Distinctly Montana Magazine

Distinctly Montana Summer 2017

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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D I S T I N C T LY M O N TA N A • S U M M E R 2 0 1 7 12 ROCKS GRASPING FOR THE SKY e story of the Pryor wild horses does not begin with the horses themselves; it begins with the earth on which they trod. East Pryor Mountain and its brother, Big Pryor Mountain, are distinct from their Beartooth cousins 40 miles to the west. ese sloping mountains were formed by the erosion of uplifted limestone, while the Beartooth Mountains, comprised of granite, were carved by glaciers. According to geologist Gary ompson, writing for the Pryors Coalition, 500 million years ago much of the Pryor area was Running Fr: T HE PRYOR MOUNTAIN WILD HORSE RANGE, located along the Montana-Wyoming border about 40 miles south of Billings and 13 miles north of Lovell, Wyoming, is home to a population of about 162 wild horses. Confined to the 39,000 acres that is the Pryor wild horse range, these horses are wedded to the landscape. Many are clothed with the very colors of the Pryor Mountains themselves. Horses the color of dampened limestone, faded grass, mudstone, and shaded juniper are scattered across the Pryor desert. by JESSIANNE WRIGHT

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