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  • Tangled Creek in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, curves through a patch of dead lodgepole pine trees that have a silica crust at their base, resembling bobby socks. The trees are in the Black Sand Basin of Yellowstone, a geothermal area. When the hot spring runoff shifted, the trees absorbed the silica-rich water.
    Yellowstone_Tangled-Creek_Bobby-Sock...jpg
  • Tangled Creek in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, curves through a patch of dead lodgepole pine trees that have a silica crust at their base, resembling bobby socks. The trees are in the Black Sand Basin of Yellowstone, a geothermal area. When the hot spring runoff shifted, the trees absorbed the silica-rich water.
    Yellowstone_Tangled-Creek_Bobby-Sock...jpg
  • Tangled Creek in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, curves through a patch of dead lodgepole pine trees that have a silica crust at their base, resembling bobby socks. The trees are in the Black Sand Basin of Yellowstone, a geothermal area. When the hot spring runoff shifted, the trees absorbed the silica-rich water.
    Yellowstone_Tangled-Creek_Bobby-Sock...jpg
  • Trees covered in frost brightly stand out from the shaded hillside along Black Slough near Van Zandt, Washington. Freezing fog rising from the slough on a 17°F morning coated the trees in ice.
    Frost-Covered-Trees_Van-Zandt_6755.jpg
  • Trees covered in frost brightly stand out from the shaded hillside along Black Slough near Deming, Washington. Freezing fog rising from the slough on a 17°F morning coated the trees in ice.
    Frost-Covered-Trees_Row_Deming_6704.jpg
  • A row of trees at the edge of Iron Spring Creek are encased in ice in the Black Sand Basin of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. The Black Sand Basin is home to a number of geothermal features. During the winter, steam can rise from them and freeze to nearby trees.
    Yellowstone_Ice-Encased-Trees_Black-...jpg
  • Trees covered in frost brightly stand out from the shaded hillside along Black Slough near Van Zandt, Washington. Freezing fog rising from the slough on a 17°F morning coated the trees in ice.
    Frost-Covered-Trees_Van-Zandt_6737.jpg
  • Trees covered in frost brightly stand out from the shaded hillside along Black Slough near Deming, Washington. Freezing fog rising from the slough on a 17°F morning coated the trees in ice.
    Frost-Covered-Trees_Deming_6722.jpg
  • Trees covered in frost brightly stand out from the shaded hillside along Black Slough near Deming, Washington. Freezing fog rising from the slough on a 17°F morning coated the trees in ice.
    Frost-Covered-Trees_Deming_6726.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
  • Bare winter trees are visible through heavy snowfall near Gros Ventre in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming.
    Grand-Teton-NP_Bare-Trees_Snowstorm_...jpg
  • Several trees grow from cracks on the steep granite face of Rocky Point in Yosemite National Park, California.
    Yosemite_Trees_Rocky-Point_8880.jpg
  • An adult bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) flies past bare winter trees along the Nooksack River near Welcome, Washington. Hundreds of bald eagles winter in the area to feast on spawned-out salmon.
    Bald-Eagle_Flying_Trees_Nooksack_619...jpg
  • Two fallen Douglas Fir trees rest on a steep hillside overlooking Smallpox Bay on San Juan Island, Washington.
    WA_San-Juan-Island_Downed-Trees_Bay_...jpg
  • Wolf lichen (Letharia vulpina) grows on the bark of a pair of  California incense-cedar trees (Librocedrus decurrens) in the Yosemite Valley, Yosemite National Park, California.
    Cedar-Incense_Wolf-Lichen_Three-Tree...jpg
  • Dozens of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) take off from bare winter trees as the sun sets in Bothell, Washington.
    Crows_Golden-Trees_Bothell_9020.jpg
  • Windblown douglas fir trees bend and twist as snow lightly falls in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Trees_Windblown_Snow_Lynnwood_9726.jpg
  • The range of green and brown colors in palm fronds are visible in this tight cluster of trees near the Malibu Lagoon in Malibu, California.
    Palm-Trees_Frond-Patterns_Malibu-Lag...jpg
  • The crescent moon shines between trees at the top of a ridge near Hurricane Ridge in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    OlympicNP_Trees_CrescentMoon_5029.jpg
  • Fresh snow blankets a number of otherwise bare trees in a section of forest in the North Cascades of Washington state.
    snow-bare-trees.jpg
  • A variety of trees line the banks of Summit Lake in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California. Summit Lake is located at an elevation of 7,000 feet (2,066 meters) near the highest stretch of road in the Cascade mountain range.
