Fallspots

Cross-state icon comparison · 669 mi apart

Tueeulala Falls vs Upper Yellowstone Falls

Two waterfalls in our directory, side by side. Same data we use on the individual pages — height, access, what we know, what we don't.

Tueeulala Falls, a waterfall in California

California

Tueeulala Falls

Tueeulala Falls is a waterfall in Tuolumne County, California. It drops roughly 915 feet. Access details and conditions have not yet been verified in person by Fallspots — the data on this page comes from OpenStreetMap and USGS GNIS.

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Upper Yellowstone Falls, a waterfall in Wyoming

Wyoming

Upper Yellowstone Falls

Upper Yellowstone Falls is a waterfall in Park County, Wyoming. It drops roughly 108 feet. Access details and conditions have not yet been verified in person by Fallspots — the data on this page comes from OpenStreetMap and USGS GNIS.

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SpecTueeulala FallsUpper Yellowstone Falls
StateCaliforniaWyoming
Height915 ft108 ft
Type
WatercourseYellowstone Falls consist of two major waterfalls on the Yellowstone River
ParkYosemite National ParkYellowstone National Park
CountyTuolumnePark
Elevation1322 m2296 m
Nearest cityYosemite Valley (19 mi)Mammoth (20 mi)
Dogs allowedNoNo

About Tueeulala Falls

Tueeulala Falls is located on the north side of Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park. At roughly 880 feet it is the smaller of two large waterfalls that spill into Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, the other being Wapama Falls. It is, however, the larger of the two in terms of greatest free-fall distance, as Wapama is split into two falls. Tueeulala Fall drops free for 600 feet, hits a ledge, then slides steeply down 280 feet further. The hike to the top of the falls is off trail but fairly brush free and straightforward.

About Upper Yellowstone Falls

Yellowstone Falls consist of two major waterfalls on the Yellowstone River, within Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, United States. As the Yellowstone river flows north from Yellowstone Lake, it leaves the Hayden Valley and plunges first over Upper Falls of the Yellowstone River and then one-quarter mile (400 m) downstream over Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River, at which point it then enters the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, which is up to 1,000 feet (300 m) deep.

Where they are

Dashed line shows the straight-line distance (669 mi). Actual drive time depends on the route — neither pin is the parking lot, so use a map app for turn-by-turn.

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