Yellowstone tourists suspended Morning Glory’s brilliant blue color with ‘thousands’ of coins.

Yellowstone National Park’s iconic geothermal pool, Morning Glory, is said to have changed hue due to the amount of rubbish thrown in by visitors.

According to park historians and former personnel, the pool’s once-jet blue water has been contaminated by coins, rubbish, and rocks tossed in throughout the years.

“We found tons, probably thousands of coins,” retired Yellowstone ranger Jeff Henry told Wyoming’s Cowboy State Daily. “The main park road used to go right by Morning Glory, so that would account for some of the metal parts that looked like car parts chucked into the bottom of the pool.”

According to the publication, the pool’s deep regions are now green, while the borders have turned yellow. As objects continued to be tossed into the pool, the color changed due to the temperature of the water.

“Hotter pools tend to be a brilliant blue, and cooler pools can be more colorful since bacteria can grow there,” Mike Poland, scientist-in-charge of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, said. “At Morning Glory, the temperature cooled because people throwing objects in caused the conduit to become partially blocked, and the temperature went down, allowing different types of bacteria to grow.”

The tradition of throwing things into the pool dates back to 1872, when the park first opened, according to Yellowstone National Park historian Alica Murphy. She claimed that tourists have always been known for throwing objects into the pool, hoping for either good luck or to prompt a geothermic event.

“People didn’t understand the plumbing and how geysers worked,” she told Cowboy State Daily. “There were lots of ideas about, ‘If we throw something into this pool, we might be able to make it erupt.’

“I think there was some trial and error and a misunderstanding of the damage they were doing.”

Murphy added: “Wishing wells are a time-honored tradition. Flip a coin into a wishing well and make a wish. There is something about a pool of water that gives humans a weird instinct to throw things into it.”

However, Henry noted that he hasn’t seen “anywhere near as many coins in pools” in recent years as he did at the beginning of his decades-long career.
“The bottoms of the more accessible springs used to be paved with coins, but now it’s pretty rare to see anything thrown into the pools,” he said.

He shared that throughout many of the pools at Yellowstone Park, he’s seen fewer and fewer coins being thrown in there. “I think people are much more respectful than they were in my early days. It’s one way that values and behavior have changed over the years,” he added.

According to the National Park Service, the Morning Glory Pool was “named in the 1880s for its remarkable likeness to its namesake flower.” As it has become a victim of vandalism, much of the debris thrown into it “became embedded in the sides and vent of the spring, which reduced the water circulation and thus the water temperature.”

However, “natural changes may be cooling the water,” with cool temperatures allowing “orange-and yellow-colored bacteria to thrive.” The average temperature of the pool is 159.3 degrees Fahrenheit.

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