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  • A severe hailstorm passes over the mountains of Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming. Severe weather is common over the mountains in summer.
    GrandTetons_Storm_1889.jpg
  • A cottonwood tree stands at the base of Mount Moroni, which is partially shrouded by storm clouds in Zion National Park, Utah. Mount Moroni is one of three dramatic peaks, which together are known as the Three Patriarchs.
    Zion_MountMoroni_Cottonwood_Stormy_5...jpg
  • Crepuscular Rays, also known as god beams, form over the Atlantic Ocean and a large sea arch called Manneporte in the late afternoon in Étretat, France. Manneporte is the largest of the three natural sea arches that have formed in the white chalk cliffs, known as the Falaise d'Étretat, which are as tall as 90 meters (300 feet).
    Etretat_Manneporte_Crepuscular-Rays_...jpg
  • The sunrise colors the storm clouds passing over the mountains along Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park, Montana. Lake McDonald is the largest lake in Glacier National Park, approximately 10 miles (16 km) long, and over a mile (1.6 km) wide. Filling a valley that was carved by glaciers, the lake is 472 feet (130 m) deep.
    GlacierNP_LakeMcDonaldSunrise_F03-52...jpg
  • The sunrise colors the storm clouds passing over the mountains along Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park, Montana. Lake McDonald is the largest lake in Glacier National Park, approximately 10 miles (16 km) long, and over a mile (1.6 km) wide. Filling a valley that was carved by glaciers, the lake is 472 feet (130 m) deep.
    Glacier_LakeMcDonald_StormySunrise_1...jpg
  • The summit of Hekla, one of the most active volcanoes in Iceland, is obscured by storm clouds just before sunset. The volcano, located in south Iceland, has a height of 1,491 meters (4,892 feet), and has erupted at least 20 times since the year 874. Hekla is the Icelandic word for a short hooded cloak, a nod to the fact that the mountain is frequently shrouded by clouds.
    Iceland_Hekla_Storm-Clouds_2689.jpg
  • The sunrise colors the storm clouds passing over the mountains along Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park, Montana. Lake McDonald is the largest lake in Glacier National Park, approximately 10 miles (16 km) long, and over a mile (1.6 km) wide. Filling a valley that was carved by glaciers, the lake is 472 feet (130 m) deep.
    GlacierNP_LakeMcDonaldSunrise_F03-52...jpg
  • The full moon shines between layers of storm clouds that are developing over Mount Adams, a volcano in Washington state. Mount Adams, at 12,280 feet (3,743 meters), is the second-tallest mountain in Washington and is still considered potentially active even though it last erupted in 550 BC.
    Adams_StormyMoonrise_3022.jpg
  • The sunrise colors the storm clouds passing over the mountains along Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park, Montana. Lake McDonald is the largest lake in Glacier National Park, approximately 10 miles (16 km) long, and over a mile (1.6 km) wide. Filling a valley that was carved by glaciers, the lake is 472 feet (130 m) deep.
    GlacierNP_LakeMcDonaldSunrise_1047.jpg
  • A bright rainbow falls on the roof of the Cunningham Cabin, a historic feature of the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming. The cabin was build in 1890 by Pierce and Margaret Cunningham as part of a 160 acre homestead.
    CunninghamCabin.jpg
  • Storm clouds bringing heavy rain lift and swirl in the Mica Valley located near Revelstoke in British Columbia, Canada.
    Canada_MicaValley_Storm_7584.jpg
  • A couple, rendered in silhouette, walk past a wind-swept tree on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean at Ecola State Park near Cannon Beach, Oregon.
    WindSweptTreeCouple.jpg
  • A bent pine tree grows near the top of a sandstone column in Zion National Park, Utah.
    Zion_Bent-Tree_8334.jpg
  • A bent pine tree grows near the top of a sandstone column in Zion National Park, Utah.
    ZionBentTree1.jpg
  • A bent pine tree grows near the top of a sandstone column in Zion National Park, Utah.
    Zion_BentTree_1678.jpg
  • Dark storm clouds hover over The Wave, petrified sand dunes that were carved by centuries of erosion from wind and heavy rain. The Wave is located in the Coyote Buttes Wilderness area of Arizona.
    Wave-DarkSky.jpg
  • A rainstorm sits at the summit of Mount Si, resulting in a rainbow that falls at the mountain's base in North Bend, Washington. Mount Si is a 4,167-foot (1,270 meter) mountain that is a remnant of an oceanic plate volcano. It lies at the western edge of the Cascade Range of mountains.
