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  • Four ring-necked ducks (Aythya collaris) rest together on one of the Promontory Ponds in Magnuson Park, Seattle, Washington.
    Ducks_Ring-Necked_Four_Magnuson-Park...jpg
  • Four bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rest near the top of a snag along the Skagit River in the North Cascades of Washington state. Hundreds of bald eagles visit the area every winter to feast on the carcasses of spawning salmon.
    BaldEagles_SkagitRiver_SnagInFog_948...jpg
  • Four plains zebras (Equus quagga) drink water from the Ol Keju Rongai River in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya.
    Kenya_Maasai-Mara_Zebras_Drinking_77...jpg
  • Four trumpeter swans (Cygnus buccinator) fly in formation over a farmer's field in the Skagit Valley of Washington state. Hundreds of swans and tens of thousands of snow geese spend the winter in the area known as the Skagit Flats.
    TrumpeterSwans_0938.jpg
  • Four Canada geese (Branta canadensis) fly in formation over the Nisqually Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. The Canada goose is the most widespread goose in North America and is found on ponds and marshes throughout the year in Canada and the northern United States.
    CanadaGeese_Nisqually_2003.jpg
  • Four bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) fight over fish over the Hood Canal, located on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington state. Bald eagles congregate in the area near the town of Seabeck early each summer to feast on migrating midshipman fish that get trapped in oyster beds during low tides.
    BaldEagles_FourFighting_HoodCanal_44...jpg
  • Four adult bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rest on the beach along the Squamish River near Brackendale, British Columbia, Canada. Hundreds of bald eagles winter in the Squamish River Valley to feed on spawned salmon.
    BaldEagles_FourOnBeach_Brackendale_4...jpg
  • Four young gulls rest on a bluff overlooking the water of Port Gardner in Everett, Washington.
    Gulls_Four_Bluff_Everett_1518.jpg
  • Four snow geese fly in formation over Skagit County, Washington. More than 30,000 snow geese spend part of the winter near Mount Vernon, feasting in farmers' fields.
    SnowGeeseFormation.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
  • Four yellow-eyed penguins (Megadyptes antipodes), also known as Hoiho, walk across the beach at Jack's Bay, located in the Catlins on 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_8291.jpg
  • What appears to be a four-winged bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) is one eagle attacking another from behind at the edge of Hood Canal near Seabeck, Washington. While bald eagles are highly skilled at catching fish, when they congregate, they tend to steal food from other eagles.
    BaldEagle_FourWings_Seabeck_4886.jpg
  • Grasses, tiny rocks and other debris is trapped in several small holes eroded in a sandstone wall in the Valley of Fire, Nevada.
    vof-sandstone-holes.jpg
  • Four great blue herons (Ardea herodias), rendered in silhouette at sunrise, fish in the Hood Canal near Seabeck, Washington.
    Herons_GreatBlue_FourSilhouette_Hood...jpg
  • A young bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), approximately four weeks old, looks out from its nest in Heritage Park, Kirkland, Washington.
    BaldEagle_Eaglet_FourWeeks_0404.jpg
  • Four common mergansers (Mergus merganser) swim on South Teal Lake in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge near Othello, Washington. The two white birds in the middle are males displaying breeding plumage. The mergansers at the ends are non-breeding adult males.
    Mergansers_Common_Four_ColumbiaNWR_6...jpg
  • An extreme macro view (approximately four times life-size) renders the anther of a wild daffodil (Narcissus pseudonarcissus) as abstract waves of yellow.
    Daffodil-Wild_Yellow_Macro_Abstract_...jpg
  • Magnification at four times life-size reveals the structure of ice crystals that formed on a fallen leaf on a frosty morning.
    Leaf_Ice-Crystals_Macro_Lynnwood_189...jpg
  • A bull Yellowstone Moose (Alces alces shirasi) feeds on willow shrubs as the winter sun rises in the Lamar Valley of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Bull moose typically have antlers, but they lose them in the winter in order to conserve energy. The Yellowstone moose is the smallest of the four subspecies of moose found in North America, although it is the largest member of the deer family that resides in the park.
    Moose_Willow-Shrubs_Winter_Yellowsto...jpg
  • Venus is visible against the setting Sun in this view from Kings Canyon National Park, California. Venus, the second planet from the Sun, is visible as a black dot on the lower right corner of the Sun. The transit was visible from at least four continents and is the last until December 2117.
