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Tower Falls - Falls 132 feet into Tower Creek and the Yellowstone River. It was named Tower Fall for the "towers" of stone construction seen at the top of the waterfall.
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Kepler Cascades - Kepler Cascades plunges 150 feet into the Firehole River. This waterfall is located between the walls of the valley.
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Lower Falls - The granddaddy of Yellowstone National Park's waterfalls is the Yellowstone River Falls. Composed of two levels: upper and lower.
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Fairy Falls - Dropping from a height of nearly 200 feet, Fairy Falls is one of the tallest waterfalls in the park.
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Gibbon Falls - Gibbon Falls is an 84-foot-high waterfall that plunges into the Gibbon River and toward Yellowstone's iconic caldera rim.
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Moose Falls - This falls is a geothermal spring that drops 30 feet along Crawfish Creek.
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Undine Falls - Undine Falls mesmerizes the visitors with its powerful gush of water falling from a height of 60 feet.
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Firehole Falls - Firehole Falls was formed more than 120,000 years ago from a rhyolite lava pool in the Yellowstone supervolcano caldera.
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Silver Cord Cascades - Plunging 1200 feet into the Yellowstone River, Silver Cord Cascades is located in the backcountry of Yellowstone.
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Crystal Falls - Plunging from a height of 129 feet, Crystal Falls flows over three different rocky strata from Cascade Creek.
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