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  • A stream of water flows over river rocks along the Snoqualmie River near Fall City, Washington.
    Snoqualmie-River_Rocks_Fall-City_292...jpg
  • Autumn color lines the base of a large granite rock formation in the City of Rocks National Reserve in Idaho as a heavy rainstorm passes.
    Idaho_CityOfRocks_Autumn-Rainstorm_0...jpg
  • A black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) feeds on grass in the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge near Denver, Colorado. Black-tailed prairie dogs are native to North American grasslands although their populations are well below historical levels. Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1992 on the site of a former U.S. Army chemical weapons manufacturing facility.
    Prairie-Dog_Black-Tailed_Rocky-Mount...jpg
  • A mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) rests in the grass in Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado. Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1992 on the site of a former U.S. Army chemical weapons manufacturing facility.
    Deer-Mule_Grass_Rocky-Mountain-Arsen...jpg
  • A mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) rests in the grass in Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado. Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1992 on the site of a former U.S. Army chemical weapons manufacturing facility.
    Deer-Mule_Grass_Rocky-Mountain-Arsen...jpg
  • Two black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) meet at the entrance to a burrow in the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge near Denver, Colorado. Black-tailed prairie dogs are native to North American grasslands although their populations are well below historical levels. Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1992 on the site of a former U.S. Army chemical weapons manufacturing facility.
    Prairie-Dogs_Black-Tailed_Rocky-Moun...jpg
  • A mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) rests in the grass in Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado. Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1992 on the site of a former U.S. Army chemical weapons manufacturing facility.
    Deer-Mule_Grass_Rocky-Mountain-Arsen...jpg
  • A large granite arch frames a pinyon pine as well as several prominent City of Rocks features, including Elephant Rock (at left) and the Bread Loaves (at right). This arch is part of Window Rock in the City of Rocks National Reserve in southern Idaho.
    Idaho_CityOfRocks_Arch_Sunrise_0993.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 setting sun colors the sky above Haystack Rock, a prominent sea stack located off the coast of Cape Kiwanda near Pacific City, Oregon.
    HaystackRockKiwandaSunset.jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves created an arch in the sandstone cliffs of Cape Kiwanda, near Pacific City, Oregon. The crashing waves are blurred by a 15-second exposure.
    CapeKiwandaArch.jpg
  • The setting sun shines through the arch of Haystack Rock, located off Cape Kiwanda on the Oregon Coast near Pacific City, Oregon.
    HaystackKiwandaSunburst.jpg
  • A Desert Tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) makes a rare appearance above ground to munch on wildflowers. Desert tortoises spend roughly nine months a year in burrows 10 feet underground, living off stored moisture from the flowers they consume. This tortoise, approximately 20 years old, is from a preserve in the Mojave Desert near California City, California.
    DesertTortoiseFeeding.jpg
  • A red fox (Vulpes vulpes) walks through snow to hunt in the Custer Gallatin National Forest near Cooke City, Montana.
    Fox-Red_Hunting_Winter_Gallatin-NF_7...jpg
  • A red fox (Vulpes vulpes) pauses to lick its lips as it climbs a snow-covered hillside in the Custer Gallatin National Forest near Cooke City, Montana.
    Fox-Red_Hunting_Winter_Gallatin-NF_7...jpg
  • A red fox (Vulpes vulpes) crouches low in the snow to hunt birds in the Custer Gallatin National Forest near Cooke City, Montana.
    Fox-Red_Hunting_Winter_Gallatin-NF_7...jpg
  • Admist light snow, a red fox (Vulpes vulpes) scans the landscape in search of prey in the Custer Gallatin National Forest near Cooke City, Montana.
    Fox-Red_Winter_Gallatin-NF_7716.jpg
  • A red fox (Vulpes vulpes) crouches in the snow behind an old tree trunk to hunt birds in the Custer Gallatin National Forest near Cooke City, Montana.
    Fox-Red_Hunting_Winter_Gallatin-NF_7...jpg
  • A Washington state ferry arrives at Colman Dock on the Seattle, Washington waterfront in this aerial view captured from the Seattle Great Wheel.
    Seattle_Waterfront_Ferry_GreatWheel_...jpg
  • Several of Seattle's tallest skyscrapers reflect onto the waters of Elliott Bay in Seattle, Washington. The tallest building on the left is 1201 Third Avenue, a 772-foot-tall, 55-story skyscraper that ranks as Seattle's second-tallest and was formerly known as the Washington Mutual Tower. At right, is Columbia Center, the tallest skyscraper in Seattle and the second-tallest on the West Coast. It stands 943 feet tall and has 76 floors.
    Seattle_Skyline_Waterfront_Argosy_10...jpg
  • A golden sunrise colors the clouds above downtown Seattle, Washington as a ferry crosses Elliott Bay. The Space Needle, built for the 1962 Worlds Fair, is visible at the left edge of the image; the Columbia Center, Seattle's tallest skyscraper with a height of 933 feet (284 meters), is visible at the right.
    Seattle_GoldenSunrise_1589.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
  • SeattleSkylineSunrise.jpg
  • A bright rainbow appears to end at the base of the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington. The 604-foot (184 meter) tower, built for the 1962 World's Fair, was at one time the tallest building west of the Mississippi River.
