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  • Several ring-billed and herring gulls fly over Dry Falls in Grant County, Washington, which at one time was believed to be the largest waterfall that ever existed. Geologists believe that during the last ice age, ice dams resulted in giant glacial lakes in eastern Washington, Idaho and Montana. When those dams failed, as they did dozens of times, glacial lakes Columbia and Missoula rapidly drained, creating a cataclysmic flood. During the floods, what is now Dry Falls was a spectacular waterfall, 400 feet high (121 meters), 3.5 miles wide (5.63 kilometers). Water may have raced over its massive cliffs at 65 miles an hour (105 km/hour), a flow that's estimated to be ten times as powerful as all the world's current rivers combined. The cliffs shown here represent a small fraction of the ice age waterfall. Dry Falls Lake is pictured in the foreground; Green Lake is visible in the background.
    WA_DryFalls_Gulls_5825.jpg
  • Dry Falls, located in Grant County, Washington, at one time was believed to be the largest waterfall that ever existed. Geologists believe that during the last ice age, ice dams resulted in giant glacial lakes in eastern Washington, Idaho and Montana. When those dams failed, as they did dozens of times, glacial lakes Columbia and Missoula rapidly drained, creating a cataclysmic flood. During the floods, what is now Dry Falls was a spectacular waterfall, 400 feet high (121 meters), 3.5 miles wide (5.63 kilometers). Water may have raced over its massive cliffs at 65 miles an hour (105 km/hour), a flow that's estimated to be ten times as powerful as all the world's current rivers combined. The cliffs shown here represent a small fraction of the ice age waterfall. Dry Falls Lake is pictured in the foreground; Green Lake is visible in the background.
    WA_DryFalls_DryFallsLake_5898.jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) turns rapidly to dry off as rain falls in the Grant County, Washington, field where it was hunting.
    Owl-Burrowing_Drying-Off_Ephrata_106...jpg
  • An anhinga (Anhinga anhinga) dries its wings near a large pond in the Florida Everglades. The anhinga's feathers do not have protective oils for waterproofing like other birds. That lack of oil allows the anhinga to dive deep for fish, however, it must dry its wings after entering the water in order to fly well..
    Anhinga_DryingWings_3144.jpg
  • A moose (Alces alces) shakes to dry off as it emerges from Fishercap Lake, located in Glacier National Park, Montana. The moose and the flying water droplets are blurred by a long exposure to capture their movement.
    moose-FishercapLake-0377.jpg
  • Four yellow-eyed penguins (Megadyptes antipodes), also known as Hoiho, dry their wings after emerging from the Pacific Ocean at Jack's Bay in the Catlins at the southern tip of the South Island of New Zealand. Yellow-eyed penguins are endangered and are one of the most rare penguins in the world with a total population of only about 4,000. About 90 percent of the yellow-eyed penguin's diet consists of fish. During the breeding season, many of the penguins spend the entire day hunting in the ocean. They enter the Pacific Ocean at dawn and return at dusk, venturing as far as 25 kilometers (16 miles) offshore and diving to depts of up to 120 meters (394 feet).
    NZ_Penguins_YellowEyed_JacksBay_8290.jpg
  • An adult bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rests with its wings somewhat outstretched to dry them after feeding on spawned out chum salmon in the Nooksack River near Deming, Washington.
    Bald-Eagle_Perched_Nooksack_5349.jpg
  • An adult bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rests with its wings somewhat outstretched to dry them after feeding on spawned out chum salmon in the Nooksack River near Deming, Washington.
