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  • Pictured are just some of the tapestries in the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown Los Angeles that were created by artist John Nava. The tapestries are the largest collection in a Catholic church in the United States. The cathedral was designed by Rafael Moneo in a postmodern style. The cathedral opened in 2002, replaced the Cathedral of Saint Viviana which was severely damaged in a 1994 earthquake.
    Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels ...jpg
  • Visitors to the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown Los Angeles pose for a photo next to a Christmas display. The Roman Catholic cathedral was designed by Rafael Moneo in a postmodern style. The cathedral opened in 2002, replaced the Cathedral of Saint Viviana which was severely damaged in a 1994 earthquake.
    Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels ...jpg
  • A nutcracker statue peers out a window in the 300 block of  South Broadway at West 4th St. in downtown Los Angeles. Modern building to the left is the California Plaza skyscraper.
    Nutcracker street scene.jpg
  • A book lies next to a burned pay phone in the 300 block of South Broadway in downtown Los Angeles.
    Burned book.jpg
  • The downtown Los Angeles skyline is framed by the trees and lake at Echo Park. The park was established in 1892. The lake’s fountain was installed as party of the city’s hosting of the 1984 Olympic Games. The park was designed by Joseph Henry Tomlinson in a “picturesque” style of open lawns, groves of trees and winding pathways. The park is popular with families for boating, walking, jogging and people watching.
    Echo Park.jpg
  • Architectural detail of Union Station in Los Angeles. The train station is the largest passenger terminal in the Western United States, opened in 1939. Today is serves nearly 110,000 passengers a day with Amtrak long distance trains and local Metrolink commuter trains, subway and light rail.
    Union Station ticket lobby.jpg
  • Tree roots of a tree at Echo Park in Los Angeles.
    Echo Park tree roots.jpg
  • Night-time close-up view of two of the featured six astronomers that make up the Astronomers Monument at the Griffith Observatory in Griffith Park in Los Angeles. Completed in 1934, the concrete statue is a Public Works of Art Project. The six astronomers featured in the monument are: Hipparchus, Nicolaus Copernicus, Galileo Galilei, Johannes Kepler, Isaac Newton and John Herschel.
    Astronomers Monument.jpg
  • People enjoy a garden at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003, was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
    Disney Concert Hall garden.jpg
  • The original ticket lobby and its ticket counter of Union Station in Los Angeles. The train station is the largest passenger terminal in the Western United States, opened in 1939. Today is serves nearly 110,000 passengers a day with Amtrak long distance trains and local Metrolink commuter trains, subway and light rail.
    Union Station ticket lobby-2.jpg
  • Tourists pose for a photo in the atrium of the Bradbury Building, located in downtown Los Angeles. The Bradbury, built in 1893, is the oldest commercial building remaining in the central city. The five-story office building is known for its skylit atrium and ornate ironwork. The building has been the location for many movies and television shoots.
    Bradbury Building tourists.jpg
  • Detail of the interior of the Bradbury Building, located in downtown Los Angeles. The Bradbury, built in 1893, is the oldest commercial building remaining in the central city. The five-story office building is known for its skylit atrium and ornate ironwork. The building has been the location for many movies and television shoots.
    Bradbury Building atrium.jpg
  • People enjoy lunch at Sarita’s Pupuseria located in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    Sarita’s Pupuseria_.jpg
  • Signs of some of the food vendors in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    _.jpg
  • Clouds seen at sunset from the Griffith Observatory in Griffith Park in Los Angeles.
    Los Angeles sunset.jpg
  • Haze from recent wildfires in the Los Angeles area hangs over the city in this view from the Griffith Observatory in Griffith Park.
    Los Angeles sunset.jpg
  • The curved stainless-steel exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall located in downtown Los Angeles was designed by architect Frank Gehry. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003
    Disney Concert Hall exterior.jpg
  • Detail of the ironwork decoration in the atrium of the Bradbury Building, located in downtown Los Angeles. The Bradbury, built in 1893, is the oldest commercial building remaining in the central city. The five-story office building is known for its skylit atrium and ornate ironwork. The building has been the location for many movies and television shoots.