    Lassen_SummitLake_Trees_4058.jpg
  • A fiery sunset colors the sky above several slash pine trees (Pinus elliotti) in the Pinelands of the Florida Everglades. Pine trees cannot survive if submerged for extended periods, and therefore grow only at the highest elevations in the Everglades – only a few feet higher than the lowest points. Slash pine trees are specially adapted to survive fires, however, which destroy invasive species.
    Everglades_Pinelands_Sunset_3410.jpg
  • Several slash pine trees (Pinus elliotti) are rendered in silhouette as the sun sets behind the Pinelands of the Florida Everglades. Pine trees cannot survive if submerged for extended periods, and therefore grow only at the highest elevations in the Everglades – which are only a few feet higher than the lowest points. Slash pine trees are specially adapted to survive fires, however, which destroy invasive species.
    Everglades_Pinelands_Sunset_3379.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 handful of evergreen trees stand out against a backdrop of bare winter trees on a hillside overlooking Gos Ventre in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming.
    Grand-Teton-NP_Winter-Hillside_1975.jpg
  • Several Joshua Trees (Yucca brevifolia) grow in a carpet of goldfields (Lasthenia chrysotoma) in the Indian Wells Valley, northeast of Mojave California.
    CA_JoshuaTrees_Goldfields_IndianWell...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
  • 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
  • Seven American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), one carrying food that it scavenged, fly past maple trees displaying a variety of autumn colors in Kenmore, Washington.
    Crows_Fall-Color_Kenmore_2357.jpg
  • Bare alder trees stand against a backdrop of trees and brush that are beginning to show spring colors in late winter in wetlands in Bothell, Washington.
    Forest_Late-Winter-Patterns_Bothell_...jpg
  • A cluster of maple trees displays a full range of autumn colors in Kenmore, Washington.
    Fall-Color_Kenmore_2568.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
  • 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 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
  • Several giant sequoia trees (Sequoiadendron gigantea) grow in the Mariposa Grove in Yosemite National Park, California. The grove is home to many ancient trees, one of which is 1800 years old.
    Yosemite_Sequoia_0789.jpg
  • Several deciduous trees, bare for the winter, stand in thick fog in Marymoor Park, Redmond, Washington.
    Marymoor-Park_Forest_Fog_5114.jpg
  • An American crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos) flies over trees displaying their fall colors along the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington. During the fall and winter months, more than 10,000 crows roost each night in the area.
    Crow_Flying_Fall-Color_Bothell_8767.jpg
  • Moss, backlit by the morning sun, appears as green fringe on trees near the Skykomish River in Skykomish, Washington.
    Moss_Backlit_Skykomish_3450.jpg
  • A partial moon shines over bare trees on a foggy autumn morning in the Beaver Marsh area of Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio.
    OH_Cuyahoga-Valley-NP_Beaver-Marsh_M...jpg
  • Trees on the summit ridge of Lost Cabin Mountain vanish into the fog in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    OlympicNP_Lost-Cabin-Mountain_Fog_49...jpg
  • A mustang (Equus caballus) walks under a canopy of mesquite trees in the Tonto National Forest in the woods near the Salt River in Arizona. The free-roaming mustangs are commonly referred to as wild horses, but they are descendants of domesticated Spanish horses that were brought to the continent in the 16th century.
    Mustang_Forest_Coon-Bluff_4040.jpg
  • Steam rising from the geothermal features in the Norris Geyser Basin turns to ice as it touches trees on a frigid day in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Temperatures on this day approached 0 degrees Fahrenheit (-20 degrees Celsius).
    Yellowstone_Norris-Geyser-Basin_Ice_...jpg
  • The Skagit River flows past deciduous trees covered with moss and lichen in the North Cascades of Washington state near the town of Rockport.
    SkagitRiver_Forest_Lichen_0162.jpg
  • Several coconut palm trees (Cocos nucifera) reach into the sky over the Pacific Ocean on the western coast of the Hawaiian island of Maui.