    Bald-Eagle_Perched_Nooksack_5387.jpg
  • The gnarled, twisted stump of a dead tree submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, is exposed after a prolonged drought caused the lake to lose nearly all of its water.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Stump_8478.jpg
  • Some bark remains intact around the base of a dead tree that had been submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The lake level dropped after a prolonged flood, exposing the stump and the preserved bark that's pulling away from it.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Bark-Exposed-Peelin...jpg
  • Several rocks are trapped in the roots of a dead tree that was submerged in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, for 100 years. The lake level dropped after most of the water was lost in a prolonged drought.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Stump-Rocks-Roots_8...jpg
  • A prolonged drought lowered the water level of Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, exposing a tree stump that had been submerged for 100 years.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Stump_8436.jpg
  • The gnarled, twisted stump of a dead tree submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, is exposed after a prolonged drought caused the lake to lose nearly all of its water.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Stump-Detai...jpg
  • Some bark remains intact around the base of a dead tree that had been submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The lake level dropped after a prolonged flood, exposing the stump and the preserved bark that's pulling away from it.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Bark-Exposed-Peelin...jpg
  • Colorful swirls and streaks stand out from the bleached remains of a tree that had been submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The log reemerged after a prolonged drought caused the lake to lost nearly all of its water.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Bark-Exposed-Log_84...jpg
  • Colorful swirls and streaks stand out from the bleached remains of a tree that had been submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The log reemerged after a prolonged drought caused the lake to lost nearly all of its water.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Bark-Exposed-Log_84...jpg
  • A prolonged drought lowered the water level of Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, exposing tree stumps that had been submerged for 100 years.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Stump_Frame...jpg
  • A prolonged drought lowered the water level of Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, exposing an extremely large tree stump that had been submerged for 100 years.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Stump_8433.jpg
  • A small patch of rough bark contrasts with the rest of the tree's smooth, weathered trunk, submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The stump reemerged after the lake lost most of its water in a prolonged drought.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Bark-Exposed-Stump_...jpg
  • A prolonged drought lowered the water level of Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, exposing tree bark that had been submerged for 100 years.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Bark_8392.jpg
  • Roots from an old tree, submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, reach out of the cracking mud exposed after a prolonged drought.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Tree-Roots_...jpg
  • A prolonged drought lowered the water level of Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington, exposing a tree stump that had been submerged for 100 years.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Stump_8377.jpg
  • Several small rocks lie at the base of a dry waterfall, which was carved by flash floods in the Coyote Gulch area of the Grand Staircase Escalante, Utah.
    CoyoteGulchDryFall.jpg
  • Backlit by the rising sun, patches of bristly fiddleneck (Amsinckia tessellata) at the tops of rolling dunes seem to glow during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil. Bristly fiddleneck is also known as tessellate fiddleneck, checker fiddleneck, and devil's lettuce, and is native to dry regions of western North America.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Fiddleneck_Backlit_...jpg
  • Brittlebush (Encelia farinosa) grows in a dry valley on the eastern side of Lassen Volcanic National Park, California. The wildflower typically blooms from March until May and is common in the Mojave and Colorado deserts as well as dry interior valleys in California.
    Brittlebush_Lassen_5815.jpg
  • A Hawaiian stilt (Himantopus mexicanus knudseni) preens itself in the Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge near Kehei, Maui, Hawaii. The Hawaiian stilt, or ae'o in Hawaiian, is an endangered subspecies of the black-necked stilt and has the longest legs in proportion to its body of any bird in the world. Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge is a coastal salt marsh. During the rainy winter season, the pond swells to more than 400 acres. It shrinks to about half that size in the dry summer, leaving a slaty residue behind as it dries out.
    Stilt_Hawaiian_Preening_KealiaPond_M...jpg
  • A Hawaiian stilt (Himantopus mexicanus knudseni) wades in the water of the Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge near Kehei, Maui, Hawaii. The Hawaiian stilt, or ae'o in Hawaiian, is an endangered subspecies of the black-necked stilt and has the longest legs in proportion to its body of any bird in the world. Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge is a coastal salt marsh. During the rainy winter season, the pond swells to more than 400 acres. It shrinks to about half that size in the dry summer, leaving a slaty residue behind as it dries out.
