Wyoming straddles the Continental Divide, and its abrupt topographic relief includes alternating basins and mountain ranges.
Major mountain ranges include the Beartooth, Gros Ventre, Teton, Wind River, Bighorn, Sierra Madre, and Medicine Bow.
On a statewide basis Wyoming was ranked fourth on lamb and sheep sales for a total amount of 411,952 head.
[3] In Wyoming, the main crops that are grown are: hay, barley, wheat, beans and corn.
[4] The major mountain ranges would consist of the Beartooth, Teton, Bighorn, Medicine Bow, Gros Ventre, Wind River, and Sierra Madre, and holds the lowlands of the Great Plains to the east.
[5] According to Geoffrey O’Gara of High Country News, The Green Mountain Common Allotment was once one of the largest unfenced open ranges in North America.
It is primarily used for grazing by 17 different ranching controls and is considered on the high plains of Wyoming, where the habitat harbors wild horses, cattle, wildlife, shrubbery, and grasslands.
Opposition says the Green Mountain Common Allotment needs to stay unfenced not only for sentiment of the “old west,” but also to prevent such things as tangled pronghorn and sage grouse, as once seen in the tragedy of the Red Rim fence disaster.
In the annual report, they disseminate information about the natural energy and resources held in the state, many in which they mine and refine from the land and environment.
The plan is partly designed to start assessing the necessary steps required to keep up with the natural changes in the climate, environment, and ecosystems.