    Maui_PalmTrees_Wailea_F0145.jpg
  • Two lodgepole pine trees (Pinus contorta) grow around a large boulder on Junction Butte in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
    Yellowstone_Lodgepole-Pines_Boulder_...jpg
  • Red alder trees (Alnus rubra) appear to fan out as they grow in a tight cluster in the early spring in the Skagit Valley near Bow, Washington.
    Alder-Red_Branches-Fanning_Skagit_07...jpg
  • A cluster of trees stands atop snow-covered rolling hills in Ashton, Idaho.
    ID_Ashton_Rolling-Hills_Winter_3331.jpg
  • Trees displaying an assortment of early fall colors line the edge of the Stumpy Basin in Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio.
    OH_Cuyahoga-Valley-NP_Stumpy-Basin_4...jpg
  • Violet spring wildflowers and oak trees sit at the base of mountains, which vanish into low clouds above Tehachapi, California.
    CA_Tehachapi_Wildflowers-Oaks_4502.jpg
  • Dozens of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) roost in trees along the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington, as the full moon rises. Crows gather in several temporary roosts at sunset, moving together into one roost that numbers more than 10,000 birds at nightfall.
    Crows_Roosting_Full-Moon_Bothell_979...jpg
  • Two oak trees — one young and vibrant, the other old and weathered — stand at the top of a hill in the foothills of Mount Diablo near Clayton, California.
    CA_Clayton_TreesOnHillside_1435.jpg
  • Several maple trees, each displaying a different fall color, grow together near North Creek in Bothell, Washington.
    Fall-Color_North-Creek_Bothell_9747.jpg
  • Green moss grows on all but the bottom portion of these trees near Summit Lake in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California. The moss line, which begins about 10-15 feet from the base of the trees illustrates the depth of the winter snow here.
    Lassen_MossLineOnTrees_4036.jpg
  • The moon shines between coconut palm trees (Cocos nucifera) at sunset at Makena Beach, Maui, Hawai`i.
    Maui_PalmTrees_Makena_Silhouette_628...jpg
  • A cluster of trees stands atop snow-covered rolling hills in Ashton, Idaho.
    ID_Ashton_Rolling-Hills_Winter_3288.jpg
  • Comet C/2020 F3 (NEOWISE) shines in the morning sky alongside trees near a beach on Camano Island, Washington. Comet NEOWISE is a long-period comet and its current orbital path will take about 6,800 years to complete. Its nucleus is about 3 miles (5 kilometers) across and is covered with sooty, dark particles left over from its formation near the birth of our solar system 4.6 billion years ago.
    Comet_Neowise_C2020F3_Camano_8519.jpg
  • Three coconut palm trees (Cocos nucifera) are rendered in silhouette against a golden sunrise on Kaua`i, Hawai`i.
    Kauai_CoconutTrees_GoldenSunrise_768...jpg
  • A few young evergreen trees poke out from a very deep snow drift near Fitzsimmons Creek in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada. The Whistler Valley gets an average of 14 feet of snow per winter.
    SnowDriftTreesWhistlerH.jpg
  • The late afternoon sun causes the ponderosa pine trees to cast long shadows over the Yakima River near Yakima, Washington.
    YakimaRiver_1874.jpg
  • Several old growth trees, including western red cedar, stand above Woodard Bay near Olympia, Washington on a foggy morning.
    WA_WoodardBay_FoggyForest_6683.jpg
  • Colorful maple trees displaying the peak of their fall colors line the banks of Nason Creek near Merritt, Washington. Merritt is located just east of Stevens Pass.
    FallColor_StevensPass_NasonCreek_047...jpg
  • Mount Rainier, lit by the setting sun, is framed by old-growth trees along the Wonderland Trail in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington.
    Rainier_MowichOldGrowth_6114.jpg
  • A few young evergreen trees poke out from a very deep snow drift near Fitzsimmons Creek in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada. The Whistler Valley gets an average of 14 feet of snow per winter.
    SnowDriftTreesWhistlerV.jpg
  • The trunks of cherry trees emerge from a hillside covered with fallen autumn leaves in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Trees_Cherry-Trunks_Autumn-Leaves_85...jpg
  • A fiery winter sunset fills the sky and is visible through the trunks of bare bigleaf maple trees in Golden Gardens Park, Seattle, Washington.