    MountSi_Rainstorm_Rainbow_9440.jpg
  • Heavy rain and hail streak across the golden sky over Hogwallow Flats at daybreak in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia.
    Shenandoah_Hogwallow-Flats_Storm_375...jpg
  • A rainbow starts to rise from the Atlantic Ocean not far from Reynisdrangar sea stacks just off Reynisfjara beach near Vík í Mýrdal, Iceland. There are a number of Iceland legends about the basalt sea stacks. In the most common legend, two trolls were turned to stone as they were caught dragging a three-masted ship to shore at daybreak.
    Iceland_Vik_Troll-Rocks_Rainbow_2252.jpg
  • A great blue heron watches a large flock of Canada geese swim up the Sammamish River near Kenmore, Washington, on a foggy winter morning.
    SammamishRiver_GeeseAndHeron_0536.jpg
  • A bright rainbow stretches across the rugged eastern slope of the dormant Haleakalā volcano on the island of Maui, Hawai`i. Haleakalā, the eastern of the two volcanoes on Maui, last erupted sometime between 1480 and 1600 AD. On average, Haleakala National Park receives about 50 inches (1263 millimeters) of rain per year.
    Maui_Haleakala_Rainbow_6967.jpg
  • Mist at the top of Snoqualmie Falls near Snoqualmie, Washington is turned golden by the rising sun, while the wall below is encased in thick winter ice. At Snoqualmie Falls, the Snoqualmie River drops 268 feet (82 meters).
    SnoqualmieFalls_Frozen_5534.jpg
  • Rocks and logs on the banks of the Snoqualmie River near Snoqualmie, Washington are encased in thick ice after several days of subfreezing temperatures. During the winter, temperatures occasionally drop so low that mist from the nearby Snoqualmie Falls turns to ice.
    SnoqualmieRiver_IcyBank_5587.jpg
  • A 10-minute exposure captures a nighttime lightning storm, visible through Mesa Arch in Canyonlands National Park, Utah.
    Canyonlands_MesaArch_Lightning_1148.jpg
  • A series of cumulus clouds develop and grow as the sun sets over Snohomish County, Washington. Cumulus means "heap" or "pile" in Latin, and the clouds typically form where warm air rises and reaches a level of cold air where the moisure in the air condenses.
    Clouds_Cumulus_Developing_Sunset_551...jpg
  • A bright double rainbow connects the mountains on both sides of Logan Pass, located in Glacier National Park, Montana. The rainbow formed as a heavy afternoon thunderstorm moved along the Going-To-The-Sun Road, which passes through the valley at the center of this image.
    Glacier_LoganPassRainbow_0081.jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) braves a rainstorm from its perch in a field of rocks in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Raining_Ephrata_9117.jpg
  • Storm clouds dump heavy rain and hail over the Blue Ridge Mountains in this view from Ridge View in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia.
    Shenandoah_Ridge-View_Sunrise-Storm_...jpg
  • A bright rainbow shines over the Atlantic Ocean near the Reynisdrangar sea stacks, also known as the Troll Rocks. The Troll Rocks are located near Vík, Iceland. According to Icelandic legend, the rocks are the remnants of trolls that were out fishing too late. The legend says trolls will turn to stone if they're exposed to daylight.
    Iceland_Vik_Troll-Rocks_Rainbow_2275...jpg
  • Storm clouds advance over the marsh of the Eastern Shore of Virginia National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia. The refuge is at the southern tip of the Delmarva Peninsula, a narrow peninsula bordered by Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean.
    VA_Eastern-Shore-Virginia_Marsh_Stor...jpg
  • A variety of spring wildflowers bloom after rainstorms in the Ballona Wetlands, one of the last significant wetlands remaining near Los Angeles, California.
    CA_Ballona_Wetlands_Wildflowers_4230.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 variety of wildflowers, including blazing star (Liatris spiciata), grow along the foggy banks of the Allegheny River in the Allegheny National Forest in Pennsylvania.
    PA_AlleghenyRiver_Wildflowers_8742.jpg
  • Mount Baker, a 10,781 foot (3,286 meter) volcano located in Whatcom County, Washington state, takes on a pastel appearance through morning fog near Artist Point in the North Cascades. Mount Baker, which is part of the Cascade Range of mountains, has the second-most thermally active crater in the range, second only to Mount St. Helens. Baker's volcanic cone is relatively young, possibly less than 100,000 years old, even though the area where it sits has been volcanically active for 1.5 million years.
