Alaska Vacation Guide System
Alaska Parks

The Bering Land Bridge that connected asia with North America more than 13,000 years ago during the Pleistocene ice age. The majority of this land bridge, once thousands of miles wide, now lies beneath the waters of the Chukchi and Bering Seas.

Denali National Park and Preserve is located in Interior Alaska and contains Denali, the tallest mountain in North America.

Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve is one of several large U.S. National Parks (8.5 million acres) in Alaska. The park lies just north of, and is entirely within, the Arctic Circle.

No roads lead to Glacier National park and it is most easily reached by a variety of National Park Service ferries or by air travel to the small community of Gustavus. Despite the lack of roads, the park averages 380,000 visitors per year.

Kenai Fjords National Park is a United States National Park on the Kenai Peninsula in southcentral Alaska near the town of Seward. The park contains the Harding Icefield, one of the largest ice fields in the United States.

Kobuk Valley National Park is in northwestern Alaska. It is noted for the Great Kobuk Sand Dunes and caribou migration routes. The park offers backcountry camping, hiking, backpacking and dog sledding.

Lake Clark National Park and Preserve includes many streams and lakes vital to the Bristol Bay salmon fishery. The park allows a wide variety of recreational activities year-round.

The Noatak River system, located just north of the Arctic Circle, is thought to be the last remaining complete river system in the United States that has not been altered by human activities.

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve is the largest national park in the United States covering an area over 13 million acres.


"You can get anything you want @ CeeAmerica"