 |
 |
  |
|
|
|
|
Denali National Park and Preserve
Photo Gallery
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
People in the Park (17 Photos)
Photographs of park visitors
|
 |
Pictures from Park Visitors (8 Photos)
Photographs of the park, and park experiences, donated by visitors
|
 |
Park Rangers, and others (33 Photos)
Photographs of people who work in the park
|
 |
Activities and Special Events (2 Photos)
Photographs of activities and special events
|
 |
Animals (8 Photos)
Photographs of park wildlife
|
 |
Plants (1 Photos)
Photographs of park plants
|
Scenic
|
|
|
Canoe on Wonder Lake
|
Cold Water
|
Glacier
|
Glacier 2
|
|
Glacier 3
|
Glen Creek Camp
|
Headquarters in Autumn
|
Lower East Fork Cabin
|
|
Lower East Fork Cabin Ice
|
Morino Grill in Winter
|
Mount Brooks
|
Ruth Glacier
|
|
|
 |
Subsistence (1 Photos)
Photographs of people, practices and techniques involved with living from the land
|
 |
Science and Research (19 Photos)
Photographs of science and research
|
 |
Wildland Fire (10 Photos)
Photographs of wildland fire, and its importance to the local ecology
|
 |
Facilities (21 Photos)
Photographs of park buildings, places and facilities
|
 |
Discovery Hike (8 Photos)
Photographs from a Discovery Hike with Ranger Danica Yates on June 25, 2008
|
 |
Mountaineering Photos (19 Photos)
Images of mountaineering in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska
|
 |
Winter by Jared Withers (11 Photos)
Photographs of winter landscapes donated by Jared Withers
|
 |
Winter Kennels: Toklat Clean Up (13 Photos)
Denali is the only national park in America with a working sled dog kennel. In January 2009, park staff and volunteers took three teams of sled dogs more than 50 miles into the park to continue a debris removal project. All told, they moved 44 loads a total of 147 miles.
|
Explore a list of national parks across Alaska, with direct links to photos and multimedia pages
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Did You Know?
Nearly 500 vegetation plots have been installed in Denali, to monitor climate change. Warmer temperatures allow woody plants to grow at higher elevations, invading the fragile and unique plants already in high alpine tundra - and threatening the animals that depend on those specialized plants.
|
|
|
|
Last Updated: May 28, 2009 at 22:35 EST |