    WA_Golden-Gardens_Fiery-Sunset_Trunk...jpg
  • The reflections of several trees stretch across the rippled waters of the Sammamish River at sunset in Kenmore, Washington.
    Sammamish-River_Tree-Reflections_Ken...jpg
  • A large tree and leaning snag stand tall above the second-growth forest on Jackman Ridge, which is obscured by fog, in the North Cascades of Washington state.
    NorthCascades_JackmanRidge_TreesInFo...jpg
  • A fiery winter sunset fills the sky and is visible through the trunks of bare bigleaf maple trees in Golden Gardens Park, Seattle, Washington.
    WA_Golden-Gardens_Fiery-Sunset_Trunk...jpg
  • The Snonomish River spilled well beyond its banks during a severe flood, engulfing these three trees near Snohomish, Washington.
    Snohomish-River_Flood_Three-Trunks_9...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
  • 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
  • A large tree and leaning snag stand tall above the second-growth forest on Jackman Ridge, which is obscured by fog, in the North Cascades of Washington state.
    NorthCascades_JackmanRidge_TreesInFo...jpg
  • A telephoto lens compresses the view of bare winter trees in and on a hill overlooking Golden Gardens Park, Seattle, Washington.
    Forest_Winter_Abstract_Golden-Garden...jpg
  • A few determined trees have managed to take hold and grow on an otherwise smooth granite dome in Yosemite National Park, California.
    Yosemite_TreeDome_0779.jpg
  • A large flock of European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) lands in bare trees in Skagit Valley, Washington. European starlings tend to travel in large flocks and fly in a large, dense cluster when they spot predators.
    Starlings_LargeFlock_Landing_6585.jpg
  • Exposed roots from trees reach into the waters of Tenaya Creek in Yosemite National Park, California.
    Yosemite_Tree-Roots_Tenaya-Creek_731...jpg
  • The moon glows behind a coconut palm tree (Cocos nucifera) as thousands of stars shine above Makena Beach on the island of Maui, Hawaii. Several major stars are visible in this image, including Pleiades, a tight cluster of blue stars that is visible just left of the largest palm tree on the right side of the image, and Aldebaran, a bright orange star near the top-center of the frame. Pleiades is also known as the Seven Sisters even though the cluster contains more than 1,000 stars; the nine brightest stars are named for the Seven Sisters of Greek mythology and their parents. The star cluster is one of the closest to Earth and it formed within the last 100 million years. Both Aldebaran and Pleiades are located in the constellation Taurus.
    Hawaii_PalmTrees_Stars_Makena_6317.jpg
  • Fiery cirrus clouds appear to erupt from the top of a Douglas fir tree in Snohomish County, Washington, at sunset.
    CirrusClouds_FierySunset_Lynnwood_18...jpg
  • A second-growth forest comprised mainly of Douglas fir and cedar trees is bathed in soft golden light that was filtered by haze from wildfire smoke. This stand of trees is in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Trees_Soft-Golden-Light_Lynnwood_824...jpg
  • In early autumn, the maple trees of Gene Coulon Memorial Beach Park in Renton, Washington, display the full assortment of fall colors.
    Fall-Color_Maple-Trees_Gene-Coulon_R...jpg
  • The low-angled red light of sunrise reveals the texture of the bottom of a layer of altocumulus clouds in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Lynnwood_Fiery-Sunrise_Trees_8130.jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, flies over trees lining the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington. During the winter months, about 16,000 crows roost each night in the area in restored wetlands.
    Crows_Murder_Trees_Bothell_3398.jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, flies over trees lining the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington, as the moon rises. During the winter months, about 16,000 crows roost each night in the area in restored wetlands.
    Crows_Murder_Trees_Moon_Bothell_0963.jpg
  • A murder of American crows flies low over trees in Lynnwood, Washington.
    Crows_Murder_Trees_Lynnwood_3925.jpg
  • A large flock of American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), known as a murder, flies over trees lining the Sammamish River in Bothell, Washington, as the moon rises. During the winter months, about 16,000 crows roost each night in the area in restored wetlands.
