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  • The rising tide envelopes a rock encrusted in blue mussels and acorn barnacles on a beach near the Klotz Hills and not far from Maquinna Cove in Muir Inlet in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska. Prominent in the background is Mt. Wright which is located at the mouth of Adams Inlet. EDITORS NOTE: The use of a slow shutter speed smoothed the action of the waves.
    Klotz Hills beach rock.jpg
  • The sun sets on Muir Inlet and rocks in this image take near the Klotz Hills in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska.
    Klotz Hills sunset 2.jpg
  • Kayakers picked a beach near the Klotz Hills to set up their tent. The location is not far from Maquinna Cove in Muir Inlet in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska. Prominent in the background is Mt. Wright which is located at the mouth of Adams Inlet.
    Klotz Hills camp.jpg
  • The sun sets on Muir Inlet and rocks in this image take near the Klotz Hills in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska.
    Klotz Hills sunset 1.jpg
  • Low tide exposes rockweed at Hunter Cove at sunset on Muir Inlet in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska. Pictured in the near background are the Klotz Hills. Behind the Klotz Hills are mountain peaks of Adams Inlet. Peaks with names are Mount Wright (far right), Mount Case (second from right), and Tree Mountain (far left).
    Hunter Cove rockweed sunset.jpg
  • A kayaker writes in her journal in a tent on a beach near the Klotz Hills and not far from Maquinna Cove in Muir Inlet in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska. Prominent in the background is Mt. Wright which is located at the mouth of Adams Inlet.
    Camper writes in diary.jpg
  • A kayaker stashes their bear resistant food container after landing on a beach near the Klotz Hills and not far from Maquinna Cove in Muir Inlet in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska. Prominent in the background is Mt. Wright which is located at the mouth of Adams Inlet. Use of a bear resistant food container is required by the park as a way to control conflicts with black and grizzly bears.
    Camper stashes BRFC.jpg
  • The Muir Inlet of the East Arm of Glacier Bay in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve offers some of the best sea kayaking in the park. The turquoise color of the water is caused by the minerals contained in “rock flour;” the material that tidewater glaciers release as the glaciers grind rocks into dust on their way to the sea. This aerial view is looking south, down the Muir Inlet. Pictured are: The Nunatak and Nunatak Cove (left foreground); Westdahl Point (right foreground), Stump Cove, the entrance to Wachusett Inlet; Hunter Cove, Rowlee Point, Point McLeod (middle right); Sealers Island (enter); Maquinna Cove (center background); Adams Inlet (center background to left background); Tree Mountain, Mount Case, Mount Right; Garforth Island, Sturgess Island, North Marble Island, South Marble Island, Willoughby Island, the northernmost islands of the Beardslee Island (upper right background); Sitakaday Narrows and the entrance to Glacier Bay (furthermost upper right background).<br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is located in southeast Alaska. Known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall costal mountains, the park is also an important marine wilderness area. The park a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site. The effects of a warming climate are easily seen here. It is a place where can you witness geological change firsthand — change that is normally measured in millennia.
    Muir Inlet aerial of East Arm.jpg
  • The Muir Inlet of the East Arm of Glacier Bay in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve offers some of the best sea kayaking in the park. The turquoise color of the water is caused by the minerals contained in “rock flour;” the material that tidewater glaciers release as the glaciers grind rocks into dust on their way to the sea. This aerial view is looking south, down the Muir Inlet. Pictured are: The Nunatak and Nunatak Cove (left foreground); Westdahl Point (right foreground), Stump Cove, the entrance to Wachusett Inlet; Hunter Cove, Rowlee Point, Point McLeod (middle right); Sealers Island (enter); Maquinna Cove (center background); Adams Inlet (center background to left background); Tree Mountain, Mount Case, Mount Right; Garforth Island, Sturgess Island, North Marble Island, South Marble Island, Willoughby Island, the northernmost islands of the Beardslee Island (upper right background); Sitakaday Narrows and the entrance to Glacier Bay (furthermost upper right background).<br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is located in southeast Alaska. Known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall costal mountains, the park is also an important marine wilderness area. The park a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site. The effects of a warming climate are easily seen here. It is a place where can you witness geological change firsthand — change that is normally measured in millennia.
    Muir Inlet aerial of East Arm.jpg