This is the current conditions weather report for Moran. The report was made 16 minutes ago, at 11:56 UTC. The wind was blowing at a speed of 10 miles per hour / 16.7 kilometers per hour from the westsouthwest (250°). The temperature was 57°F / 14°C, with a dew-point at 57°F / 14°C. The temperature felt like 55°F / 13°C. The atmospheric pressure was 30.09 inHg / 1020 hPa. The relative humidity was 25%. The skies were mostly cloudy.
Grand Teton National Park is a United States National Park located in western Wyoming, south of Yellowstone National Park. It is named after Grand Teton, which at 13,770 feet (4197 m), is the tallest mountain in the Teton Range.
The mountains were named by a French trapper who viewed them from the Idaho side of the range and called them tétons, French slang for "nipples" (presumably referring to the shape of the peaks). It was established as a national park on February 26, 1929. The park covers 484 mi² (1,255 km²) of land and water.
There are nearly 200 miles (320 km) of trails for hikers to enjoy in Grand Teton National Park.
Part of the Rocky Mountains, the north-south-trending Teton Range rises from the floor of Jackson Hole without any foothills along a 40 mile (65 km) long by 7 to 9 miles (11 to 15 km) wide active fault-block mountain front system. In addition to 13,770 foot (4197 m) high Grand Teton, another twelve peaks are over 12,000 ft (3660 m) above sea level. Seven of these peaks between Avalanche and Cascade canyons make up the often-photographed Cathedral Group.
Jackson Hole is a 55 mile (90 km) long by 6 to 13 mile (10 to 20 km) wide graben valley that has an average elevation of 6,800 feet (2070 m) with its lowest point near the south park boundary at 6350 feet (1935 m). The valley sits east of the Teton Range and is vertically displaced downward 30,000 feet (9100 m) from corresponding rock layers in it, making the Teton Fault and its parallel twin on the east side of the valley normal faults with the Jackson Hole block being the hanging wall and the Teton Mountain block being the footwall. Grand Teton National Park contains the major part of both blocks. A great deal of erosion of the range and sediment filling the graben, however, yields a topographic relief of only up to 7700 feet (2350 m).