    Space-Needle_Rainbow_O-R02-02.jpg
  • Several Seattle skyscrapers climb above the fog that settled in over Puget Sound at sunrise. Among the buildings in this image are the Columbia Tower at far right (Seattle's tallest building) and the Washington Mutual Tower, which has the pyramid-shaped roof.
    seattle-skyline-foggy-sunrise.jpg
  • The wind blows blades of dried grass, which carve a light groove into a sand dune in the Juniper Dunes Wilderness near Pasco, Washington. The Juniper Dunes Wilderness is named for the western juniper trees that grow there, the northernmost cluster of such trees. Located in Franklin County, Washington, Juniper Dunes is a protected wilderness area that comprises 7,140 acres (28.9 km²). Some dunes in the area measure more than 130 feet (40 meters) in height and 1,000 feet (305 meters) in width. The dunes formed in what was essentially a flood basin at the end of the last ice age.
    JuniperDunes_GrassBlownByWind_5289.jpg
  • The Juniper Dunes Wilderness, northeast of Pasco, Washington, is home to the largest sand dunes in Washington state. The dunes, some of which are as much as 100 feet high, are located in what was essentially a flood basin at the end of the last ice age.
    JuniperDunesSunburst.jpg
  • A blade of grass grows from and casts its shadow on a rippled sand dune in the Juniper Dunes Wilderness near Pasco, Washington. The Juniper Dunes Wilderness is named for the western juniper trees that grow there, the northernmost cluster of such trees. Located in Franklin County, Washington, Juniper Dunes is a protected wilderness area that comprises 7,140 acres (28.9 km²). Some dunes in the area measure more than 130 feet (40 meters) in height and 1,000 feet (305 meters) in width. The dunes formed in what was essentially a flood basin at the end of the last ice age.
    JuniperDunes_GrassShadow_5980.jpg
  • A blade of grass grows from and casts its shadow on a rippled sand dune in the Juniper Dunes Wilderness near Pasco, Washington. The Juniper Dunes Wilderness is named for the western juniper trees that grow there, the northernmost cluster of such trees. Located in Franklin County, Washington, Juniper Dunes is a protected wilderness area that comprises 7,140 acres (28.9 km²). Some dunes in the area measure more than 130 feet (40 meters) in height and 1,000 feet (305 meters) in width.
    JuniperDunes_GrassShadow_6076.jpg
  • A beetle leaves tracks as it runs across the rippled sand dunes of the Juniper Dunes Wilderness near Pasco, Washington. The Juniper Dunes Wilderness is named for the western juniper trees that grow there, the northernmost cluster of such trees. Located in Franklin County, Washington, Juniper Dunes is a protected wilderness area that comprises 7,140 acres (28.9 km²). Some dunes in the area measure more than 130 feet (40 meters) in height and 1,000 feet (305 meters) in width.
    JuniperDunes_Beetle.jpg
  • Mist from Snoqualmie Falls during a particularly heavy flow drifts and forms a secondary waterfall. The 268 foot (82 meter) waterfall is located between the cities of Fall City and Snoqualmie, Washington.
    SnoqualmieFalls_SecondaryFalls_Spray...jpg
  • American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) have largely replaced leaves on three winter trees near North Creek in Bothell, Washington. American crows spend most of the day in small groups of between 5 and 15 birds. As the sun sets, however, thousands of crows gather in staging areas before traveling to their roost in the city, which is home to more than 10,000 crows.
    Crows_Three-Trees_Sunset_North-Creek...jpg
  • An American crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos) perched at the top of a snag watches over hundreds of others that are perched in the trees along North Creek in Bothell, Washington. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area of the city each night.
    Crows_Perched_Snag_Sunset_North-Cree...jpg
  • Red tulips bloom together in a tight cluster at Roozengaarde, one of the largest tulip gardens in the Skagit Valley of Washington state. It is part of 300 acres of tulip fields near the city of Mount Vernon. A million people attend the annual tulip festival there.
    Tulips_ClusterOfRed_Roozengaarde_754...jpg
  • A small rock rests next to a large crack in the ice on Rattlesnake Lake, located in King County, Washington, near the city of North Bend.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Ice_Crack_Rock_8555.jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, circles against the night sky as the birds look for a place to roost in Bothell, Washington. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_Sky-Full_Flash_Bothell_...jpg
  • Mist from Snoqualmie Falls during a particularly heavy flow drifts and forms a secondary waterfall. The 268 foot (82 meter) waterfall is located between the cities of Fall City and Snoqualmie, Washington.
    SnoqualmieFalls_SecondaryFalls_Spray...jpg
  • Hundreds of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) in a large flock, known as a murder, fly over bare winter trees along the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington, on a dark, cloudy day. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_Stormy_Bothell_3395.jpg
  • A flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, fly across the twilight sky on their way to roosting grounds in Bothell, Washington. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area of the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_In-Flight_North-Creek_2...jpg
  • Red, white and light violet tulips bloom together in a tight cluster at Roozengaarde, one of the largest tulip gardens in the Skagit Valley of Washington state. It is part of 300 acres of tulip fields near the city of Mount Vernon. A million people attend the annual tulip festival there.
