Denali National Park and Preserve IUCN Category II (National Park) Location Denali Borough and Matanuska-Susitna Borough Alaska USA Nearest city Healy Coordinates 63200N 150300W / 63.333333N 150.5W / 63.333333; -150.5Coordinates: 63200N 150300W / 63.333333N 150.5W / 63.333333; -150.5 Area 6075107 acres (24585.09 km2) Established February 26 1917 Visitors 1178745   (in 2005) Governing body National Park Service

Park Service Changes Tack About Denali Road Lottery Applications
The National Park Service backtracked Tuesday when it announced it will accept entries for the annual Denali Road Lottery by phone and mail.


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Denali National Park
Everything you ever wanted to know about Denali National Park
Denali National Park and Preserve is located in Interior Alaska and contains Denali (Mount McKinley) the highest mountain in North America. The park and preserve together cover 9492 mi (24585 km).The longest glacier is the Kalhiltna glacier. Contents 1 Overview 2 Wildlife 3 Geography 4 Climate 5 Vehicle access 6 Wilderness 7 Prehistory and protohistory 7.1 Fossils 8 Interactive image map 9 References 10 External links Overview See also: Denali naming dispute

Climber dies after reaching summit of Mt. McKinley
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - A climber died in his tent shortly after reaching the summit of Mount McKinley, North America's highest peak, the National Park Service said on Saturday.

Customer Service DENALI NATIONAL PARK Originally established to protect its large mammals not because of majestic Mount McKinley Denali National Park at 6 million acres large is larger than the State of Massachusetts It
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Ptarmigan Song

Denali National Park and Preserve - Plan Your Visit (U.S. ...
Roughly 400,000 intrepid travelers journey to Denali National Park and Preserve each year, primarily between late May and early September. ...
The word "Denali" means "the high one" in the native Athabaskan language and refers to the mountain itself. The mountain was named after president William McKinley of Ohio in 1897 by local prospector William A. Dickey although McKinley had no connection with the region. The name is only used by those outside of Alaska. Charles Alexander Sheldon took an interest in the Dall sheep native to the region and became concerned that human encroachment might threaten the species. After his 1907-1908 visit he petitioned the people of Alaska and Congress to create a preserve for the sheep. (His account of the visit was published posthumously as The Wilderness of Denali ISBN 1-56833-152-5). The park was established as Mount McKinley National Park on February 26 1917. However only a portion of Mount McKinley (not even including the summit) was within the original park boundary. The park was designated an international biosphere reserve in 1976. A separate Denali National Monument was proclaimed by Jimmy Carter on December 1 1978. Denali as seen from the park road Denali National Park

Denali Road lottery entry options expanded
DENALI NATIONAL PARK, Alaska - The National Park Service again has changed its mind about rules for the Denali Road lottery. The Park Service said Tuesday the change was made in response to comm...

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Denali National Park and Preserve - Wikipedia, the free ...
Denali National Park and Preserve is located in Interior Alaska and contains Denali (Mount McKinley), the highest mountain in North America. ...
Mount McKinley National Park whose name had been subject to local criticism from the onset and Denali National Monument were incorporated and established into Denali National Park and Preserve by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act December 2 1980. At this time the Alaska Board of Geographic Names changed the name of the mountain back to "Denali" even though the U.S. Board of Geographic Names maintains "McKinley". Alaskans tend to use "Denali" and rely on context to distinguish between the park and the mountain. The size of the national park is over 6 million acres (24500 km) of which 4724735.16 acres (19120 km) are federally owned. The national preserve is 1334200 acres (543 km) of which 1304132 acres (5278 km) are federally owned. On December 2 1980 a 2146580 acre (8687 km) Denali Wilderness was established within the park.

Park Service changes tack about Denali Road Lottery applications
FAIRBANKS — The National Park Service backtracked Tuesday when it announced it will accept entries for the annual Denali Road Lottery by phone and mail. Complaints from the public prompted the par...


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Denali Park Resorts
Denali Park Resorts located on the George Parks highway in Denali Park, Alaska offers seasonal accommodation between May and September.
Denali habitat is a mix of forest at the lowest elevations including deciduous taiga. The preserve is also home to tundra at middle elevations and glaciers rock and snow at the highest elevations. Today the park hosts more than 400000 visitors who enjoy wildlife viewing mountaineering and backpacking. Wintertime recreation includes dog-sledding cross-country skiing and snowmobiling where allowed. Wildlife Grizzly bear in Denali National Park

Park Service again changes road lottery rules
DENALI NATIONAL PARK, Alaska (AP) — The National Park Service again has changed its mind about rules for the Denali Road lottery.

