Cliff Martinka, Glacier Park’s first full-time research scientist passed away March 18 . . .
In August 1967, two weeks after starting his job as Glacier National Park’s first research scientist, Cliff Martinka received an unlikely assignment – kill the bears.
Two young women, at campsites miles apart from one another, situated on opposite sides of 9,000-foot Heavens Peak, had been mauled and killed by grizzly bears. They were the first bear-related fatalities since the park’s inception in 1910, and the tragedy was indelibly etched into history as the “Night of the Grizzlies.”
Scant research had occurred at that point, and rangers could provide little information or insight into what had prompted the bears’ aggressive behavior.