    Tulips_RedWhiteViolet_Roozengaarde_7...jpg
  • The trunks of second-growth trees appear to fan out from this vantage point in Ravenna Park, Seattle, Washington. Ravenna Park is one of the Seattle's oldest, becoming a city park in 1911 after nearly 25 years of operation as a private park.
    WA_Ravenna-Park_Forest_2064.jpg
  • An American crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos) rests on a street light in Bothell, Washington, as the sun begins to set. During the fall and winter months as many as 15,000 crows roost each night in the city.
    Crow_Street-Light_Bothell_5221.jpg
  • American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) seem to replace the leaves on the otherwise bare winter trees along the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington. More than 10,000 crows roost in a small area of city each night in the winter months.
    Crows_Replace-Leaves_Bothell_9319.jpg
  • An American crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos) flies to join hundreds of other crows that are roosting in trees along North Creek in Bothell, Washington. An estimated 10,000 crows roost each night in a small area of the city.
    Crows_One-Flying_One-Tree_North-Cree...jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, circles against the night sky as the birds look for a place to roost in Bothell, Washington. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_Sky-Full_Flash_Bothell_...jpg
  • Thousands of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) in a large flock known as a murder fly over Bothell, Washington, at dusk. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_Sky-Full_Bothell_4061.jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, flies past bare winter trees along the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington, on a dark, cloudy day. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_Stormy_Bothell_3352.jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, flies past bare winter trees along North Creek in Bothell, Washington, at dusk on their way to their night roosting grounds. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_In-Flight_North-Creek_1...jpg
  • A flock of shorebirds, mainly Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri), feed in the mudflats of the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington as other shorebirds fly by. Tens of thousands of shorebirds briefly stop in the refuge, located near the city of Hoquiam, each spring on their way to breeding groudns in the far North.
    Shorebirds_Sandpipers_FeedingReflect...jpg
  • A variety of tulips, red, pink and orange, bloom together in a tight cluster at Roozengaarde, one of the largest tulip gardens in the Skagit Valley of Washington state. It is part of 300 acres of tulip fields near the city of Mount Vernon. A million people attend the annual tulip festival there.
    Tulips_RedOrangePink_Roozengaarde_75...jpg
  • A band of altocumulus clouds, partially illuminated by city lights, pass over rugged cliffs that are remnants of ancient lava flows in Columbia National Wildlife Refuge near Othello, Washington.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Night-Clouds_9837.jpg
  • Hundreds of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) in a large flock, known as a murder, fly over bare winter trees along the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington, on a dark, cloudy day. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_Forest_Moon_Bothell_333...jpg
  • American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) circle over trees where hundreds of others have already landed along North Creek in Bothell, Washington. At least 10,000 crows roost each night in a small area of the city. This is a staging area where crows gather at sunset before moving as a large flock, or murder, to their roost.
    Crows_Circling-Roost_North-Creek_450...jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, circles against the night sky as the birds look for a place to roost in Bothell, Washington. An estimated 10,000 crows roost in a small area in the city each night.
    Crows_Murder_Sky-Full_Flash_Bothell_...jpg
  • Several tufa columns are turned golden by the rising sun at Mono Lake, California. Tufa forms only underwater. When calcium-rich springs flow up through the lake bottom, the calcium bonds to the carbonates in the lake water, forming calcium carbonate, a type of limestone. The solid material builds on itself, gradually forming a tufa tower. The tufa towers form only underwater; they were exposed when the lake was drained to provide drinking water for cities. After environmental groups took legal action, less water is being diverted for cities and the lake is slowly refilling.
    CA_MonoLake_Tufas_Golden_9336.jpg
  • A sign on the Icelandic island of Grímsey marks the location of the Arctic Circle, as well as the distances to major world cities. Grímsey is the northernmost point in Iceland and approximately half the island lies within the Arctic Circle.
    Iceland_Grimsey_ArcticCircleMarker_7...jpg
  • An Eastern Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) feeds on seeds from a maple tree in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. The Eastern Gray Squirrel is native to the United States east of the Mississippi River, but was introduced to several cities in Washington, Oregon, California and British Columbia. It does not hibernate, but does store seeds and nuts in tree cavities and the ground for the winter.
    Arboretum_Squirrel_Autumn_5264.jpg
  • An Eastern Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) feeds on seeds from a maple tree in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. The Eastern Gray Squirrel is native to the United States east of the Mississippi River, but was introduced to several cities in Washington, Oregon, California and British Columbia. It does not hibernate, but does store seeds and nuts in tree cavities and the ground for the winter.
    Arboretum_Squirrel_Autumn_2699.jpg
  • An Eastern Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) feeds on seeds from a maple tree in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. The Eastern Gray Squirrel is native to the United States east of the Mississippi River, but was introduced to several cities in Washington, Oregon, California and British Columbia. It does not hibernate, but does store seeds and nuts in tree cavities and the ground for the winter.
    Arboretum_Squirrel_Autumn_2482.jpg
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