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  • A North American river otter (Lontra canadensis) swims in the still water of Ronald Bog on a foggy morning in Shoreline, Washington.
    Otter_Swimming_Foggy_Shoreline_7218.jpg
  • The late evening sun lights up golden flowers and driftwood just before it sets behind the Olympic Mountains in this view from Richmond Beach, Shoreline, Washington.
    Richmond-Beach_Sunset_Driftwood_Wild...jpg
  • The late evening sun lights up golden flowers and driftwood just before it sets behind the Olympic Mountains in this view from Richmond Beach, Shoreline, Washington.
    Richmond-Beach_Sunset_Driftwood_Wild...jpg
  • Several layers of leaves frame the trunk of an old maple tree in Hamlin Park, Shoreline, Washington.
    Tree-Maple_Leaves_Hamlin-Park_2810.jpg
  • Three mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) feed and rest on the water of Ronald Bog in Shoreline, Washington, on a foggy morning.
    Ducks-Mallard_Fog_Ronald-Bog_4427.jpg
  • Thin cirrus clouds fill the sky over the Olympic Mountains as the sun sets over Puget Sound in this view from Richmond Beach, Washington.
    Olympics_Richmond-Beach_Sunset_9725.jpg
  • This aerial view shows the colorful shoreline of Baffin Island as it meets the Northwestern Passages in Nunavut, Canada. Baffin Island, part of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, is the largest island in Canada and the fifth largest in the world, with an area of 507,451 km² (195,928 sq miles).
    Canada_BaffinIsland_Shoreline_Aerial...jpg
  • Runoff from a rainstorm flows past a water-quality warning sign and into a stormwater drain in Shoreline, Washington. The painted sign features a salmon icon and reads, "Dump no waste. Drains to Sound." Sound refers to Puget Sound, a large body of water in Washington state.
    Stormwater-Drain_Shoreline_7150.jpg
  • This aerial view shows the colorful shoreline of Baffin Island as it meets the Northwestern Passages in Nunavut, Canada. Baffin Island, part of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, is the largest island in Canada and the fifth largest in the world, with an area of 507,451 km² (195,928 sq miles).
    Canada_BaffinIsland_Shoreline_Aerial...jpg
  • Atlantic Ocean waves crash into a narrow break in the rugged, granite shoreline of Acadia National Park, Maine. The ocean's waves are blurred by an extended exposure. Thunder Hole earns its name from stormy periods when waves slam into the tiny cove making a thunder-like sound.
    ThunderHoleAcadiaMaine.jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves pound the rocky shoreline along the Wild Pacific Trail near Ucluelet, Vancouver Island.
    Ucluelet_RockyShore_5164.jpg
  • Dozens of magenta rose campion (Silene coronaria) blossoms stand out against their grayish-green stems and leaves in a garden in King County, Washington.
    Campion_Rose_Flowers_Shoreline_5769.jpg
  • A large sea stack is partially reflected in the sand at Ecola State Park, near Cannon Beach, Oregon.
    SeastackReflectionEcola1.jpg
  • A whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus) hunts for food in the rocks along McNeill Bay, located on Vancouver Island, Canada. While it has a long bill, it tends to feed more by picking and less by probing as other birds in its family do.
    Whimbrel_McNeillBay_7417.jpg
  • South Beach, located in San Juan Island National Historical Park, is bathed in a soft golden light as sunset approaches on San Juan Island in Washington state.
    San-Juan-Island_South-Beach_Evening_...jpg
  • A long exposure blurs the action of Puget Sound waves as they crash around the beach rocks at Mukilteo, Washington at sunset.
    MukilteoBeach_Rocks_Waves_LongExposu...jpg
  • A young family walks on the beach near Haystack Rock, Oregon, in thick fog. Haystack Rock, remnants of an ancient lava flow, is one of the world's largest monoliths.
    HaystackFogFamily.jpg
  • Thick patches of seaweed, a type of algae, line South Creek near the point where it empties into Puget Sound in Seahurst Park, Burien, Washington.