    Stilt_Hawaiian_KealiaPond_Maui_1786.jpg
  • A Hawaiian stilt (Himantopus mexicanus knudseni) wades in the water of the Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge near Kehei, Maui, Hawaii. The Hawaiian stilt, or ae'o in Hawaiian, is an endangered subspecies of the black-necked stilt and has the longest legs in proportion to its body of any bird in the world. Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge is a coastal salt marsh. During the rainy winter season, the pond swells to more than 400 acres. It shrinks to about half that size in the dry summer, leaving a slaty residue behind as it dries out.
    Stilt_Hawaiian_KealiaPond_Maui_1330.jpg
  • A variety of wildflowers growing on the side of a hill in the Temblor Range begin to catch the first light of day during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument, California. This patch of wildflowers primarily consists of yellow hillside daisies (Monolopia lanceolata), San Joaquin blazingstar (Mentzelia pectinata), and desert candle (Caulanthus inflatus). During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Wildflowers_Cluster...jpg
  • A large kiawe (Prosopis pallida) tree frames of the southwestern coast of the Hawaiian island of Maui near the town of Makena. The first kiawe tree was introduced to Hawaii in 1828 and is now one of the most common trees in the dry lowlands of the Hawaiian islands. The prominent hill visible just to the right of the center of this image if Pu`u Ola`i, a 320-foot (98-meter) cinder cone formed when molten lava erupted from a volcanic vent and fell back to earth forming a nearly perfect cone. Pu`u Ola`i is also known as Earthquake Hill, Red Hill, and Round Mountain.
    Maui_Makena_Kiawe_PuuOlai_6384.jpg
  • California goldfields (Lasthenia californica) grow up against a finger of Soda Lake during a superbloom in Carrizo Plain National Monument, California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Goldfields_Soda-Lak...jpg
  • Great Valley phacelia (Phacelia ciliata) and bristly fiddlenecks (Amsinckia tessellata) fill the basin below the Temblor Range during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument, California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Wildf...jpg
  • Rolling hills in the Temblor Range are covered with a variety of colorful spring wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Super...jpg
  • Rolling hills in the Temblor Range are covered with a variety of colorful spring wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. The Carrizo Plain is the largest single native grassland remaining in California and was designated as the Carrizo Plain National Monument in 2001. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Super...jpg
  • The badlands of the Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona, are turned red by the setting sun. Badlands are a type of dry terrain where clay or soft sedimentary rock have been heavily eroded by rain and wind and where vegetation is scarce.
    AZ_Petrified-Forest_Badlands_Sunset_...jpg
  • A large kiawe (Prosopis pallida) tree frames of the southwestern coast of the Hawaiian island of Maui near the town of Makena. The first kiawe tree was introduced to Hawaii in 1828 and is now one of the most common trees in the dry lowlands of the Hawaiian islands. The prominent hill visible just to the right of the center of this image if Pu`u Ola`i, a 320-foot (98-meter) cinder cone formed when molten lava erupted from a volcanic vent and fell back to earth forming a nearly perfect cone. Pu`u Ola`i is also known as Earthquake Hill, Red Hill, and Round Mountain.
    Maui_Makena_Kiawe_PuuOlai_6412.jpg
  • Rolling hills in the Temblor Range are covered with a variety of colorful spring wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Wildf...jpg
  • Desert candles (Caulanthus inflatus) grow among other wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. The desert candle, also known as squaw cabbage, is native to the Mojave Desert of California and Nevada, and can grow up to 27 inches (70 centimeters) in height. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Desert-Candles_8296.jpg
  • The hillsides in the Temblor Range are covered with yellow hillside daisies (Monolopia lanceolata) and other wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Super...jpg
  • The sun rises over the Temblor Range, illuminating lupine and fiddlenecks that fill the Carrizo Plain in San Luis Obispo County, California, during a so-called superbloom. The area is the largest single native grassland remaining in California and was designated as the Carrizo Plain National Monument in 2001. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Lupine_Sunrise_8946.jpg
  • Rolling hills in the Temblor Range are covered with a variety of colorful spring wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. The Carrizo Plain is the largest single native grassland remaining in California and was designated as the Carrizo Plain National Monument in 2001. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Super...jpg
  • Rolling hills in the Temblor Range are covered with a variety of colorful spring wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. The Carrizo Plain is the largest single native grassland remaining in California and was designated as the Carrizo Plain National Monument in 2001. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Super...jpg
  • A piece of fruit falls out of a side-striped jackal's (Lupulella adusta) mouth as it feeds in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. The jackal is an omnivore, feeding on invertebrates during the wet season, small mammals in the dry months, and on fruit when it is available. They also scavenge from the kills of larger predators.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Jackal_Feeding_838...jpg
  • A side-striped jackal (Lupulella adusta) stands in a field in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. The jackal is an omnivore, feeding on invertebrates during the wet season, small mammals in the dry months, and on fruit when it is available. They also scavenge from the kills of larger predators.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Jackal_7639.jpg
  • A double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) flaps its wings to dry off after fishing in the water of Puget Sound near Edmonds, Washington.
