conservation movement (reference John Muir) and has provided inspiration for artists (Ansel Adams and more).
It is also the WHS that I know best, having hiked or skied most of its trails over the past 50 years. I am writing this review less as an evaluation than as an introductory guide for other WHS travelers, having appreciated the guidance I’ve found in other reviews for less celebrated sites.
For first time visitors, recognize the great popularity of the park and attendant crowds in many times of the year- all summer, and during the February “firefall” weeks, when, if weather and water conditions cooperate, there is a chance that the ephemeral Horsetail Falls will glow red for a few minutes at sunset. Great when it happens. The park service has used a day visitor reservation system in recent years (both in February and summer) but the crowds can still be a bit much.
Popular day hike trails can also be crowded. The deservedly most popular is the Mist Trail up Vernal Falls, and if you have the energy further up to the top of Nevada Falls. Crowded but great. I recommend returning via the less scenic John Muir trail to save your knees (a required return during Covid). Having done extensive hiking in all of the US (except American …
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This is the only WHS that I have been to multiple times, due to living in California, and it truly is a highlight of not only CA but the USA as a whole. It is a beautiful and unique landscape that rewards multiple visits. I have only been in summer because that is when most trails are open for hiking, but I have heard that it is gorgeous in all seasons. I actually would not recommend a visit in high summer due to crowds and the reservation system that they have put in place. The Valley can become a circus very quickly, especially in the summer season. I would recommend a visit in fall.
I have done the hike up to Yosemite falls, and while it is amazing when you make it to the top, the trail itself is basically an endless staircase that is usually pretty crowded. We actually underestimated the amount of water that we needed as well, which led to an eventual race down to the bottom so we could get extra water from the car. So please don't underestimate this hike in particular, it is brutal! (The falls are very nice from the bottom as well).
You can hike to the top of Half Dome as well, but that requires a special permit that is awarded in a lottery system, as well as an absence of a fear of heights.
There are other areas of the park that are nice and free of …
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In 2017, we took a two week long trip to California, starting in Los Angeles and driving from there to San Francisco. Along the way, we stopped in Yosemite National Park, where we stayed in a motel close to the entrance. We found out when we got there that we needed to get up super early to make sure we had a parking spot in the park. We should have investigated finding a place to stay in the park, but it was too late for that. This park is very impressive with beautiful views and water falls but also a bit of a tourist trap due to long lines for parking and for lunch. We did make a nice walk at the end of the park and again took tons of pictures.
Yosemite is maybe the ultimate original United States National Park of them all, it is here that John Muir convinced Teddy Roosevelt that nature needed to be appreciated and preserved. This might not be the actual truth, but this is what I learned during our visit to this park. This valley is majestic with tons of beautiful steep cliffs, waterfalls, hiking trails, a true natural wonder. The downside is that it might be a bit too touristy, especially the limited access in the summer is annoying. I need to come back and spend a night camping in the park, so I can experience the park when the tourists leave and the stars come out.
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An incredible park - one of the best in the US. However, it is super busy in summer and holiday periods and that definitely takes away from the enjoyment. I would suggest planning a visit out of peak season. Also, if you can, take a bit longer in the park and get away from the obvious spots. The area is big enough for everyone, but for some reason people seem to congregate in the same places!
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Half Dome, El Capitan, Yosemite Falls, Glacier Point -- the Yosemite Valley is packed with spectacular natural sights. The beauty of this area led citizens to petition Congress to designate the valley and nearby Mariposa Grove as a California state park in 1864, setting a precedent for the later formation of the U.S. National Park system. Yosemite became a national park in 1890, and just celebrated its 125th anniversary last month. Although I'd heard a lot about the crowds at Yosemite in the spring, the number of visitors wasn't too daunting when I visited mid-week this past April. The Yosemite Valley is full of great hiking trails, but I stuck to ones easy enough for my friend's one-year-old son to navigate. The trails along the Merced River offered the awesome backdrop of Yosemite Falls and peaks like El Capitan, while the Mirror Lake trail took us below Half Dome. Glacier Point opened early this year, so we were unexpectedly treated to a spectacular view of the valley below. Don't miss the Tunnel View overlook on the way back down to the valley for an iconic Yosemite panorama. This is one of my favorite national parks in the U.S.