    Seahurst-Park_South-Creek_7049.jpg
  • Numerous common eiders (Somateria mollissima) nest on the shore at Þorpar, Iceland, located next to a large fjord in the northwestern part of the country. Common eiders are a large sea duck that nest at the edge of the sea. Nests are lined with feathers plucked from the female eider's breast.
    Iceland_EidersNesting_Þorpar_2983.jpg
  • High cirrus clouds high over a beach near Sayulita, Mexico, are turned red and orange after sunset.
    Sayulita_BeachTwilight_1018.jpg
  • Numerous common eiders (Somateria mollissima) nest on the shore of Bitrufjörður, a large fjord in northwestern Iceland. Common eiders are a large sea duck that nest at the edge of the sea. Nests are lined with feathers plucked from the female eider's breast.
    Iceland_EidersNesting_Bitrufjordur_2...jpg
  • Puget Sound and the rocky beach at Mukilteo catch the last light of day as the sun sets behind Whidbey Island, Washington. A long exposure blurs the movement of the waves on Puget Sound.
    MukilteoBeach_WideView_Twilight_1188.jpg
  • An especially fiery sunset reddens the water of Puget Sound as it crashes up against a large piece of driftwood on the Edmonds, Washington waterfront. A 30-second camera exposure blurs the movement over the water.
    Driftwood_RedSunset_Edmonds_3518.jpg
  • The sun may be going down, but this surfer is headed out to ride the waves near Santa Cruz, California. Another surfer is visible behind his left shoulder.
    SurferSilhouette.jpg
  • Dozens of narrow canyons meet the Pacific Ocean along the Na Pali coast of Kauai, Hawaii.
    NaPaliAerial1.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
  • Face Rock, located on the Oregon coast at Bandon, appears to gaze at the full moon. According to Native American legend, the face belongs to the beautiful Indian princess Ewanua. While several tribes gathered nearby to celebrate, she wandered to the sea inhabited by Seatka, the evil spirit of the ocean. He turned her to stone whlie she stared at the moon.
    FaceRockMoonSunrise.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
  • A fiery sunrise colors the sky red over Venice Beach, Venice, California.
    CA_Venice-Beach_Fiery-Sunrise_7260.jpg
  • The bright, golden glint of the setting sun stretches across Puget Sound to the rocky beach at Mukilteo, Washington.
    MukilteoBeach_Rocks_Glint_1169.jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves shoot 50 feet into the air through a tiny hole in a lava shelf off on the Kauai coast known as the Spouting Horn blowhole. It sounds like a whale breathing, but Hawaiian legend says the sound is actually the "lizard woman" moaning. She would attack anyone who got too close. One day she chased a fisherman into a lava tube. He escaped; she's still stuck.
    SpoutingHorn.jpg
  • The sun begins to set over the Pacific Ocean as waves crash up against the rocks on the beach near Sayulita, Mexico.
    Sayulita_BeachSunset_0612.jpg
  • The sun sets over the Pacific Ocean in this view from a rocky beach near Sayulita, Mexico.
    Sayulita_BeachSunburst_0653.jpg
  • KalalauValley.jpg
  • The full moon overs over the sea stacks at Bandon By The Sea on the southern Oregon Coast. The area's most famous sea stack, Face Rock, is visible on the horizon at the right side of the image. According to Indian legend, Face Rock is a tribe member who was turned to stone by an evil spirit who lives in the Pacific Ocean.
    BandonMoonDawn.jpg
  • Dozens of narrow canyons meet the Pacific Ocean along the Na Pali coast of Kaua`i, Hawai`i.
    NaPali_Coast_8233.jpg
  • Bright molten lava flows into the Pacific Ocean at twilight at Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii. The hot lava vaporizes the crashing waves, which reflect the lava's glow. The lava arrived at the ocean through an underground lava tube connected to the Pu'u O'o vent.
    LavaPacificOcean.jpg
  • Flames surround a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cone in King County, Washington. Douglas fir cones are unique in that they have three-pronged brachts that extend from between the scales. According to Native American legends, those brachts represent mice that used the cone for protection during forest fires; the mice dove headfirst into the cones and the three prongs represent their hing legs and tail.
