Wyoming, USA · UTC-7
This live camera captures a view within Yellowstone National Park, America's oldest and most geothermally active national park. Steam plumes rise from hot springs and fumaroles across the landscape, while the surrounding terrain shifts between snow-dusted meadows and dense lodgepole pine forests depending on the season.
The thermal features create an otherworldly atmosphere, with mineral-stained runoff channels painting the ground in vivid bands of orange, yellow, and turquoise. Bison herds often wander through the frame, seemingly unbothered by the steaming vents, and in winter their shaggy coats collect frost as they graze near warm ground.
Yellowstone's weather is dynamic and unpredictable. Summer brings wildflower meadows and afternoon thunderstorms, while winter transforms the park into a silent, frozen wilderness where thermal features become even more dramatic against the snow.
Yellowstone was established in 1872 as the world's first national park and spans 2.2 million acres across Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. The park sits atop a supervolcano with a magma chamber estimated to hold enough material to fill the Grand Canyon 11 times. Old Faithful erupts approximately every 90 minutes, shooting up to 8,400 gallons of boiling water 130 feet into the air. Yellowstone is home to the largest concentration of mammals in the lower 48 states.
Early morning from 6 AM to 9 AM Mountain Time is best for wildlife sightings, especially wolves and bears in the Lamar Valley. Winter viewing from December through February shows the most dramatic steam plumes. The park's wildflower season peaks in July, and elk rut occurs in September.
Yes, the Yellowstone live camera streams 24 hours a day, 7 days a week from Wyoming, USA. The feed may occasionally go offline for maintenance, but it is designed to provide continuous real-time footage.
Watch Yellowstone live from Wyoming, USA. See steaming geysers, hot springs, and untamed wildlife in America's first national park, streaming 24/7.
Wyoming, USA is in the UTC-7 time zone. EarthLive24 displays the current local time on the camera page so you can see what time it is at the camera location.
Early morning from 6 AM to 9 AM Mountain Time is best for wildlife sightings, especially wolves and bears in the Lamar Valley. Winter viewing from December through February shows the most dramatic steam plumes. The park's wildflower season peaks in July, and elk rut occurs in September.
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