    Cormorant-Double-Crested_Flapping-Wi...jpg
  • A double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) shakes its head dry after fishing in Puget Sound near Edmonds, Washington.
    Cormorant-Double-Crested_Shaking-Hea...jpg
  • An American mink (Neovison vison) tries to dry out in the sunshine after emerging from Wiley Slough in the Skagit Wildlife Area near Mount Vernon, Washington.
    Mink_American_Skagit_2333.jpg
  • Otter Falls races down relatively smooth granite into Lipsy Lake. No otters live here; the falls were presumably named for the fact that otters might enjoy the natural slide. Otter Falls is estimated at 1,600 feet tall, though only the bottom few hundred feet are visible here. The falls, located east of North Bend, Washington in the Mount Baker Snoqualmie National Forest, is typically dry by mid-summer.
    OtterFalls_6436.jpg
  • Three double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) dry themselves on a large rock in Rye Harbor, New Hampshire. The double-crested cormorant is the most widespread cormorant in North America..
    Cormorant_DoubleCrested_RyeHarbor_05...jpg
  • The dramatic Burney Falls plunge 129 feet (39 meters) at McArthur-Burney State Park in northern California. The waterfall is fed by underground springs at and above the falls and flows at an almost constant rate of 100 million US gallons per day (4 m³/s), even during the dry summer months.
    CA_BurneyFalls_3553.jpg
  • The Guadalupe Mountains of western Texas tower over the Salt Basin, a remnant of an ancient lake that existed during the Pleistocene Epoch between 10,000 and 1.8 million years ago. The lake, which at times was up to 37 feet deep, had no outlet. As the water evaporated, salt and gypsum accumulated. The old lake bed is now dry most of the year, collecting only an inch or so of water during exceptionally heavy rains. The Guadalupe Mountains, part of Guadalupe Mountains National Park, are visible on the horizon. The iconic El Capitan (8085 feet/2464 meter) is visible at right. Guadalupe Peak, the highest point in Texas at 8749 feet (2667 meters) is immediately left of it.
    TX_GuadalupeMountains_SaltBasin_1250.jpg
  • Viewed from the summit of a mountain in the Temblor Range, patches of wildflowers in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California take on the abstract appearance of spilled color. The wildflowers in this view are predominantly goldfields, fiddlenecks, and phacelia. Ths image was captured during a so-called superbloom when an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Superbloom_Above_86...jpg
  • Cirrus clouds high over the Templor Range turn red at daybreak, as the Carrizo Plain is filled with blooming fiddlenecks during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument, California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Fiddl...jpg
  • A summit in the Temblor Range are covered with a variety of colorful spring wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Super...jpg
  • Rolling hills in the Temblor Range are covered with a variety of colorful spring wildflowers during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Super...jpg
  • A side-striped jackal (Lupulella adusta) stands in a field in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. The jackal is an omnivore, feeding on invertebrates during the wet season, small mammals in the dry months, and on fruit when it is available. They also scavenge from the kills of larger predators.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Jackal_8045.jpg
  • A side-striped jackal (Lupulella adusta) feeds on fruit in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. The jackal is an omnivore, feeding on invertebrates during the wet season, small mammals in the dry months, and on fruit when it is available.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Jackal_Feeding_781...jpg
  • Slash pine trees (Pinus elliotti) grow in the "river of grass" that makes up the Florida Everglades. Pine trees, which need to stay relatively dry, grow at the highest points of the Everglades – only a foot or two higher than the lowest point.