    Fir_Douglas_Cone_Fire_2129.jpg
  • Flames surround a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cone in King County, Washington. Douglas fir cones are unique in that they have three-pronged brachts that extend from between the scales. According to Native American legends, those brachts represent mice that used the cone for protection during forest fires; the mice dove headfirst into the cones and the three prongs represent their hing legs and tail.
    Fir_Douglas_Cone_Fire_1581.jpg
  • Flames surround a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cone in King County, Washington. Douglas fir cones are unique in that they have three-pronged brachts that extend from between the scales. According to Native American legends, those brachts represent mice that used the cone for protection during forest fires; the mice dove headfirst into the cones and the three prongs represent their hing legs and tail.
    Fir_Douglas_Cone_Fire_2174.jpg
  • Flames surround a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cone in King County, Washington. Douglas fir cones are unique in that they have three-pronged brachts that extend from between the scales. According to Native American legends, those brachts represent mice that used the cone for protection during forest fires; the mice dove headfirst into the cones and the three prongs represent their hing legs and tail.
    Fir_Douglas_Cone_Fire_2329.jpg
  • Flames surround a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cone in King County, Washington. Douglas fir cones are unique in that they have three-pronged brachts that extend from between the scales. According to Native American legends, those brachts represent mice that used the cone for protection during forest fires; the mice dove headfirst into the cones and the three prongs represent their hing legs and tail.
    Fir_Douglas_Cone_Fire_1726.jpg
  • Flames surround a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cone in King County, Washington. Douglas fir cones are unique in that they have three-pronged brachts that extend from between the scales. According to Native American legends, those brachts represent mice that used the cone for protection during forest fires; the mice dove headfirst into the cones and the three prongs represent their hing legs and tail.
    Fir_Douglas_Cone_Fire_2040.jpg
  • Flames surround a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cone in King County, Washington. Douglas fir cones are unique in that they have three-pronged brachts that extend from between the scales. According to Native American legends, those brachts represent mice that used the cone for protection during forest fires; the mice dove headfirst into the cones and the three prongs represent their hing legs and tail.
    Fir_Douglas_Cone_Fire_2248.jpg
  • A mating pair of familiar bluet damselflies (Enallagma civile) lay eggs in the Ronald Bog in Shoreline, Washington. The male, above, holds the female by the "neck" while she deposits her eggs beneath the surface of the water.
    Damselflies_FamiliarBluet_Mating_958...jpg
  • Two mating pairs of familiar bluet damselflies (Enallagma civile) lay eggs in the Ronald Bog in Shoreline, Washington. The male, hovering above, holds the female by the "neck" while she deposits her eggs beneath the surface of the water.
    Damselflies_FamiliarBluet_Mating_956...jpg
  • Ice covers rocks and branches along Lake Michigan on a cold afternoon near Beverly Shores in the Indiana Dunes National Park, Indiana.
    Indiana-Dunes_Frozen-Shoreline_6856.jpg
  • The golden light of the setting sun streaks across portions of a few ripples and some small bubbles on the water of Puget Sound off the shoreline of Edmonds, Washington.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Bubbles_1088.jpg
  • The golden light of the setting sun streaks across portions of a few ripples on the water of Puget Sound off the shoreline of Edmonds, Washington.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Last-Light_1776.jpg
  • Large Pacific Ocean waves crash into the shoreline of Damon Point in Ocean Shores, Washington at sunrise. Mount Rainier, the tallest mountain in the state, is visible in the background.
    WA_DamonPoint_Waves_Rainier_8919.jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves carved a narrow inlet into the rocky shoreline at Yachats, Oregon. The wave action is blurred by an 8 second exposure.