    Bradbury Building ironwork.jpg
  • Detail of the facade of the Million Dollar Theater in downtown Los Angeles. The theater was one of the first movie palaces in the United States. It was built in 1917 by  movie theater owner Sid Grauman.  Sculptor Joseph Mora was responsible for the exterior ornamentation.
    Million Dollar Theater facade.jpg
  • People enjoy lunch at Berlin Currywurst located in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    Berlin Currywurst.jpg
  • Sign for Berlin Currywurst, of one of the food vendors in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    Berlin Currywurst sign.jpg
  • Sign of one of the food vendors in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    Ana Maria sign.jpg
  • Night-time detail of the Griffith Observatory building located in Griffith Park in Los Angeles. The Works Progress Administration (WPA) project was completed in 1935 and was the country’s third planetarium at that time. Since it’s opening, the Observatory has had over 81 million visitors.
    Griffith Observatory.jpg
  • Among the major highways that connect Los Angeles to the rest of the nation is U.S. Route 101, which travels the California, Oregon and Washington coasts for 1,550 miles. This image of the highway and downtown Los Angeles was taken from the Jerome C. Daniel Overlook.<br />
<br />
Los Angeles, located on the Pacific Ocean in southern California, is the second-most populous city in the United States. It is the regions business and cultural center, most famously known for the entertainment, television, and motion picture industries.
    U.S. Route 101 Los Angeles.jpg
  • The curved stainless-steel exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall located in downtown Los Angeles was designed by architect Frank Gehry. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003
    Disney Concert Hall exterior detail-...jpg
  • The curved stainless-steel exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall located in downtown Los Angeles was designed by architect Frank Gehry. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003
    Disney Concert Hall exterior detail-...jpg
  • The curved stainless-steel exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall located in downtown Los Angeles was designed by architect Frank Gehry. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003
    Disney Concert Hall exterior detail.jpg
  • Signs in downtown Los Angeles
    Signs in downtown Los Angeles.jpg
  • Signs in downtown Los Angeles
    Signs in downtown Los Angeles.jpg
  • Sign for Sarita's Pupuseria,  of one of the food vendors in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    Grand Central Market food vendor sig...jpg
  • Detail of the many candies for sale at La Huerta Candy in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    La Huerta Candy.jpg
  • Sign of one of the food vendors in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    Valeria's Chiles & Spices sign.jpg
  • Sign of one of the food vendors in the Grand Central Market located in downtown Los Angeles. The market, which opened in 1917, is home to food and drink vendors.
    Torres Produce sign.jpg
  • The pipe organ of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels is believed to be the 89th largest pipe organ in North America and the 143rd largest in the world. It was built by Dobson Pipe Organ Builders, Ltd., of Lake City, Iowa with visual design collaboration with Cathedral architect Rafael Moneo. The organ’s burnished tin facade is the largest facade in the United States  made of polished tin.
    Pipe organ of the Cathedral of Our L...jpg
  • Burned pay phone in the 300 block of South Broadway in downtown Los Angeles.
    Burned pay phone.jpg
  • Clouds seen at sunset from the Griffith Observatory in Griffith Park in Los Angeles.
    Los Angeles sunset-3.jpg
  • Among the major highways that connect Los Angeles to the rest of the nation is U.S. Route 101, which travels the California, Oregon and Washington coasts for 1,550 miles. This image of the highway and downtown Los Angeles was taken from the Jerome C. Daniel Overlook.<br />
<br />
Los Angeles, located on the Pacific Ocean in southern California, is the second-most populous city in the United States. It is the regions business and cultural center, most famously known for the entertainment, television, and motion picture industries.