    Baker_PastelFog_ArtistPoint_0691.jpg
  • Large icicles form on a steep wall near Snoqualmie Falls, Snoqualmie, Washington after several days of subfreezing temperatures. During periods of extreme cold, mist from the waterfall freezes to the canyon walls.
    Icicles_SnoqualmieFalls_5541.jpg
  • A winter storm envelops the summit of Mount Isolation, a 1,620-meter (5,315-foot) peak in Fiordland National Park, New Zealand. Located on the southwestern portion of the South Island, Fiordland National Park is New Zealand's largest national park.
    NZ_Fiordland_MountIsolation_Storm_69...jpg
  • A bright rainbow shines over the Atlantic Ocean near the Reynisdrangar sea stacks, also known as the Troll Rocks. The Troll Rocks are located near Vík, Iceland. According to Icelandic legend, the rocks are the remnants of trolls that were out fishing too late. The legend says trolls will turn to stone if they're exposed to daylight.
    Iceland_TrollRocks_Rainbow_2275.jpg
  • Low clouds and fog frame the summit of Castle Mountain, a 2,766 meter (9,075 foot) tall mountain located in Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada.
    Banff_CastleMountain_Cloudy_7296.jpg
  • Otter Crest (right) and Cape Foulweather are shrouded in fog as gulls search for food at the edge of the Pacific Ocean on the central Oregon coast.
    OR_OtterCrest_Foggy_0020.jpg
  • Bright red clouds, illuminated by the sunrise, point to the summit of Mount Rainier in Washington state. Below, summer wildflowers, including Silky Lupine and Indian Paintbrush, line Edith Creek. The creek is located in the Paradise section of Mount Rainier National Park, known for stunning displays of summer wildflowers. Mount Rainier, with an elevation of 14,411 feet (4,392 meters), is the tallest mountain in Washington and the highest mountain in the Cascade Range.
    Rainier_Wildflowers_EdithCreek_Cirru...jpg
  • Thick clouds and fog blow over a ridge high above the South Fork of the Tuolumne River in the Stanislaus National Forest, California. This image was captured from a vista point known as the Rim of the World and is located west of Yosemite National Park.
    CA_Stanislaus_RimOfTheWorld_Foggy_84...jpg
  • Thick fog in Kauai's Kalalau Valley blocks the view of all but the summit of Keanapuka.
    kauai-keanapuka.jpg
  • Rising fog swirls around the Zoroaster Temple in this view from Bright Angel Point on the north rim of the Grand Canyon in Arizona.
    GrandCanyon_ZoroasterTemple.jpg
  • An anvil cumulonimbus incus cloud forms over the Sierra Nevada mountains in California. These clouds can result in lightning, hail, heavy rain and strong wind.
    CA_anvil_cumulonimbus_cloud_8720.jpg
  • A blanket of fog covers Baker Lake, located in the North Cascades of Washington state. Several peaks that are part of North Cascades National Park are visible on the horizon, including Bacon Peak at right.
    BakerLake_Fog_0541.jpg
  • Fall color surrounds a seasonal waterfall that drops from Granite Mountain in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest near Snoqualmie Pass, Washington.
    Snoqualmie-Pass_Denny-Creek_Fall-Col...jpg
  • An aspen tree displays its autumn colors on a ridge in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah, as a heavy rainstorm approaches.
    Bryce-Canyon_Autumn-Rainstorm_0847.jpg
  • A partial rainbow forms in the downpour from a rainstorm passing at the edge of Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah.
    Bryce-Canyon_Rainstorm_4350.jpg
  • Low clouds and fog rise from between the ridges in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah.
    Bryce-Canyon_Lifting-Clouds_4165.jpg
  • Crepuscular rays, also known as God beams, shine down on the Stillaguamish River on a foggy morning on Leque Island near Stanwood, Washington.
    Stillaguamish-River_God-Beams_Eide-R...jpg
  • Two layers of clouds — one high and turned golden by the rising sun, the other low and in the shade — meet in the sky at sunrise over Edmonds, Washington.