    Sun_Venus_Transit_KingsCanyon_7356.jpg
  • Shiprock, a prominent peak located northwestern New Mexico, is turned golden at sunrise. The peak rises 1,583 ft (482 m) above the surrounding landscape and has a total elevation of 7,177 ft (2,188 m). The peak is located on Navajo tribal land and is sacred to them. The Navajo name for the peak is Tsé Bit'a'í, which means "rock with wings." Tribal legend says a great bird brought the Navajo people from the North to the present-day Four Corners area.
    NM_Shiprock_Sunrise_1589.jpg
  • A family of four trumpeter swans (Cygnus buccinator) swims in the Firehole River in winter in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. The Firehole River is supplied mainly by runoff from geysers and hot springs, so it does not freeze in the winter, even when temperatures plunge well below freezing.
    Swans-Trumpeter_Firehole-River_Winte...jpg
  • Four sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), showing their red breeding coloration, swim up the Cedar River in Renton, Washington toward their spawning grounds. Sockeye salmon are blue-tinged and silver when they live in the ocean; their bodies turn red and their heads green when they return to freshwater rivers to spawn.
    Salmon_Sockeye_Underwater_Renton_080...jpg
  • The midday sun shines over Sunrise, a high alpine meadow in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington. At 6,400 feet (1,951 meters), the growing season is very short. The meadow is typically snow-covered for all but three or four months per year.
    Rainier_Sunrise_MiddaySun_9964.jpg
  • A macro view — approximately four times magnification — renders the flower of a common hawthorn in abstract forms.
    Hawthorn-Common_Macro_Abstraction_11...jpg
  • Water droplets cling to a wild daffodil (Narcissus pseudonarcissus) after a rain storm. They are shown here in an extreme macro view of approximately four times life-size.
    Daffodil-Wild_Rain-Drops_Macro_0561.jpg
  • An extreme macro view (approximately four times life-size) renders the anther of a wild daffodil (Narcissus pseudonarcissus) as abstract waves of yellow.
    Daffodil-Wild_Yellow_Macro_Abstract_...jpg
  • Magnification at four times life-size reveals the structure of ice crystals that formed on a fallen leaf on a frosty morning.
    Leaf_Ice-Crystals_Macro_Lynnwood_187...jpg
  • A great blue heron (Ardea herodias) hides and rests in the reeds of the Edmonds Marsh in Edmonds, Washington, as four Canada geese swim by.
    Heron_GreatBlue_EdmondsMarsh_Resting...jpg
  • Four Canada geese, rendered in silhouette, watch a fiery fall sunset over the Olympic Mountains of Washington state while swimming on Puget Sound off Alki Point.
    Alki_Geese_Olympics_FierySunset_5314.jpg
  • Four common gulls (Larus canus canus) crowd together on a tiny ledge high above Atlantic Ocean on the Látrabjarg bird cliff in western Iceland. Látrabjarg is Europe's largest bird cliff: 14 km (8.7 miles) long and standing up to 440 meters (1444 feet) above the Atlantic Ocean.
    Gulls_Common_Ledge_Latrabjarg_2790.jpg
  • The Sol Duc river splits into four waterfalls as it dives into a rocky gorge in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    SolDucFalls_7052.jpg
  • Pink clouds fill the sky above Shiprock, a prominent peak in northwestern New Mexico. Shiprock is located on Navajo land and is sacred to the tribal people. They call it the "Rock with Wings," for they believe a bird guided them from the North to settle in the present-day Four Corners area of the United States. Early European settlers thought it looked more like a sailing schooner and named it Shiprock.
    NM_Shiprock_Sunset_1566.jpg
  • Purple camas and other summer wildflowers bloom on the mima mounds, located near Littlerock, Washington. Hundreds of regularly-spaced mounds four to six feet tall cover the preserve. No one is sure how the mounds formed, though one leading scientific theory suggests they may be the result of glacial activity.
    mima_mounds_6392.jpg
  • Four trumpeter swans (Cygnus buccinator) swim on Lake Washington in Kirkland, Washington, on a foggy morning.
    Swans-Trumpeter_Lake-Washington_Fogg...jpg
  • An extreme macro view — approximately four times magnification — renders carnation petals as abstract forms.
