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  • The Bear River plunges about 20 feet over rough granite in one of the largest tiers of Screw Auger Falls in western Maine. Fall color is just beginning to show. This waterfall is located in Grafton Notch. Maine has another Screw Auger Falls located in Gulf Hagas Brook. .
    Maine_ScrewAugerFalls_0988.jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color line frame Liberty Bell Mountain (left) and the Early Winters Spires in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees.
    NorthCascades_EarlyWintersLibertyBel...jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color frame Blue Lake and several peaks near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees. Of the mountains in the cluster at left, Liberty Bell Mountain is the leftmost peak; the Early Winters Spires are the tight cluster of three peaks at the center of the mountains shown.
    NorthCascades_BlueLake_GoldenLarches...jpg
  • Blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) cross the Mara River to reach the grasslands of the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya near the border with Tanzania as the rainy season begins in September. Wildebeest, also known as gnu and wild cattle, can travel long distances to reach productive grasslands. This population alternates between the southern Serengeti in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara in Kenya.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Wildebeast-Crossin...jpg
  • Blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) emerge from the Mara River after crossing it to reach the grasslands of the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya as the rainy season begins in September. Wildebeest, also known as gnu and wild cattle, can travel long distances to reach productive grasslands. This population alternates between the southern Serengeti in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara in Kenya.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Wildebeast-Crossin...jpg
  • Martha, the last known living passenger pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius), is displayed in an exhibit of extinct birds in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Martha died on September 1, 1914.
    Passenger-Pigeon_Martha_Smithsonian_...jpg
  • The full moon in a type of lunar eclipse known as a Super Blood Moon rises over Mount Rainier in Washington state. The total lunar eclipse of September 27, 2015 occurred when the moon was at perigee — its closest approach to Earth — making the moon appear more than 10 percent larger. While lunar eclipses are relatively common, it is rare for an eclipse to happen when the moon is at perigee. Such eclipses only happen about once every 20 years. Mount Rainier, an active volcano, has an elevation of 14,411 feet (4,392 meters), making it the tallest mountain in the Cascade Range and the highest point in Washington state.
    Rainier_Full-Moon_Eclipse_7845.jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color frame Whistler Mountain (left) and Cutthroat Peak in the North Cascades of Washington state. The half moon begins to set behind Cutthroat Pass. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees.
    NorthCascades_CutthroatPass_GoldenLa...jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color line Blue Lake and several peaks near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees. Of the mountains in the cluster at left, Liberty Bell Mountain is the leftmost peak; the Early Winters Spires are the tight cluster of three peaks at the center of the mountains shown.
    NorthCascades_BlueLake_GoldenLarches...jpg
  • A tall column of smoke rises behind Mount Jupiter from the Big Hump fire in the Olympic National Forest, Washington. The fire, which started August 31, 2011, had grown to 1,150 acres at the time this image was taken September 10th.
    Olympics_BigHumpFire_4570.jpg
  • Blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) cross the Mara River to reach the grasslands of the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya near the border with Tanzania as the rainy season begins in September. Wildebeest, also known as gnu and wild cattle, can travel long distances to reach productive grasslands. This population alternates between the southern Serengeti in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara in Kenya.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Wildebeast-Crossin...jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color surround Blue Lake near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees. Several peaks are visible above the lake. From left to right, the peaks are Liberty Bell and the Early Winters Spires.
    North-Cascades_Blue-Lake_Larches_Gol...jpg
  • A Golden Larch tree (Pseudolarix amabilis) bends over Blue Lake near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees.
    NorthCascades_BlueLake_BentLarch_035...jpg
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