| Alagnak
Wild River - Alagnak Wild River is located in the
beautiful Aleutian Range. The river provides unparalleled opportunities
to experience the wilderness of the Alaska Peninsula.
Aleutian
World War II National Historic Area - The Aleutian
World War II National Historic Area encompasses the historic footprint
of the U.S. Army base Fort Schwatka. Located on Amaknak Island in the
Aleutian Island Chain of Alaska, the fort was one of four coastal
defense posts built to protect Dutch Harbor (the back door to the United
States) during World War II, the fort is also highest coastal battery
ever constructed in the United States.
Aniakchak
National Monument and Preserve - The Aniakchak
Caldera, is the result of a series of eruptions, the latest in 1911.
Nearly six miles in diamerter and covering some ten square miles, it is
one of the finest examples of dry caldera in the world. Located in the
volcanically active Aleutian Mountains, the crater contains many
outstanding examples of volcanic features, including lava flows, cinder
cones, and explosion pits. Surprise Lake, located within the caldera, is
the source of the Aniakchak River, which cascades through a 1,500-foot
gash in the caldera wall. The site also contains the Aniakchak Wild
River.
Bering
Land Bridge National Preserve - The Bering Land
Bridge National Preserve is one of the most remote national park areas,
located on the Seward Peninsula in northwest Alaska. The Preserve is a
remnant of the land bridge that connected Asia with North America more
than 13,000 years ago. The majority of this land bridge, once thousands
of miles wide, now lies beneath the waters of the Chukchi and Bering
Seas.
Cape
Krusentern National Monument - Cape Krusenstern
National Monument is a treeless coastal plain dotted with sizable
lagoons and backed by gently rolling limestone hills. Cape Krusenstern's
bluffs and its series of 114 beach ridges record the changing shorelines
of the Chukchi Sea over thousands of years.
Denali
National Park and Preserve - It's more than a
mountain. Denali National Park & Preserve features North America's
highest mountain, 20,320-foot tall Mount McKinley. The Alaska Range also
includes countless other spectacular mountains and many large glaciers.
Denali's more than 6 million acres also encompass a complete sub-arctic
eco-system with large mammals such as grizzly bears, wolves, Dall sheep,
and moose.
Gates
of the Artic National Park and Preserve - By
establishing Gates of the Arctic National Park & Preserve (GAAR) in
Alaska's Brooks Range, Congress has reserved a vast and essentially
untouched area of superlative natural beauty and exceptional scientific
value - a maze of glaciated valleys and gaunt, rugged mountains covered
with boreal forest and arctic tundra vegetation, cut by wild rivers, and
inhabited by far-ranging populations of caribou, Dall sheep, wolves, and
bears (barren-ground grizzlies and black bears).
Glacier
Bay National Park and Preserve - The marine
wilderness of Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve provides
opportunities for adventure, a living laboratory for observing the ebb
and flow of glaciers, and a chance to study life as it returns in the
wake of retreating ice. Amidst majestic scenery, Glacier Bay offers us
now, and for all time, a connection to a powerful and wild landscape.
Inupiat
Heritage Center National Historic Park - The Inupiat
Heritage Center in Barrow, Alaska was designated an affiliated area of
New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park in New Bedford,
Massachusetts to ensure that the contributions of Alaska Natives to the
history of whaling is recognized. More than 2000 whaling voyages from
New Bedford sailed into arctic waters during the late nineteenth and
early twentieth century. Many Alaska Natives, particularly Inupiat
Eskimo people, participated in commercial whaling. In addition to
crewing on the ships they hunted for food for the whalers, provided warm
fur clothing, and sheltered many crews that were shipwrecked on the
Alaska coast.
Katmai
National Park and Preserve - Katmai is famous for
volcanoes, brown bears, fish, and rugged wilderness and is also the site
of the Brooks River National Historic Landmark with North America's
highest concentration of prehistoric human dwellings (about 900). |
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Kenai
Fjords National Park - The Kenai Fjords reflect
scenic icebound landscapes in which salt spray mixes with mountain mist.
Located on the southeastern Kenai Peninsula, the national park is a
pristine and rugged land supporting many unaltered natural environments
and ecosystems.
Klondike
Gold Rush National Historic Park - This park
celebrates the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897-98 through 15 restored
buildings within the Skagway Historic District. The park also
administers the Chilkoot Trail and a small portion of the White Pass
Trail. Included in the park is a portion of the Dyea Townsite at the
foot of the Chilkoot Trail.
Kubuk
Valley National Park - Kobuk Valley National Park is
encircled by the Baird and Waring mountain ranges. The park povides
protection for several important geographic features, including the
central portion of the Kobuk River, the 25-sqaure-mile Great Kobuk Sand
Dunes, and the Little Kobuk and Hunt River dunes.
Lake
Clark National Park and Preserve - Lake Clark
National Park and Preserve is a composite of ecosystems representative
of many regions of Alaska. The spectacular scenery stretches from the
shores of Cook Inlet, across the Chigmit Mountains, to the tundra
covered hills of the western interior. The Chigmits, where the Alaska
and Aleutian Ranges meet, are an awesome, jagged array of mountains and
glaciers which include two active volcanoes, Mt. Redoubt and Mt. Iliamna.
Lake Clark, 40 miles long, and many other lakes and rivers within the
park are critical salmon habitat to the Bristol Bay salmon fishery, one
of the largest sockeye salmon fishing grounds in the world. Numerous
lake and river systems in the park and preserve offer excellent fishing
and wildlife viewing.
Noatak
National Reserve - As one of North America's largest
mountain-ringed river basins with an intact ecosystem, the Noatak River
environs features some of the Artic's finest arrays of plants and
animals. The river is classified as a national wild and scenic river,
and offers surperlative wilderness float-trip opportunities - from deep
in the Brooks Range to the tidewater of the Chukchi Sea.
Northwest
Alaska Areas - Northwest Alaska Areas is a management
unit which includes Noatak National Perserve, Cape Krusenstern National
Monument and Kobuk Valley National Park.
Sitak
National Historic Site - Alaska's oldest federally
designated park was established in 1910 to commemorate the 1804 Battle
of Sitka. All that remains of this last major conflit between Europeans
and Alaska Natives is the site of the Tlingit Fort and battlefield,
located within this scenic 107 acre park in a temperate rain forest.
Wrangell
- St Elias National Park and Preserve - The Chugach,
Wrangell, and St. Elias mountain ranges converge here in what is often
referred to as the "mountain kingdom of North America." The
largest unit of the National Park System and a day's drive east of
Anchorage, the park-preserve includes the continent's largest assemblage
of glaciers and the greatest collection of peaks above 16,000 feet.
Mount St. Elias, at 18,008 feet, is the second highest peak in the
United States. Adjacent to Canada's Kluane National Park, the site is
characterized by remote mountains, valleys, wild rivers, and a variety
of wildlife.
Yukon
- Charley Rivers National Preserve - Located along
the Canadian border in central Alaska, the preserve protects 115 miles
of the 1,800-mile Yukon River and the entire Charley River basin.
Numerous rustic cabins and historic sites are reminders of the
importance of the Yukon River during the 1898 gold rush. Paleontological
and archeological sites here add much to our knowledge of the
environment thousands of years ago. Peregrine falcons nest in the high
bluffs overlooking the river, while the rolling hills that make up the
preserve are home to an abundant array of wildlife. The Charley, a
100-mile long wild river, is considered by many to be the most
spectacular river in Alaska.
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