    Carnation_Macro_Abstraction_4133.jpg
  • An extreme macro view — four times magnification — renders the flower of a Nootka rose in abstract form.
    Rose-Nootka_Macro_Abstraction_3169.jpg
  • Five bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) - four adults and one juvenile - rest near the top of a snag along the Skagit River in the North Cascades of Washington state. Hundreds of bald eagles visit the area every winter to feast on the carcasses of spawning salmon.
    BaldEagles_SkagitRiver_FiveOnSnag_97...jpg
  • A long exposure captures the motion of four sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), showing their red breeding coloration, swimming fast up the Cedar River in Renton, Washington toward their spawning grounds. Sockeye salmon are blue-tinged and silver when they live in the ocean; their bodies turn red and their heads green when they return to freshwater rivers to spawn.
    Salmon_Sockeye_LongExposure_Renton_4...jpg
  • Heavy moss hangs from four old-growth sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) trees in the Hoh Rain Forest in Olympic National Park, Washington. The Hoh Rain Forest is one of the largest temperate rain forests in the United States. The sitka spruce trees can grow to be 300 feet (100 meters) tall, with a diameter of 16 feet (5 meters). Trees in the Hoh Rain Forest can grow to tremendous size as the area receives an average of 150 inches (4 meters) of rain annually.
    OlympicNP_Hoh_FourMossyTrees_2269.jpg
  • A three-year-old bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rests along the Squamish River in Brackendale, British Columbia, Canada. Bald eagles do not get their identifying white heads until they are four or five years old. The youngest bald eagles have dark heads. A faint eye stripe appears when they are two. That eye stripe is more pronounced in a three-year-old eagle.
    BaldEagle_Age3_Brackendale_4419.jpg
  • Two juvenile bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) sit together on their nest in Puyallup, Washington. While young bald eagles are nearly as big as their parents by the time they are two months old, they do not develop their distinctive white heads until they are four or five years old.
    BaldEagles_JuvenilesOnNest_Puyallup_...jpg
  • Five bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), one adult and four juveniles, sit together on a tree overlooking the Nooksack River in the North Cascades of Washington state. Hundreds of bald eagles winter along the river to feast on spawned out salmon.
    BaldEagles_FiveInTree_Nooksack_5272.jpg
  • A long exposure blurs the water erupting from Strokkur, an active geyser in southern Iceland. Strokkur erupts every four to eight minutes, sending water as high as 40 meters (131 feet). Strokkur is the Icelandic word for churning; just before the geyser erupts, a ball of water full of bubbles repeatedly surges and subsides.
    Iceland_Strokkur_LongExposure_1980.jpg
  • A juvenile bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) that is approximately two years old chases a mature bald eagle over Boundary Bay in British Columbia, Canada. Bald eagles do not receive their distinctive white heads until they are four or five years old.
    BaldEagles_JuvenileChasingAdult_Boun...jpg
  • An adult bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) sits over its nest in Heritage Park, Kirkland, Washington. Bald eagles typically lay from one to three eggs, though occasionally they will lay four. This particular nest produced two healthy juveniles.
    BaldEagle_Nest_6693.jpg
  • The Little Blitzen Gorge is one of four massive gorges located on the west face of Steens Mountain in southeastern Oregon. Steens Mountain is a roughly 30-mile (48-kilometer) long block mountain that rises a mile above the Alvord Desert. Massive internal pressure forced the ridge upward; glaciers carved dramatic gorges on the western face. Steens Mountain is the largest block-fault mountain in the Great Basin of Oregon and Nevada.
    OR_SteensMountain_LittleBlitzenGorge...jpg
  • Shiprock, a prominent peak located northwestern New Mexico, is framed by cirrus clouds at sunrise. The peak rises 1,583 ft (482 m) above the surrounding landscape and has a total elevation of 7,177 ft (2,188 m). The peak is located on Navajo tribal land and is sacred to them. The Navajo name for the peak is Tsé Bit'a'í, which means "rock with wings." Tribal legend says a great bird brought the Navajo people from the North to the present-day Four Corners area.
    NM_Shiprock_CirrusSunrise_1513.jpg
  • Shiprock, a prominent peak located northwestern New Mexico, is framed by cirrus clouds at sunrise. The peak rises 1,583 ft (482 m) above the surrounding landscape and has a total elevation of 7,177 ft (2,188 m). The peak is located on Navajo tribal land and is sacred to them. The Navajo name for the peak is Tsé Bit'a'í, which means "rock with wings." Tribal legend says a great bird brought the Navajo people from the North to the present-day Four Corners area.