Foto vom MountMcKinley und Wonder Lake im Herbst mit krftigen Herbstfarben im Denali Nationalpark in Alaska USA
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Denali National Park travel guide - Wikitravel
Open source travel guide to Denali National Park, featuring up-to-date information on attractions, hotels, restaurants, nightlife, travel tips and more. Free and ...
Denali is home to a variety of Alaskan birds and mammals including a healthy population of grizzly bears and black bears. Herds of caribou roam throughout the park. Dall sheep are often seen on mountainsides and moose feed on the aquatic plants of the small lakes and swamps. Despite human impact on the area Denali accommodates gray wolf dens both historic and active. Smaller animals such as hoary marmots arctic ground squirrels beavers pikas and snowshoe hares are seen in abundance. Foxes martens lynx wolverines also inhabit the park but are more rarely seen due to their elusive natures.

Missing Alaska sled dog musher turns up alive, safe
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - An Alaska sled dog musher who had been missing since the Memorial Day weekend has been located alive and safe, the Alaska State Troopers said Saturday.

immediately we saw a moose cow and her calf grazing by the road Later we saw a family of Dall Sheep grazing on the side of the road and were able to watch them closely for some time Denali National Park on a cloudy day in June We also saw an owl s nest with a parent and two large fluffy chicks a family of brown grizzly bears from a distance and a large
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Denali National Park - Denali Park Travel Planning & Insider Tips
Get all the Denali National Park trip planning information you need like hotels or lodging and tours with booking, pricing, and advice. ...
The park is also well known for its bird population. Many migratory species reside in the park during late spring and summer. Birdwatchers may find waxwings Arctic Warblers pine grosbeaks and wheatears as well as Ptarmigan and the majestic tundra swan. Predatory birds include a variety of hawks owls and the gyrfalcon as well as the abundant but striking golden eagle.

Park Service again changes road lottery rules
The Associated Press The Associated Press DENALI NATIONAL PARK, Alaska The National Park Service again has changed its mind about rules for the Denali Road lottery. The Park Service said Tuesday the change was made in response to comments received from the public about last month's move to restrict applications to online entries only. The Park Service says beginning Friday, entries also will be ...


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Denali National Park Visitors Guide
Welcome to the Denali National Park Visitors Guide. Here you will find general visitors information on ... Denali National Park is an area that predominately without trails. ...
Ten species of fish including trout salmon and arctic grayling share the waters of the park. Because many of the rivers and lakes of Denali are fed by glaciers glacial silt and cold temperatures slow the metabolism of the fish preventing them from reaching normal sizes. A single amphibious species the wood frog also lives among the lakes of the park.

Missing Alaskan musher turns up alive and safe after 12 days... but where was she?
An Alaska sled dog musher who had been missing since the Memorial Day weekend has been located alive and safe - 12 days after she was last seen, according to Alaska State Troopers.

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Denali National Park May 18th 2011

Denali National Park & Preserve - Areaparks.com
From a short day-trip to an extended backcountry adventure, Denali has the makings for among your most memorable national park experiences. more...
Denali park rangers maintain a constant effort to keep the wildlife wild by limiting the interaction between humans and park animals. However the number of wild bears necessitates their wearing collars to track movements. Feeding animals is strictly forbidden as it may cause adverse affects on the feeding habits of the creature. Visitors are encouraged to view animals from safe distances. Despite the large concentration of bears in the park efforts by rangers to educate backpackers and visitors about preventative measures and BRFCs have greatly reduced the number of dangerous encounters. Certain areas of the park are often closed due to uncommon wildlife activity such as denning areas of wolves and bears or recent kill sites. These restricted areas may change throughout the year. Through the collective care of park staff and visitors Denali has become a premier destination for wildlife viewing. Geography Painting of the heavily glaciated southern part of Denali by Heinrich Berann Alpine forest and lakes in Denali by Carol M. Highsmith

Missing musher found, taken to hospital
Volunteers found Iditarod veteran Melanie Gould alive Saturday in the Cantwell area, more than 11 days after the Talkeetna musher first disappeared.