    Everglades_Pinelands_Sunset_3402.jpg
  • Slash pine trees (Pinus elliotti) grow in the "river of grass" that makes up the Florida Everglades. Pine trees, which need to stay relatively dry, grow at the highest points of the Everglades – only a foot or two higher than the lowest point.
    Everglades_Pinelands_Sunset_3396.jpg
  • A chukar (Alectoris chukar) looks out from a rocky outpost high on Haleakala on the Hawaiian island of Maui. The chukar is a type of partridge that was introduced to the Hawaiian islands and prefers dry, rocky conditions.
    maui-chukar.jpg
  • Burney Falls in northern California emerges from the rocks. The waterfall is fed by underground springs at and above the falls; cracks in the rock allow the water to emerge at various points of the falls. Since it is fed by springs, Burney Falls flows at an almost constant rate of 100 million US gallons per day (4 m³/s), even during the dry summer months.
    CA_BurneyFalls_Close_3582.jpg
  • Mojave sun cups (Camissonia campestris) and lupine fill the basin below the Temblor Range during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument, California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Temblor-Range_Wildf...jpg
  • A variety of wildflowers, including bristly fiddlenecks and red bromes, glow in the backlight of the early morning sun during a superbloom in the Carrizo Plain National Monument in California. During superbloom years, an unusually high number of wildflowers blossom at the same time, usually the result of wet winter and spring weather. The seeds may have been dormant for years in the more typically dry desert soil. The Carrizo Plain is the largest native grassland remaining in the state of California.
    CA_Carrizo-Plain_Wildflowers_Backlig...jpg
  • A side-striped jackal (Lupulella adusta) forages for fruit in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. The jackal is an omnivore, feeding on invertebrates during the wet season, small mammals in the dry months, and on fruit when it is available. They also scavenge from the kills of larger predators.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Jackal_Foraging_75...jpg
  • A side-striped jackal (Lupulella adusta) feeds on fruit in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. The jackal is an omnivore, feeding on invertebrates during the wet season, small mammals in the dry months, and on fruit when it is available. They also scavenge from the kills of larger predators.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Jackal_Feeding_811...jpg
  • Altocumulus clouds, turned red by the setting sun, streak over badlands near the Blue Mesa in Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona. Badlands are a type of dry terrain where clay or soft sedimentary rock have been heavily eroded by rain and wind and where vegetation is scarce.
    AZ_Petrified-Forest_Badlands_Sunset_...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
  • A juvenile bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) dries out its wings while perched at the top of a tree along the Skagit River in the North Cascades of Washington state.
    BaldEagle_Skagit_DryingWings_Juvenil...jpg
  • An American pika rests in the forest along the North Fork of the Sauk River in Washington's Central Cascades. Pikas live at higher altitudes on rocky mountains. They do not hibernate in the winter, so they spend the summer collecting and drying grasses for food and bedding. It is related to the rabbit and is also known as the "whistling hare" due to its high-pitched alarm call.
    Pika_NorthForkSauk_9778.jpg
  • A Double-Crested Cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) rests on a broken branch in North Creek in Bothell, Washington. A cormorant's feathers are not water repellant, so they typically dive into the water only to feed. They spend most of their time on perches, drying their wings.
    Cormorant_DoubleCrested_NorthCreek_8...jpg
  • Mudcracks in a variety of shapes and sizes are visible in the sediment at the base of Harris Wash in Utah. Mudcracks, also known as desiccation cracks, result when the top layer of sediment dries before lower layers. When the water in the top layer evaporates, the thin layer separates from the layers below. The loss of moisture also causes the layer to shrink somewhat, causing a strain that results in the cracks.
