"The pre-industrial concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was 280 parts per million (ppm). As of December 2016, 404.93 ppm," @BadlandsNPS wrote in a now-deleted tweet Tuesday morning. That tweet was in direct opposition to a memo issued to all National Park Service, ordering them to "immediately cease use of government Twitter accounts until further notice." But @BadlandsNPS kept at it for almost an hour before the tweets disappeared into the ether.

For later, after those Badlands National Park tweets get deleted, here's what happened. ht @migold pic.twitter.com/b5vnKjwDnn — Patrick LaForge (@palafo) January 24, 2017

Although the facts have now been archived in screenshots and @BadlandsNPS has returned to posting idyllic nature photos, civil rights lawyer and Law professor Dr. Anthony M. Kreis noted on Twitter that deleting a government agency's tweets is actually a violation of the Freedom of Information Act. So, even though one national park sending off a few defiant tweets seems relatively minor, it could cause some legal headaches for the administration.

Deleting tweets violates the Freedom of Information Act. So, who demanded it be removed, when, and why? https://t.co/3mOcQfxxFx — Dr. Anthony M. Kreis (@AnthonyMKreis) January 24, 2017

According to FiveThirtyEight, the gag orders may only be temporary, at least for some of the federal agencies affected, but they also may be in violation of directives issued by President Obama in 2009 which protect scientists' ability to speak with the people about publicly funded research. While it is currently unclear how this will play out for the nation's scientists, there's no getting around the fact that the planet is still getting hotter every year.