    Crows_Murder_Trees_Moon_Bothell_0977.jpg
  • A fiery sunset colors the sky above several slash pine trees (Pinus elliotti) in the Pinelands of the Florida Everglades. Pine trees cannot survive if submerged for extended periods, and therefore grow only at the highest elevations in the Everglades – only a few feet higher than the lowest points. Slash pine trees are specially adapted to survive fires, however, which destroy invasive species.
    Everglades_Pinelands_Sunset_3415.jpg
  • A fiery sunset colors the sky above several slash pine trees (Pinus elliotti) in the Pinelands of the Florida Everglades. Pine trees cannot survive if submerged for extended periods, and therefore grow only at the highest elevations in the Everglades – only a few feet higher than the lowest points. Slash pine trees are specially adapted to survive fires, however, which destroy invasive species.
    Everglades_Pinelands_Sunset_3426.jpg
  • A fiery sunset colors the sky above several slash pine trees (Pinus elliotti) in the Pinelands of the Florida Everglades. Pine trees cannot survive if submerged for extended periods, and therefore grow only at the highest elevations in the Everglades – only a few feet higher than the lowest points. Slash pine trees are specially adapted to survive fires, however, which destroy invasive species.
    Everglades_Pinelands_Sunset_3419.jpg
  • Mountain dogwood (Cornus nuttallii) trees show their blossoms in late spring along the Merced River in the Yosemite Valley, Yosemite National Park, California. Mountain dogwood trees are short compared to most other trees in the Yosemite Valley. Mature dogwood trees grow to between 10 and 30 feet (3 to 9 meters).
    Yosemite_Dogwood_Merced-River_7451.jpg
  • Dead lodgepole pine trees cast shadows on the snow covering the Lower Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Lodgepole pine trees have a very shallow root system that extends sideways, allowing them to grow in Yellowstone where there is only a thin layer of topsoil that contains few nutrients. These snags, however, are near an active hydrothermal area and they soaked up mineral-laden water.
    Yellowstone_Lodgepole-Pine-Snags_Sno...jpg
  • Dead lodgepole pine trees cast shadows on the snow covering the Lower Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Lodgepole pine trees have a very shallow root system that extends sideways, allowing them to grow in Yellowstone where there is only a thin layer of topsoil that contains few nutrients. These snags, however, are near an active hydrothermal area and they soaked up mineral-laden water.
    Yellowstone_Lodgepole-Pine-Snags_Sno...jpg
  • Dead lodgepole pine trees cast shadows on the snow covering the Lower Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Lodgepole pine trees have a very shallow root system that extends sideways, allowing them to grow in Yellowstone where there is only a thin layer of topsoil that contains few nutrients. These snags, however, are near an active hydrothermal area and they soaked up mineral-laden water.
    Yellowstone_Lodgepole-Pine-Snags_Sno...jpg
  • Dead lodgepole pine trees cast shadows on the snow covering the Lower Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Lodgepole pine trees have a very shallow root system that extends sideways, allowing them to grow in Yellowstone where there is only a thin layer of topsoil that contains few nutrients. These snags, however, are near an active hydrothermal area and they soaked up mineral-laden water.
    Yellowstone_Lodgepole-Pine-Snags_Sno...jpg
  • Dead lodgepole pine trees cast shadows on the snow covering the Lower Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Lodgepole pine trees have a very shallow root system that extends sideways, allowing them to grow in Yellowstone where there is only a thin layer of topsoil that contains few nutrients. These snags, however, are near an active hydrothermal area and they soaked up mineral-laden water.
    Yellowstone_Lodgepole-Pine-Snags_Sno...jpg
  • In early autumn, the maple trees of Gene Coulon Memorial Beach Park in Renton, Washington, display the full assortment of fall colors.
    Fall-Color_Maple-Tree_Gene-Coulon_Re...jpg
  • In early autumn, the maple trees of Gene Coulon Memorial Beach Park in Renton, Washington, display the full assortment of fall colors.
    Fall-Color_Maple-Tree_Gene-Coulon_Re...jpg
  • A bald eagle rests in bare winter trees in this impressionistic view of a stand of trees along the Nooksack River in the North Cascades of Washington state.
    BaldEagle_NooksackForest_Impressioni...jpg
  • Trees in the Cascades of Washington state show signs of damage from beavers. Beavers, the largest rodent in North America, use their powerful front teeth to cut trees, which they use for food and for building dams and lodges.
    BeaverDamage_MountainLoopHwy_0877.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
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