    UT_Mudcracks_HarrisWash_4278.jpg
  • Mudcracks in a variety of shapes and sizes are visible in the sediment at the base of Harris Wash in Utah. Mudcracks, also known as desiccation cracks, result when the top layer of sediment dries before lower layers. When the water in the top layer evaporates, the thin layer separates from the layers below. The loss of moisture also causes the layer to shrink somewhat, causing a strain that results in the cracks.
    UT_Mudcracks_HarrisWash_4282.jpg
  • Mudcracks in a variety of shapes and sizes are visible in the sediment at the base of Harris Wash in Utah. Mudcracks, also known as desiccation cracks, result when the top layer of sediment dries before lower layers. When the water in the top layer evaporates, the thin layer separates from the layers below. The loss of moisture also causes the layer to shrink somewhat, causing a strain that results in the cracks.
    UT_Mudcracks_HarrisWash_4264.jpg
  • Mudcracks in a variety of shapes and sizes are visible in the sediment at the base of Harris Wash in Utah. Mudcracks, also known as desiccation cracks, result when the top layer of sediment dries before lower layers. When the water in the top layer evaporates, the thin layer separates from the layers below. The loss of moisture also causes the layer to shrink somewhat, causing a strain that results in the cracks.
    UT_Mudcracks_HarrisWash_4276.jpg
  • A red fox (Vulpes vulpes) walks along a dried creek bed near Swiftcurrent Creek in Glacier National Park, Montana.
    RedFox_Glacier.jpg
  • A spotted shag, also known as Parekareka (Phalacrocorax punctatus), dries its wings as the last light of day illuminates the Seaward Kaikoura Mountain Range. The range includes Mount Fyffe at 1602 meters (5256 ft) and Manakau at 2609 meters (8560 ft).
    NZ_KaikouraRange_Shag_4614.jpg
  • A honey bee collects pollen from the flower of a Nootka rose (Rosa nutkana) in Snohomish County, Washington. Pollen provides protient and other nutrients needed by bees. They also collect nectar, which provides energy, turning into honey as it dries out.
    Honey-Bee_Nootka-Rose_Lynnwood_7403.jpg
  • A Death Valley pupfish (Cyprinodon salinus salinus) swims in Salt Creek in Death Valley National Park, California. The Death Valley pupfish, which is endangered, is believed to be the only fish species that survived the climate changes that resulted in the present-day Death Valley. Before the last ice age ended, the area was covered in a large lake, called Lake Manly, believed to have supported a large ecosystem of fish. The lake dried after the ice age ended, and the Death Valley pupfish adapted to live in the shallow, hot, saline water now found there.
    DeathValleyPupfish_7366.jpg
  • Mudcracks in a variety of shapes and sizes are visible in the sediment at the base of Harris Wash in Utah. Mudcracks, also known as desiccation cracks, result when the top layer of sediment dries before lower layers. When the water in the top layer evaporates, the thin layer separates from the layers below. The loss of moisture also causes the layer to shrink somewhat, causing a strain that results in the cracks.
    UT_Mudcracks_HarrisWash_4280.jpg
  • The top layer of sediment peels away at the base of Harris Wash near Escalante, Utah. Mudcracks, also known as desiccation cracks, result when the top layer of sediment dries before lower layers. When the water in the top layer evaporates, the thin layer separates from the layers below. The loss of moisture also causes the layer to shrink somewhat, causing a strain that results in the cracks.
    UT_Mudcracks_HarrisWash_Peeling_4267.jpg
  • A close-up of the Painted Hills in John Day National Monument, Oregon reveals their popcorn-like texture. This texture is the result of erosion. The cracks result from the drying of the soil after heavy rain; the deeper channels are caused by the run-off of heavy rain.
    OR_PaintedHills_Texture_3125.jpg
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