    NM_Shiprock_Cirrus_V_1499.jpg
  • Several mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) - four males and one female - fly above the Green River Natural Preserve in Kent, Washington.
    mallards_flying_7214.jpg
  • The Icelandic geyser Strokkur begins to erupt. Strokkur means "churning." Its water level repeatedly swells and contracts before erupting, which it does every four to eight minutes. The geyser, which first erupted in 1789, reaches a height of as much as 100 feet (30 meters).
    Iceland_Strokkur_Bubble_7714.jpg
  • An extreme macro view — approximately four times magnification — renders the edges of rose petals as abstract forms.
    Rose_Macro_Abstraction_8254.jpg
  • An extreme macro view — approximately four times magnification — renders carnation petals as abstract forms.
    Carnation_Macro_Abstraction_4074.jpg
  • An extreme macro view — approximately four times magnification — renders carnation petals as abstract forms.
    Carnation_Macro_Abstraction_4155.jpg
  • Four giant sequoia trees known as the Bachelor and the Three Graces stand in the Mariposa Grove of Yosemite National Park, California. Sequoias can grow very close together because they share root systems.
    Sequoias_BachelorThreeGraces_Yosemit...jpg
  • The crescent moon hovers over Shiprock, a prominent peak in northwestern New Mexico. Early European settlers thought the peak resembled a sailing schooner. The Navajo people, who settled the area first, called it "Rock with Wings." Their legend states a great bird guided them from the North to settle in the present-day Four Corners area of the United States near where this peak is located.
    NM_Shiprock_CrescentMoon_1571.jpg
  • Strokkur, a geyser located in Iceland, blasts hot water up to 100 feet (30 meters) every four to eight minutes. The geyser, located in a geothermal region in Iceland's Golden Circle, first erupted in 1789. Strokkur is an Icelandic word meaning "churn" and the geyer's water level repeatedly surges and contracts just before it erupts.
    Iceland_Strokkur_Erupting_7747.jpg
  • A juvenile bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) hunts for food from its snow-covered perch above the Skagit River in northern Washington state. Bald eagles typically do not develop their trademark white head until they are three or four years old.
    baldeagle-snow-juvenile.jpg
  • An extreme macro view — approximately four times magnification — renders carnation petals as abstract forms.
    Carnation_Macro_Abstraction_4125.jpg
  • An extreme macro view — four times magnification — renders the flower of a Nootka rose in abstract form.
    Rose-Nootka_Macro_Abstraction_3149.jpg
  • Magnification at four times life-size reveals the structure of ice crystals that formed on a fallen leaf on a frosty morning.
    Leaf_Ice-Crystals_Macro_Lynnwood_190...jpg
  • A long exposure captures the motion of four sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), showing their red breeding coloration, swimming fast up the Cedar River in Renton, Washington toward their spawning grounds. Sockeye salmon are blue-tinged and silver when they live in the ocean; their bodies turn red and their heads green when they return to freshwater rivers to spawn.
    Salmon_Sockeye_LongExposure_Renton_4...jpg
  • The Icelandic geyser Strokkur erupts as the sun rises in an area known as the Golden Circle in Iceland. Strokkur, which means "churn" in Icelandic, erupts every four to eight minutes, sending a column of hot water as much as 40 meters (130 feet) into the air. Strokkur is located in the Haukadalur geothermal area, not far from Geysir, which no longer erupts regularly.
    Iceland_Strokkur_Sunrise_3492.jpg
  • A family of Canada geese (Branta canadensis) — two adults and four goslings — feed on a bluff over the water of Smallpox Bay in San Juan County Park on San Juan Island, Washington. Smallpox Bay was named for a smallpox outbreak that killed Indians. Indians who were infected with the disease in Victoria where brought across Haro Straight in 1860 to die near the bay on the west side of San Juan Island.
    Geese-Canada_Family_San-Juan-Island_...jpg
  • Clouds, lit by the full moon, streak by Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming. Thinner parts of the clouds caught the moons light; the streaks are the result of a four-minute exposure.
    DevilsTowerStreaks.jpg
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