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Yosemite Falls is reflected in a springtime pool in flooded Cooks Meadow, Yosemite Valley.
Image ID: 16135
Location: Yosemite Falls, Yosemite National Park, California, USA | Yosemite Falls rises above the Merced River, viewed from the Swinging Bridge. The 2425 falls is the tallest in North America. Yosemite Valley.
Image ID: 16143
Location: Yosemite Falls, Yosemite National Park, California, USA | Bridalveil Falls with a rainbow forming in its spray, dropping 620 into Yosemite Valley, displaying peak water flow in spring months from deep snowpack and warm weather melt. Yosemite Valley.
Image ID: 16160
Location: Bridalveil Falls, Yosemite National Park, California, USA |
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Two mature brown bears fight to establish hierarchy and fishing rights.
Image ID: 17036
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Brooks River, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA | Brown bear waits for salmon at Brooks Falls. Blurring of the water is caused by a long shutter speed. Brooks River.
Image ID: 17047
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Brooks River, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA | Delicate Arch, dusted with snow, at sunset, with the snow-covered La Sal mountains in the distance. Delicate Arch stands 45 feet high, with a span of 33 feet, atop of bowl of slickrock sandstone.
Image ID: 18104
Location: Delicate Arch, Arches National Park, Utah, USA |
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Turret Arch through North Window, winter, sunrise.
Image ID: 18120
Location: North Window, Arches National Park, Utah, USA | Brown bear walks on tide flats. Grizzly bear.
Image ID: 19136
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Juvenile female coastal brown bear (grizzly bear) grazes on sedge grass.
Image ID: 19137
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |
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Self portrait at sunrise, panorama of Crater Lake. Crater Lake is the six-mile wide lake inside the collapsed caldera of volcanic Mount Mazama. Crater Lake is the deepest lake in the United States and the seventh-deepest in the world. Its maximum recorded depth is 1996 feet (608m). It lies at an altitude of 6178 feet (1880m).
Image ID: 19130
Location: Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, USA
Pano dimensions: 2726 x 9677 |
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Coastal brown bear in meadow. The tall sedge grasses in this coastal meadow are a food source for brown bears, who may eat 30 lbs of it each day during summer while waiting for their preferred food, salmon, to arrive in the nearby rivers.
Image ID: 19138
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | A brown bear mother (sow) stands in tall sedge grass to look for other approaching bears that may be a threat to her cubs.
Image ID: 19139
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Coastal brown bear forages for razor clams in sand flats at extreme low tide. Grizzly bear.
Image ID: 19140
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |
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Juvenile female brown bear forages for razor clams in sand flats at extreme low tide. Grizzly bear.
Image ID: 19141
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Coastal brown bear on sand flats at low tide.
Image ID: 19142
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Young brown bear stands in tall sedge grass to get a better view of other approaching bears.
Image ID: 19143
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |
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Coastal brown bear walking on sand beach.
Image ID: 19144
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Coastal brown bear walks in Silver Salmon Creek.
Image ID: 19146
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Silver Salmon Creek, Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Young brown bear grazes in tall sedge grass. Brown bears can consume 30 lbs of sedge grass daily, waiting weeks until spawning salmon fill the rivers.
Image ID: 19147
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |
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Brown bears fighting or sparring. These are likely young but sexually mature males that are simply mock fighting for practice.
Image ID: 19148
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Mature male coastal brown bear boar waits on the tide flats at the mouth of Silver Salmon Creek for salmon to arrive. Grizzly bear.
Image ID: 19149
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Brown bear cubs. These cubs are one and a half years old and have yet to leave their mother. They will be on their own and have to fend for themselves next summer.
Image ID: 19150
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |
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Full grown, mature male coastal brown bear boar (grizzly bear) in sedge grass meadows.
Image ID: 19151
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Coastal brown bear forages for razor clams in sand flats at extreme low tide. Grizzly bear.
Image ID: 19152
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | A brown bear mother (sow) stands in tall sedge grass to look for other approaching bears that may be a threat to her cubs.
Image ID: 19153
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |
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Brown bear female sow in sedge meadow, with her three spring cubs hidden by the deep grass next to her. These cubs were born earlier in the spring and will remain with their mother for almost two years, relying on her completely for their survival.
Image ID: 19154
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Coastal brown bear in meadow. The tall sedge grasses in this coastal meadow are a food source for brown bears, who may eat 30 lbs of it each day during summer while waiting for their preferred food, salmon, to arrive in the nearby rivers.
Image ID: 19155
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | Young brown bear grazes in tall sedge grass. Brown bears can consume 30 lbs of sedge grass daily, waiting weeks until spawning salmon fill the rivers.
Image ID: 19156
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |
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Portrait of a young brown bear, pausing while grazing in tall sedge grass. Brown bears can consume 30 lbs of sedge grass daily, waiting weeks until spawning salmon fill the rivers.
Image ID: 19157
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA | A brown bear mother (sow) stands in tall sedge grass to look for other approaching bears that may be a threat to her cubs.
Image ID: 19158
Species: Brown bear, Ursus arctos
Location: Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, USA |