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  • The bottom portion of North Fork Falls forms a wide cascade as it flows over reddish rock into Coal Creek in Bellevue, Washington.
    Coal-Creek_North-Fork-Falls_Cascades...jpg
  • The core of downtown Bellevue, Washington is visible in this aerial view. Among the buildings visible, from left to right, are Bellevue Square, Lincoln Square, Bellevue Place, Bravern, Bellevue City Hall and the Meydenbauer Center. Interstate 405 runs in the foreground; Lake Washington is visible in the background.
    Bellevue_DowntownCore_Aerial_5379.jpg
  • The full range of fall colors—red, yellow, gold, violet and even green—are visible in the leaves of these intertwined trees along the Bellevue Botanical Garden in Bellevue, Washington.
    Fall-Color_Bellevue-Botanical_7655.jpg
  • A pair of ferns grow over a carpet of clover on the forest floor in Bellevue, Washington. The darker fern is an American Alpine Lady fern (Athyrium alpestre); the brighter fern is a Western Sword fern (Polystichum munitum).
    Ferns_Bellevue-Botanical-Garden_6710.jpg
  • One day after heavy rain, water races down the face of North Fork Falls and into Coal Creek, Bellevue, Washington.
    Coal-Creek_North-Fork-Falls_Detail_7...jpg
  • Interstate 90 crosses Lake Washington and Mercer Island in this aerial view over Bellevue, Washington. The Seattle skyline and Mount Constitution, part of the Olympic Mountains, is visible in the background.
    MercerIsland_I90_Aerial_5397.jpg
  • A circumzenithal arc appears to stretch across the tops of trees on Cougar Mountain near Bellevue, Washington. Circumzenithal arcs appear as upside-down rainbows and are the brightest and most colorful of all the solar halos. They appear when the sun is relatively low on the horizon, less than 32 degrees above the horizon and ideally 20°, and cirrus clouds are overhead. Circumzenithal arcs are especially bright and vibrant because the ice crystals in the cirrus clouds are perfectly aligned, passing through almost parallel bands of light.
    Circumzenithal_Arc_3523.jpg
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