Angeles National Forest Map provides both unmatched detail and valuable information for outdoor enthusiasts enjoying this diverse recreational area just north of Los Angeles.
Tonto National Forest Map provides an unparalleled tool for exploring this remarkable region.
The following content on Saguaro National Park is licenced from National Geographic’s Guide to
National Parks of the United States (9th Edition).
THE SAGUARO CACTUS long ago went from being a mere plant to an iconic symbol depicted all over, from comic strips to magazine advertising. Namesake of Saguaro National Park, its grand, distinctive arm-raised form sends a loud-and-clear message: This is the American West.
Prescott National Forest Map provides an unparalleled tool for exploring this remarkable region.
Coconino National Forest Map provides an unparalleled tool for exploring this remarkable region.
The following content on Wrangell—St. Elias National Park is licenced from National Geographic’s Guide to
National Parks of the United States (9th Edition).
BY FAR THE LARGEST NATIONAL PARK—nearly six times the size of Yellowstone—Wrangell–St. Elias National Park and Preserve could be the closest thing we’ll ever have to Shangri-La. It’s a landscape protected by mountains, where glaciers flow through streaks of earth, and where nature’s work—the click of a mountain goat’s hoof, the sniff of a bear checking the wind—goes on with almost no one to hear or see it.
The following content on Kobuk Valley National Park is licenced from National Geographic’s Guide to
National Parks of the United States (9th Edition).
THE LAND OF THE DENA’INA ATHABASCAN PEOPLE for 14,000 years continues to be imbued with their culture, where nature has a voice and everything has a spirit that should be treated with respect. Lake Clark National Park and Preserve offers visitors a diversity of experiences and landscapes that cause even state residents to swoon. Be prepared to revel in the reflections of volcanoes and remain ever ready for bear-viewing opportunities, all the while dreaming of ways to stay for a while.
The following content on Gates of the Arctic National Park is licenced from National Geographic’s Guide to
National Parks of the United States (9th Edition).
THE NORTHERNMOST NATIONAL PARK in the United States, entirely north of the Arctic Circle, Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve is a wilderness landscape of plains between mountains that rise in jagged majesty. It is a rich land populated by Porcupine caribou, musk oxen, Dall sheep, grizzlies, black bears, moose, wolves, and waterfowl. Gates of the Arctic is a dramatic reminder of an ancient world.
The following content on Katmai National Park is licenced from National Geographic’s Guide to
National Parks of the United States (9th Edition).
REMOTE YET EASILY ACCESSED by floatplane, Katmai National Park hooks visitors from the very start—whether on a day trip to the bear-viewing stations at Brooks Camp, on a float trip down the Alagnak River, or camping in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes. The park’s 4 million acres provide a lifetime’s worth of return trips, each one a chance to explore this wild world on a deeper level.
The following content on Kenai Fjords National Park is licenced from National Geographic’s Guide to
National Parks of the United States (9th Edition).
SET BETWEEN the Kenai Mountains and the Gulf of Alaska, Kenai Fjords National Park, the most accessible of Alaska’s national parks, brings to life what people who have only dreamed of visiting the state might imagine. Here, for both day-trippers and intrepid adventurers to explore, is a vast swath of ice and snow, glaciers, rocky coastline, bands of forest, and, soaring above it all, bald eagles on the hunt for their next meal.
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