    Clouds-Converging_Sunrise_Edmonds_13...jpg
  • Fog and pastel-colored clouds are reflected onto the water of Hornafjörður, a fjord in the Eastern Region of Iceland near Höfn. The Vatnajökull ice cap, the largest glacier in Europe, is visible on the horizon. Breiðabunga, a 3,468-foot (1,057-meter) ice-capped mountain, is among the peaks covered by the ice cap. Vatnajökull roughly translates to the "water glacier."
    Iceland_Pastel-Sunrise_Hornafjordur_...jpg
  • A long exposure captures the motion of storm clouds as they move over the Blue Ridge Mountains in this view from Shenandoah National Park, Virginia.
    Shenandoah_Ridge-View_Cloud-Motion_9...jpg
  • Heavy rain and hail drop from a storm passing over the Blue Ridge Mountains at daybreak in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia.
    Shenandoah_Mountain-Storm_Daybreak_9...jpg
  • The sun shines through thick fog that has settled over Borst Lake in Snoqualmie, Washington.
    WA_Snoqualmie_Borst-Lake_Foggy_9471.jpg
  • Low clouds drop fresh snow onto evergreen trees at the base of Mount Hornaday in the Lamar Valley of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Mount Hornaday, with an elevation of 10,003 feet (3,049 meters), is part of the Absaroka Range of mountains.
    Yellowstone_Mount-Hornaday_Snowing_5...jpg
  • On an autumn morning, fog envelops Indigo Lake, located in Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio.
    OH_Cuyahoga-Valley-NP_Indigo-Lake_Fo...jpg
  • A layer of relatively-high altocumulus clouds is turned fiery red by the setting sun, while the lower cumulus clouds are already in the shade in this scene over Puyallup, Washington.
    Sunset_Fiery-Sky_Puyallup_2600.jpg
  • Lightning strikes a hillside near Jackson, Wyoming, during a severe thunderstorm.
    Lightning_Jackson_WY_2010.jpg
  • A variety of yellow spring wildflowers bloom after rainstorms in the Ballona Wetlands, one of the last significant wetlands remaining near Los Angeles, California.
    CA_Ballona_Wetlands_Wildflowers_4263.jpg
  • Storm clouds streak across Sauk Mountain, which stands above the Skagit River in the North Cascades of Washington state.
    SaukMountain_SkagitRiver_Stormy_0266.jpg
  • A very tall snag leans above the fog on Jackman Ridge in the North Cascades of Washington state.
    LeaningSnag_JackmanRidge_0237.jpg
  • Several lightning flashes light up the night sky during a thunderstorm over Snohomish County, Washington. Lightning is usually produced by towering cumulonimbus clouds, which can climb to heights of more than 9 miles (15 km); the lightning flashes temporarly balance the electrical charge in the cloud. Only about 25 percent of all lightning flashes reach the ground; those flashes are known as strikes.
    Lightning_SnohomishCounty_8479.jpg
  • Vibrant fall color reflects onto the foggy waters of Franklin Falls Pond, located in the Adirondacks of New York.
    Adirondacks_FranklinFallsPond_FallCo...jpg
  • The white and multi-colored Elkheart Cliffs stand out against dark storm clouds over Mt. Carmel Junction, Utah.
    UT_ElkheartCliffs_StormClouds_0290.jpg
  • Large icicles form on a steep wall near Snoqualmie Falls, Snoqualmie, Washington after several days of subfreezing temperatures. During periods of extreme cold, mist from the waterfall freezes to the canyon walls. The Snoqualmie River is visible flowing across the bottom of the image.
    Icicles_SnoqualmieFalls_5661.jpg
  • Mount Constance, far left, and neighboring peaks in the Olympic Mountains of Washington state are visible between a layer of low clouds and fog. Mount Constance has an elevation of 7,756 feet (2,364 meters). The full moon is beginning to set behind the clouds in this view from Seattle.
    Olympics_MountConstance_Fog_Moon.jpg
  • A hole-punch cloud is typically formed when an airplane passes through altocumulus clouds. Altocumulus clouds are made up of small, super cooled water droplets. When aircraft pass through these clouds, the rapid pressure changes they cause can cool the air further. That, in turn, causes the water droplets to form heavy ice crystals, which then drop from the sky, leaving behind a "hole punch." This hole-punch cloud was observed in Thurston County, Washington. Hole-punch clouds are also sometimes called sky-punch clouds.
