It's more than a mountain. Denali National Park & Preserve features North America's highest mountain, 20, 320-foot tall Mount McKinley. The Alaska Range also includes countless other spectacular mountains and many large glaciers.
Katmai is famous for volcanoes, brown bears, fish, and rugged wilderness and is also the site of the Brooks River National Historic Landmark with North America's highest concentration of prehistoric human dwellings (about 900).
Sweeping from rocky coastline to glacier-crowned peaks, Kenai Fjords National Park encompasses 607, 805 acres of unspoiled wilderness on the southeast coast of Alaska?s Kenai Peninsula.
Alaska's oldest federally designated park was established in 1910 to commemorate the 1804 Battle of Sitka.
Beaver Creek NWR is a Class I, clear water river, that flows past jagged limestone peaks in the White Mountains and through the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge before joining the Yukon River. It may be the longest road-to-road float in North America.
Crossing the Brooks Range is one of the true motoring adventures available in North America. One of the best places to see Dall sheep in Alaska is on the rocky slopes of Atigun Pass (mile 240, elevation 4, 739 feet) along Dalton Highway.
This 1-million-acre area is used primarily from February to April, when dog-mushers, snowmobilers, and skiers come to take advantage of the winter solitude and northern lights.
The Chena Project offers a host of recreational opportunities and a variety of Alaskan scenery to enjoy throughtout the year.
You can camp in a campground - or in a cabin. You can hike through dense forest, alpine meadow, or on a wooden trail through marshland called muskeg. You can explore world-class caves.
The mountains and waters of the Kenai Peninsula, the islands and glaciers of Prince William Sound, and the wetlands and birds of the Copper River Delta make this forest a prime destination for adventurers the world over.