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DENALI NATIONAL PARK – The #1 Travel Guide To Denali
DENALI NATIONAL PARK ALASKA Travel Information Including details about reservations, businesses, wildlife, maps, stories, towns, and what to expect
The Alaska Range a mountainous expanse running through the entire park provides interesting ecosystems in Denali. Because the fall line lies as low as 2500 feet (760 m) wooded areas are rare inside the park except in the flatter western sections surrounding Wonder Lake most of the park is vast expanses of tundra. and lowlands of the park where flowing waters melt the frozen ground. Spruces and willows make up the majority of these treed areas. Because of mineral content ground temperature and a general lack of soil areas surrounding the bases of mountains are not suitable for sufficient tree growth and most trees and shrubs do not reach full size. Having a range of elevations there is a variety of vegetation zones. From lowest to highest there is low brush bog bottomland spruce-poplar forest upland spruce-hardwood forest moist tundra and finally the highest of elevations alpine tundra. Throughout Denali's history there has been a patchwork pattern of different plants relying on fire. Because of this the fire history is too complicated to explain. North of the Alaskan Range fires are common occurring when old forests need replacement. Tundra is the predominate ground cover of the park. Layers of topsoil collect on rotten fragmented rock moved by thousands of years of glacial activity. Mosses ferns grasses and fungi quickly fill the topsoil and in areas of muskeg "wet tundra" tussocks form and may collect algae. The term muskeg includes very spongy waterlogged tussocks as well as deep pools of water covered by solid looking moss. Wild blueberries and soap berries thrive in this landscape and provide the bears of Denali with the main part of their diets. Over 450 species of flowering plants fill the park and can be viewed in bloom throughout summer. Images of goldenrod fireweed lupine bluebell and gentian filling the valleys of Denali are often used on postcards and in artwork. Climate Long winters are followed by short growing seasons. Eighty percent of the bird population returns after cold monthsraising their young. Most mammals and other wildlife in the park spend the brief summer months preparing for winter and raising their young. Summers are usually cool and damp but temperatures in the 70s are not rare. The weather is so unpredictable that there have even been instances of snow in August. The north and south side of the Alaskan Range have a completely different climate. The Gulf of Alaska carries moisture to the south side but the mountains block water to the north side. This brings a drier climate and huge temperature fluctuations to the north. The south receives transitional maritime continental climateswith moister cooler summers and warmer winters. Vehicle access The single road within Denali National Park The park is serviced by a 91-mile (146 km) road from the George Parks Highway to the mining camp of Kantishna. It runs east to west north of and roughly parallel to the imposing Alaska Range. Only a small fraction of the road is paved because permafrost and the freeze-thaw cycle create an enormous cost for maintaining the road. Only the first 15 miles (24 km) of the road are available to private vehicles and beyond this point visitors must access the interior of the park through concessionary buses. Wonder Lake can be reached by a six-hour bus ride from the Wilderness Access Center. Eielson Visitor Center is located four hours into the park on the road. Several fully-narrated tours of the park are available the most popular of which is the Tundra Wilderness Tour. The tours travel from the initial boreal forests through tundra to the Toklat River or Kantishna. A clear view of the mountain is only possible about 20% of the time during the summer although it is visible more often during the winter. Several portions of the road run alongside sheer cliffs that drop hundreds of feet at the edges and there are no guardrails. As a result of the danger involved and because most of the gravel road is only one lane wide drivers are trained extensively in procedures for navigating the sharp mountain curves and yielding the right-of-way to opposing buses and park vehicles. While the main park road goes straight through the middle of the Denali National Park Wilderness the national preserve and portions of the park not designated wilderness are even more inaccessible. There are no roads extending out to the preserve areas which are on the far west end of the park. The far north of the park characterized by hills and rivers is accessed by the Stampede Trail a dirt road which stops at the park boundary. The very rugged south portion of the park characterized by enormous glacier filled canyons is accessed by Petersville Road a dirt road that stops about 5 miles (8.0 km) outside of the park. The mountains can be accessed most easily by air taxis that land on the glaciers. Wilderness The Denali Wilderness is a wilderness area in the Denali National Park and