    Cloud_HolePunch_1831.jpg
  • Bright red clouds, illuminated by the sunrise, point to the summit of Mount Rainier in Washington state. Below, summer wildflowers, including Silky Lupine and Indian Paintbrush, line Edith Creek. The creek is located in the Paradise section of Mount Rainier National Park, known for stunning displays of summer wildflowers. Mount Rainier, with an elevation of 14,411 feet (4,392 meters), is the tallest mountain in Washington and the highest mountain in the Cascade Range.
    Rainier_Wildflowers_EdithCreek_Cirru...jpg
  • Mount Rainier, capped by a lenticular cloud, towers over a field of wildflowers and Edith Creek in the Paradise section of Mount Rainier National Park, Washington. The flowers on the hillside are predominently lupine, but also include some blooming Indian Paintbrush and Bear Grass. Mount Rainier, with an elevation of 14,411 feet (4,392 meters), is the tallest mountain in Washington and the highest mountain in the Cascade Range. The Paradise section of Mount Rainier National Park is known for dramatic displays of summer wildflowers.
    Rainier_Wildflowers_EdithCreek_Lenti...jpg
  • A cumulus cloud seems to emerge from the summit of Unicorn Peak, a 10,823 foot (3299 meter) peak in Yosemite National Park, California. While the peak has three summits, it appears as a single spire from narrow angles in the Tuolumne Meadows. Cockscomb, a 11,065 foot (3373 meter) peak also in the Cathedral Range, is visible to the right of Unicorn Peak.
    Yosemite_UnicornPeak_9184.jpg
  • A large, bright rainbow forms during a rainstorm over the Kalalau Valley on the island of Kauai, Hawaii.
    Kauai_Kalalau_Rainbow_1830.jpg
  • A Washington state ferry is docked at Kingston, Whidbey Island, as the Brothers, part of the Olympic Mountains, stand above a low layer of fog in this view across Puget Sound from the Edmonds waterfront.
    Ferry_Olympics_Brothers_Edmonds_6952.jpg
  • A layer of low clouds and fog blows in at sunset over Howe Sound near Squamish, British Columbia, Canada. This view was captured from the spit located in the Squamish River Estuary.
    BC_HoweSound_LowClouds_Sunset_5431.jpg
  • A mammoth lenticular cloud nearly dwarfs Mount Rainier, the tallest mountain in Washington and the highest volcano in the Cascade Range. Lenticular clouds form when moist air is forced up and over mountains or other large obstructions. The moist air condenses and becomes a visible cloud as it rises. While lenticular clouds can hover directly over mountain peaks, they can form some distance away from the summit when the winds are strong.
    Rainier_Lenticular_BW_5711.jpg
  • Thich fog bunches up and spills over a hillside above Smith Creek in Mount St. Helens National Monument, Washington.
    StHelens_FogFalls_3422.jpg
  • Storm clouds surround the summit of Mount Shasta, a 14,179-foot (4,322 m) volcano in Siskyou County, California, which is turned red by the setting sun.
    shasta-stormy-sunset.jpg
  • An already tall cumulonimbus storm cloud continues to build over the Pacific Ocean near Sayulita, Mexico at sunrise.
    Sayulita_OceanStorm_V_0698.jpg
  • Steam fog rises off one of the Reflection Lakes in Mount Rainier National Park as the still waters reflect a dramatic late summer sunrise. Steam fog, also known as evaporation fog, occurs when the air above is colder than the water in a lake or other body of water. Moist air rises from the water and is rapidly cooled to its saturation point, producing fog..
    ReflectionLakeSteam_3859.jpg
  • Rain falls and drips from the leaves of a vine maple tree in Twin Falls State Park near North Bend, Washington.
    Rain_VineMapleLeaves_7160.jpg
  • A heavy rainstorm builds over the Pacific Ocean near Manzanita, Oregon.
    OR_Manzanita_GoldenRainstorm_1843.jpg
  • Mount Olympus, at just under 8000 feet, is the tallest of the Olympic mountains. This aerial view shows how the mountain range blocks rain storms from the Pacific Ocean, resulting in a temperate rain forest, the only one in North America.
    Olympus_Aerial7565.jpg
  • Ground frost, otherwise known as hoar frost, sticks to the grass on a cold morning in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah. Ground frost typically forms on cold, clear nights when the ground temperature drops below freezing. When water vapor in the warmer air touches the frozen ground, it freezes, forming ice in a process known as sublimation.