    OR_DoubleArch_Yachats_Twilight_4289.jpg
  • The golden light of the setting sun streaks across portions of a few ripples on the water of Puget Sound off the shoreline of Edmonds, Washington.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Last-Light_1830.jpg
  • The golden light of the late-day sun streaks across the tops of small Puget Sound waves near the Edmonds, Washington, shoreline.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Sunset-Contrast_...jpg
  • The golden light of the late-day sun streaks across the tops of numerous small Puget Sound waves off of the Edmonds, Washington, shoreline.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Glint_CloseUp_09...jpg
  • The golden light of the late-day sun streaks across the tops of small Puget Sound waves near the Edmonds, Washington, shoreline.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Sunset-Contrast_...jpg
  • With a Pacific Ocean wave in the background, a Heermann's gull (Larus heermanni) rests on a rock overlooking Las Tunas Beach near Malibu, California. This is an adult Heermann's gull, displaying breeding plumage. Heermann's gulls are native to the west coast of North America, from southwestern British Columbia to Mexico. The gulls are usually found at the shoreline or very far out to sea; they are very rarely spotted inland. Nearly all of the Heermann's gulls nest on Isla Rasa in the Gulf of California.
    Gull_Heermanns_Las-Tunas-Beach_9341.jpg
  • Waves from Lake Washington crash into pieces of driftwood along the undeveloped shoreline of Saint Edward State Park in Kenmore, Washington.
    WA_St-Edward_Driftwood_6736.jpg
  • Winter storm clouds build around Mount Constitution, located in the Olympic mountain range in Washington state. This black and white image was captured from Richmond Beach in Shoreline, Washington.
    MountConstitution_StormClouds_BlackA...jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves crash up against the rocky shoreline on a beach in Sayulita, Mexico.
    Sayulita_RockyShore_0049.jpg
  • The sun sets over a notch in the rocky shoreline that borders Sunset Beach in Washington Park on Fidalgo Island, Anacortes, Washington. The sun's glint shines on the water of Rosario Strait. Blakely Island, one of the San Juan Islands, is visible in the background.
    WA_Sunset-Beach_Fidalgo-Island_Sunse...jpg
  • The golden light of the setting sun streaks across portions of a few ripples on the water of Puget Sound off the shoreline of Edmonds, Washington.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Last-Light_2125.jpg
  • The golden light of the late-day sun streaks across the tops of small Puget Sound waves near the Edmonds, Washington, shoreline.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Sunset-Contrast_...jpg
  • Large Pacific Ocean waves crash into the shoreline of Damon Point in Ocean Shores, Washington at sunrise. Mount Rainier, the tallest mountain in the state, is visible in the background.
    WA_DamonPoint_Waves_Rainier_8867.jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves crash into Devils Churn, a narrow inlet located on the Oregon coast south of Yachats. Devils Churn is located in the Siuslaw National Forest and is the result of thousands of years of erosion on the basalt shoreline.
    OR_DevilsChurn_6089.jpg
  • The golden light of the setting sun streaks across portions of a few ripples on the water of Puget Sound off the shoreline of Edmonds, Washington.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Last-Light_2043.jpg
  • Pacific staghorn sculpin (Leptocottus armatus) fry swim in a tight cluster called a school in Puget Sound near the Edmonds, Washington, shoreline. Pacific staghorn sculpin are found in shallow coastal waters along the Pacific coast from Alaska to Baja California, and are especially common in estuaries and coastal lagoons.
    Fish_Small-Fry_Circles_Edmonds_0796.jpg
  • A fiery fall sunset colors the sky over the Olympics in this view from Richmond Beach, Shoreline, Washington. Most of the Olympic mountain range peaks that are visible from across the Puget Sound are included in this panorama, which is a composite of eight images.
    Olympics_FierySunset_Panorama_5052.jpg
  • The golden light of the setting sun streaks across portions of a few ripples on the water of Puget Sound off the shoreline of Edmonds, Washington.
    Puget-Sound_Ripples_Last-Light_1878.jpg
  • A Hawaiian stilt (Himantopus knudseni), also known as an Ae'o, is framed by grasses along the Kanaha Pond on the Hawaiian island of Maui. The stilt lives in shallow brackish ponds, mud flats and along shorelines, where it feeds on small invertebrates. The stilt is endangered, and the Kanaha Pond Wildlife Sanctuary was created to protect it and other animals.
    maui-stilt-framed.jpg
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