Logistics: Yosemite is most easily reached by car, though you have the option to use the free Yosemite Valley shuttle service inside the park.
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Firstly, two days (minimum) in the park is highly recommended. Anyone who complains the park is too full of tourists likely only visited the park for one day (on a weekend) and spent most of their time in Yosemite Valley during the afternoon, which does get fairly busy. Once you get to the northern section of the park the amount of vehicles slowly dwindles and you are once again in wilderness.
My wife and I had whole lakes, meadows, and forests to ourselves (especially if you get going early). We layed out a light picnic alongside Tenaya lake which reflected the majestic mountains. Its difficult to describe how amazing Yosemite really is. Treat yourself and enjoy the whole park in more than one day. Between 2009 - 2023 I've made 5 trips to the park, including camping inside the park (make reservations early).
Highlights:
- Glacier Point Road - Sentinel Dome Hike (1hr) & Taft Point Hike (1hr)
- Sequoia Groves - Mariposa & Tuolumne (note that the most impressive Sequoia's are found in the Giant Forest Grove in Sequoia National Park)
- Tioga Road - Tuolumne Meadows, Lukens Lake, Tenaya Lake
- Hetch Hetchy - Hike to Tueeulala and Wapama Falls (2-3 hrs)
- Historic Yosemite Parkitecture (5 National Historic Landmarks) - Le Conte Memorial Lodge, Ranger's Club, The Ahwahnee, Wawona Hotel, and Parsons Memorial Lodge
Yosemite Valley: Late Spring/Early Summer is peak season (plan accordingly), the waterfalls in Yosemite Valley and Hetch Hetchy …
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Yosemite is really beautiful and is a worthwhile destination. My favorite was the Half Dome. I took many photos of it as the sun was setting. I have yet to see the sun set like that again. The colors in the sky were amazing - pink, orange, blood red, and purple.
I also saw a bear and a wolf, which was very exciting! I had a hard time leaving Yosemite and would love to visit again, but there are so many other sites to see!
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I really enjoyed my visit to Yosemite, it is defiantly not a wilderness anymore but it is worth going out of your way for, but be warned it is very busy.
The view of the Yosemite Valley from Glacier Point (pictured) is the centre of the park, and is a pretty inspiring sight. The sheer face of Half Dome was being scaled by a group of intrepid climbers whilst we were there and it provided a great sense of scale; how small they were compared to the rock face.
The part of the park I most enjoyed was the groves of giant sequoias, they were absolutely massive, I remember being really impressed by the up-turned roots of one of the trees, and being frustrated that I couldn't fit them all into one photo.
We stayed at a nice place called outside the park called Jamestown, in a hotel that had the train from Back to the Future III in it, I spent most of my time watching humming birds feeding next to the swimming pool and also remember visiting the Gold Rush town of Columbia.
I really enjoyed California, it is a very easy place to visit if you have your own transport and has some great places to visit and Yosemite was a highlight (though I also have to give an honourable mention Monterey especially the Crown and Anchor Pub!). The ease of travel however means that it is very busy, the main routes especially, I think if you …
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Flocks of tourists aside, the Yosemite Valley is truly one of the most stunning landscapes this planet has to offer. The sheer face of El Capitan on one side and the curved top of Half Dome on the other makes this spot one of my favorite in California and the entire US.
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Joanne and I were so taken by the park that it seemed like heavin on earth to us and we almost cried at the thought of so much beauty in one location. Truly this was God's masterpiece of creation. We both envied the Native Americans who found it and lived there.
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I have visited Yosemite in both summer and winter. In winter it is magical, with the trees covered in icicles and the waterfall a frozen beard hanging way up there.
There are next to no visitors around in winter, but the shuttle buses still operate along the valley .
And the bus runs to Yosemite from Merced station even in winter, when it need chains on its wheels to get through.
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This truely is a beutiful place, especially if you can get away from the main tourist routes. but even if you can't due to limited time it is stunning, the views over Glacier Peak and the giant Redwoods are truely awe-ispiring. I wish i could go back and spend more time there.
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