    GroundFrost_Grass_BryceNP_1240.jpg
  • A towering cumulonimbus cloud forms over the Pacific Ocean near Sayulita, Mexico. Cumulonimbus clouds are known as clouds of vertical development, since their base and summit can be at dramatically different elevations.
    cumulonimbus_0401.jpg
  • A storm crosses over Mount Emma bringing rain to the desert in northern Arizona. Mount Emma, 7698 feet tall (2346 meters), is part of the Uinkaret Mountains in the Kaibab National Forest.
    AZ_MountEmma_Storm_4918.jpg
  • A dark storm cloud stretches over Puget Sound at sunset in this view from Alki Beach, Seattle, Washington.
    Alki_StormySunset_1792.jpg
  • Approaching storm clouds, turned red by the setting sun, frame the moon as it rises over a large hoodoo in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah. Hoodoos are remanants of large sandstone fins that have been subjected to centuries of erosion.
    Bryce-Canyon_Moonrise_4375.jpg
  • The moon rises in a break in storm clouds passing over the dramatic red rocks of Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah.
    Bryce-Canyon_Stormy-Moonrise_4351.jpg
  • An approaching autumn storm is visible on the ampitheater cliffs in this view from Rainbow Point in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah. Bryce Canyon is known for its ampitheater full of hoodoos, or spires, are remanants of large sandstone fins that have been subjected to centuries of erosion.
    Bryce-Canyon_Rainbow-Point_Fall-Stor...jpg
  • Clouds streaking over the summit of Mount Si in Washington state are turned red by the rising sun. Mount Si, located in North Bend, has an elevation of 4,167 feet (1,270 meters). The mountain, at the western edge of the Cascade Range, is a remnant of an oceanic plate volcano. Its summit is a class 3 rock scramble known as the Haystack.
    WA_MountSi_Autumn-Sunrise_5877.jpg
  • Early morning fog somewhat obscures the view of Mount Si at daybreak in Snoqualmie, Washington. Mount Si, which has an elevation of 4,167 feet (1,270 meters), is located at the western edge of the Cascade Range and is a remnant of an oceanic plate volcano. Its summit is a class 3 rock scramble known as the Haystack.
    MountSi_Foggy-Morning_5794.jpg
  • A flock of western sandpipers (Calidris mauri) flies in the fog after foraging in the mudflats of Leque Island near Standwood, Washington.
    Sandpipers-Western_Foggy_EideRoad_52...jpg
  • Cumulus clouds cast shadows on a layer of haze over the North Cascades in Washington state.
    Clouds_Cumulus_Shadow-Streaks_Aerial...jpg
  • Low cumulus clouds hang over the colorful land of Baffin Island in Nunavut, Canada. The remote Baffin Island is the fifth largest island in the world and has a popluation of just 11,000.
    Canada_BaffinIsland_Aerial_Clouds_37...jpg
  • Late afternoon storm clouds develop over lichen-covered volcanic rocks and hills near Hveragerði in southern Iceland.
    Iceland_Developing-Clouds_Volcanic-R...jpg
  • Sunlight streaks through a break in the dark clouds during a rainstorm over the Hengill mountains in southwestern Iceland.
    Iceland_Hengill_Rainstorm_3256.jpg
  • A giant stack of lenticular clouds forms near the summit of Mount Rainier in Washington state in the golden light of sunset. Lenticular clouds form when moist air is forced up and over mountains or other large obstructions. The moist air condenses and becomes a visible cloud as it rises. While lenticular clouds can hover directly over mountain peaks, they can form some distance away from the summit when the winds are strong. Mount Rainier is the tallest mountain in Washington state and the highest volcano in the Cascade Range.
    Rainier_Lenticular_Sunset_Sky-Island...jpg
  • A rainbow stretches across the sky over Mont Saint-Michel Bay over the tidal island of Tombelaine in Normandy, France.
    MontSaintMichel_Tombelaine_Rainbow_5...jpg
  • A heavy rainstorm passes over the Olympic Mountains — including the Brothers, which is visible at left — at sunset, in this view from Hood Canal near Hansville, Washington.
    Olympics_Stormy-Sunset_Panorama_7863...jpg
  • Morning fog partially obscures the autumn trees and their reflections on Kendall Lake, located in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio.
    OH_Cuyahoga-Valley-NP_Kendall-Lake_F...jpg
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