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Great Basin National Park
Photo Gallery
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Welcome to the Photo and Multimedia Gallery of Great Basin National Park. This gallery is still a work in progress and we will continue to add more images with time. Feel free to browse through the various catagories and check back for new ones posted. Please contact us if you have any questions.
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Cave Life (19 Photos)
Over 40 caves in Great Basin National Park have been located, and of those about half have had biological inventories conducted. To date, more than 100 taxa have been found. A current study of several caves will help us understand the distribution and ecology of some of these underground dwellers.
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Lehman Caves (22 Photos)
Lehman Caves is remarkably well-decorated with cave formations, or as geologists call them, speleothems: Stalactites, Stalagmites, Helictites, Flowstone, Draperies, the mysterious Shields, and more. By good fortune, these wonders are no longer hidden. The earth has revealed one more secret from its treasury.
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People in Park (8 Photos)
Modern visitors make a considerable commitment just getting to their national park to satisfy their curiosity about an unexplored land. We travel great distances to wonder at myterious caverns, to marvel at the astonishing bristlecone pines, to breathe deeply, and escape the crowded places. By studying and visiting the spectacular Great Basin, we learn about our local and worldwide environments - and we learn about ourselves.
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Cultural Resources (2 Photos)
Humans have inhabited the Great Basin for at least 12,000 years from Paleo-Indians, Hunter-gatherers of the Desert Archaic cultures, Fremont, Shoshone, Paiute, Ute, and Europeans who were explorers and settlers. Many called Great Basin their home.
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Trees (10 Photos)
Geology of the Great Basin creates a rich diversity in its flora and fauna. Biological diversity is due largely to the great differences in elevation from valley floors to mountain summits. Driving up the Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive is like driving north hundreds of miles. You can travel through the various communities of life: Valley Sagebrush Community, Pinyon-Juniper Woodland, Mountain-Mahogany Woodland, and Conifer Forest Community. At treeline, ancient bristlecone pines stubbornly cling to slopes and ridges thriving in this formidable country of wind and cold on dry, rocky soils.
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Plants (6 Photos)
Isolated by natural barriers of mountain ranges and valley basins, plants must cope with uprooting winds, long periods of killing cold, brief blasts of heat, too little atmosphere, and too much sun - as well as the single most important environmental factor, the scarcity of water. And yet, in spite of (or perhaps because of) what the environment does to make life implausible, biological diversity abounds in the Great Basin.
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Sky Views (6 Photos)
Great Basin National Park is one of the few places where the sky remains dark and the air remains clean. Located far from the glare of cities, the park offers an increasingly rare chance to experience the night sky in full glittering depth. Off the path of pollutant-transporting prevailing winds, daytime views at Great Basin National Park are no less than extraordinary. The park has the highest average visibility in the nation - on an average day one can see for more than 100 miles.
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Water: It means everything (5 Photos)
Precious water draining from mountain ranges does not flow into the oceans. Rather, this priceless substance either percolates underground, accumulates in basins to form lakes, or evaporates back into the atmosphere. Water, within this mountain-calloused landscape, creates an incredible diversity of life forms.
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Winter Landscapes (13 Photos)
While the winter months at Great Basin National Park can be cold and snowy, the winter season provides an amazing backdrop to experience the solitude and beauty of this mountain landscape.
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Wildlife (24 Photos)
There is a layer cake of habitats and life zones, each with its characteristic plants and animals and seasonal variations. Elevation is the key factor. Conditions become cooler and wetter the higher you go. The many life zones (4,000 ft - 11,000 ft) reveal an abundance of wildlife.
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 Historic Photo Gallery Great Basin National Park Archive more... | |  Bookstore Western National Parks Association more... | |
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Did You Know?
Nevada is the most mountainous state in the country, with over 300 individual mountain ranges and 42 named summits over 11,000 feet!
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Last Updated: November 02, 2009 at 16:26 EST |