Preserve. It encompasses the high heart of the Alaska Range including Denali the centerpiece of the wilderness which comprises about one-third of the national park. Denali Wilderness covers the area formerly known as Mount McKinley National Park from 1917 until the park was expanded and renamed in 1980. It is 2146580 acres (8687 km) in area; the entire park is larger than the state of Massachusetts.1 Prehistory and protohistory An immense collection of cultural sites gives more and more clues as to what and who used to live there. Thousand of years ago grassland was abundant and mammoths utilized the flat Mammoth Steppe to move and graze. Around 11000 to 13500 years ago these grasslands shrunk and woody shrubs began to appear. Back then the North-Alaskan Range was predominantly ice free. 187 cultural sites tell about Denali's past eighty-four have prehistoric items. Native Americans have lived in this environment for 11000 years using every resource the wild provided. The Koyukon Dena'ina Athna Kolchan Tanana and Athabaskans are particularly known. Panoramic view of the Polychrome Mountains Fossils Denali is emerging as a site of interesting fossils including footprints (ichnites) that were credited with being the first evidence of prehistoric wading birds probing in mudflats for food during the Late Cretaceous Period when they were first publicly reported in May 2006. A footprint of a carnivorous theropod had previously been reported in the park. Interactive image map Painting of the heavily glaciated southern part of Denali looking north-northwest. Mount Foraker is at the left and Mt. McKinley purposely drawn on an exaggerated scale is featured in the center. Mouse over the painting and click on an area of interest. References Wilderness.net Denali Wilderness External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Denali National Park National Park Service: Denali National Park & Preserve Denali National Park travel guide from Wikitravel NPS Education packet v d eNational parks of the United States Acadia  American Samoa  Arches  Badlands  Big Bend  Biscayne  Black Canyon of the Gunnison  Bryce Canyon  Canyonlands  Capitol Reef  Carlsbad Caverns  Channel Islands  Congaree  Crater Lake  Cuyahoga Valley  Death Valley  Denali  Dry Tortugas  Everglades  Gates of the Arctic  Glacier  Glacier Bay  Grand Canyon  Grand Teton  Great Basin  Great Sand Dunes  Great Smoky Mountains  Guadalupe Mountains  Haleakal  Hawaii Volcanoes  Hot Springs  Isle Royale  Joshua Tree  Katmai  Kenai Fjords  Kings Canyon  Kobuk Valley  Lake Clark  Lassen Volcanic  Mammoth Cave  Mesa Verde  Mount Rainier  North Cascades  Olympic  Petrified Forest  Redwood  Rocky Mountain  Saguaro  Sequoia  Shenandoah  Theodore Roosevelt  Virgin Islands  Voyageurs  Wind Cave  Wrangell-St. Elias  Yellowstone  Yosemite  Zion                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     List of National Parks of the United States (by elevation) v d eProtected Areas of Alaska Federal National Parks Denali Gates of the Arctic Glacier Bay Katmai Kenai Fjords Kobuk Valley Lake Clark Wrangell-St. Elias National Historical Parks Klondike Gold Rush Sitka National Monuments Admiralty Island Aniakchak Cape Krusenstern Misty Fjords World War II Valor in the Pacific National Preserves Bering Land Bridge National Preserve Noatak National Preserve Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve National Wildlife Refuges Alaska Maritime Alaska Peninsula Arctic Becharof Innoko Izembek Kanuti Kenai Kodiak Koyukuk Nowitna Saint Lazaria Selawik Tetlin Togiak Yukon Delta Yukon Flats National Forests Chugach Tongass U.S. Wilderness Areas Aleutian Islands Andreafsky Becharof Bering Sea Bogoslof Chamisso Chuck River Coronation Island Denali Endicott River Forrester Island Gates of the Artic Glacier Bay Hazy Islands Innoko Izembek Karta River Katmai Kenai Kobuk Valley Kootznoowoo Koyukuk Kuiu Lake Clark Maurille Islands Misty Fjords Mollie Beattie Noatak Nunivak Petersburg Creek-Duncan Salt Chuck Pleasant/Lemusurier/Inian Islands Russell Fjord Saint Lazaria Selawik Semidi Simeonof South Baranof South Etolin South Prince of Wales Stikine-LeConte Tebenkof Bay Togiak Tracy Arm-Fords Terror Tuxedni Unimak Warren Island West Chichagof-Yakobi Wrangell-Saint Elias National Conservation Area Steese National Conservation Area State State Parks Afognak Island State Park Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve Baranof Castle Hill State Historic Site Birch Lake State Recreation Site Chena River State Recreation Area Chena River State Recreation Site Chugach State Park Deep Creek State Recreation Area Denali State Park Kachemak Bay State Park Wood-Tikchik State Park State Forests Haines Tanana Valley Alaska Department of Natural Resources

In brief: Police say man ran over two cows - Sun, 12 Jun 2011 PST
PROSSER, Wash. – Prosser police say a man ran over two of his own cows when he couldn’t get them back onto his property. Officer Mark Cole said the 57-year-old man was reportedly using his van to try to corral six cows that had escaped Friday afternoon.

Shuttle buses bring tourist into Denali
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