    U.S. Route 101 Los Angeles-2.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured is a detail of the roller mill manufactured by Barnard and Leas Manufacturing Co. A roller mill is used for the “first break” where the husk was sheared from the wheat kernel. <br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-8.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured is a roller mill manufactured by Barnard and Leas Manufacturing Co. A roller mill is used for the “first break” where the husk was sheared from the wheat kernel. <br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-9.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured in the back row are roller mills, used for the “first break” where the husk was sheared from the wheat kernel. At far right, foreground, is a Barnard & Leas horizontal bran duster, used to separate flour from bran.<br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-4.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured are a feeder/mixer, roller mill and horizontal bran duster, all manufactured by Barnard and Leas Manufacturing Co.<br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-7.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured is a utility grinder, used to grind small amounts of material such as coffee.<br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-6.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured is a Barnard & Leas horizontal bran duster, used to separate flour from bran.<br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-5.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured at left is a Whitmore middlings purifier, used to separate the bran from the usable part of the flour. At right is a flour dresser used to sift the flour through finer wire and silk reels.<br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-3.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel.<br />
<br />
Pictured is a detail of the flour dresser, used to sift the flower through finer wire and silk reels.<br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill-2.jpg
  • Dillard Mill, located along Huzzah Creek, is one of Missouri’s best-preserved water-powered gristmills. The mill, now part of the Dillard Mill State Historic Site, was built in 1908 and was in business until 1956 making it the longest-running mill of its kind in the state. Since 1977, the Dillard Mill State Historic Site has been leased by the L-A-D Foundation to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for management by Missouri State Parks.<br />
<br />
Formerly known as the Mischke Mill before its restoration was completed in 1980, Dillard Mill uses an underwater turbine rather than a water wheel. <br />
<br />
When it was an operating mill, area farmers would bring their grain to the mill to be ground into flour and eventually livestock feed. Most of Dillard Mill's original machinery is still operational. Visitors can see and hear the sounds of the machinery and turbine just as millers did over a hundred years ago. <br />
<br />
Dillard Mill State Historic Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
    Dillard Mill.jpg
  • Photojournalist John L. Dengler poses with a chum salmon carcass along the Herman Creek man-made spawning channel near Haines, Alaska. Dengler was photographing ecologist Rachel Wheat working on her research project. Wheat was collecting DNA samples from the saliva of bears who had partially eaten the salmon as part of her Ph.D. dissertation.
    John L. Dengler with salmon carcass.jpg
  • Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (center), attaches a solar-powered GPS satellite transmitter (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) to the back of a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) using a lightweight harness. Assisting Lewis with the attaching of the GPS satellite transmitter by holding the eagle is Yiwei Wang, graduate student, University of California Santa Cruz (right). Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska (left), films the procedure using a Go-Pro camera. The eagle, captured in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve will be tracked by Rachel Wheat, a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The latest tracking location data of this bald eagle known as "2Z" can be found here: http://www.ecologyalaska.com/eagle-tracker/2z/ . During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 20.jpg
  • Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (left) and Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska (right), take blood samples from a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) captured in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Holding the eagle is Yiwei Wang, graduate student, University of California Santa Cruz. Blood samples are taken of the eagles to study for various things including chemical contaminants such as mercury. Rachel Wheat, graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz (not pictured) is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. The latest tracking location data of this bald eagle known as "2Z" can be found here: http://www.ecologyalaska.com/eagle-tracker/2z/ . During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 24.jpg
  • Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (left) and Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska (right) take blood samples from a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) captured in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Holding the eagle is Yiwei Wang, graduate student, University of California Santa Cruz. Watching the procedure is Rachel Wheat, graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz. Blood samples are taken of the eagles to study for various things including chemical contaminants such as mercury. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. The latest tracking location data of this bald eagle known as "2Z" can be found here: http://www.ecologyalaska.com/eagle-tracker/2z/ . During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 25.jpg
  • Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska (right), reviews a video he made for his website of Rachel Wheat, a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. Information about Wheat’s bald eagle migration study and the latest updates on the locations of the bald eagles she is tracking can be found on the Ecology Alaska website http://www.ecologyalaska.com . Social media and education outreach are an important facet of Wheat’s project. Wheat along with Yiwei Wang, graduate student, University of California Santa Cruz and Dr. Taal Levi, wildlife ecologist, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies funded their various Alaska research projects through an innovative Kickstarter fundraising campaign. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 35.jpg
  • Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, gently resets one of the leg snare traps being used to trap bald eagles on the gravel bar of the Chilkat River. When a bald eagle lands on the hinged perch, a spring is sprung which tightens a looped cord around the eagle’s legs. Lewis, and Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska (left) were assisting in the capture of bald eagles for a research study being conducted by Rachel Wheat, a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz. Wheat is studying the migration of bald eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 41.jpg
  • Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska, checks a blood sample taken from a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) captured in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Ford was assisting, Rachel Wheat, graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz in the processing of eagles she is studying. Blood samples are taken of the eagles to study for various things including chemical contaminants such as mercury. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 27.jpg
  • Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska (left), uses his cell phone to film Rachel Wheat, a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz, for a field report of her describing her bald eagle research. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. Information about Wheat’s bald eagle migration study and the latest updates on the locations of the bald eagles she is tracking can be found on the Ecology Alaska website http://www.ecologyalaska.com . Social media and education outreach are an important part of of Wheat’s project. Wheat along with Yiwei Wang, graduate student, University of California Santa Cruz and Dr. Taal Levi, wildlife ecologist, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies funded their various Alaska research projects through an innovative Kickstarter fundraising campaign. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 34.jpg
  • Once leg snare and net launcher traps to catch bald eagles are set, it is a matter of waiting -- and waiting. On some days no eagles were caught, on others, only one or two were caught. The eagles were being caught as part of a research study being conducted by Rachel Wheat, a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz. Wheat is studying the migration of bald eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. Once caught, solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) are attached to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. The eagles are then released back into the wild. Pictured here on the bank of the Chilkat River (left to right) are Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska,  Yiwei Wang, graduate student, University of California Santa Cruz, Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and Wheat. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 42.jpg
  • Pam Randles, Takshanuk Watershed Council Education Director (center), reviews the previous day’s bald eagle count that her team of students conducted for their citizen science class at the Haines School with a team of researchers studying bald eagle migration. Rachel Wheat (left), a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. Wheat is tracking bald eagles using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal)  that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. Assisting Wheat with the capture, tagging and mounting of the transmitters on the birds are (from right to left): Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska; Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service; Yiwei Wang, graduate student at University of California Santa Cruz; Dr. Taal Levi, wildlife ecologist, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies and Dr. Chris Wilmers, associate professor University of California Santa Cruz (second from left). Also pictured (third person from left) is Liza Gross, freelance journalist. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle count - 40.jpg
  • Avian veterinarian Scott Ford places a salmon carcass as bait in front of a net launcher that will be used to trap bald eagles on the banks of the Chilkat River in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve near Haines. Ford was assisting Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and Rachel Wheat, a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. Wheat is tracking bald eagles using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
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  • Dr. Chris Wilmers, associate professor, University of California Santa Cruz, holds a blood sample taken from a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) captured in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Wilmers was assisting, Rachel Wheat, graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz in the processing of eagles she is studying. Blood samples are taken of the eagles to study for various things including chemical contaminants such as mercury. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
    Bald eagle migration research - 26.jpg
  • Dr. Scott Ford, avian veterinarian, Avian Speciality Veterinary Services of Alaska, comforts a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) captured in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Ford was assisting Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (back to camera) and Rachel Wheat, graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz (not pictured), in the processing of eagles Wheat is studying. Wheat is conducting a bald eagle migration study of eagles that visit the Chilkat River for her doctoral dissertation. She hopes to learn how closely eagles track salmon availability across time and space. The bald eagles are being tracked using solar-powered GPS satellite transmitters (also known as a PTT - platform transmitter terminal) that attach to the backs of the eagles using a lightweight harness. Holding the eagle is Yiwei Wang, graduate student, University of California Santa Cruz. Helping with the recording of measurements taken of the bald eagle is Pam Randles, Takshanuk Watershed Council Education Director (left). The latest tracking location data of this bald eagle known as "2Z" can be found here: http://www.ecologyalaska.com/eagle-tracker/2z/ . During late fall, bald eagles congregate along the Chilkat River to feed on salmon. This gathering of bald eagles in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve is believed to be one of the largest gatherings of bald eagles in the world.
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  • A hike pauses just off the Devil’s Den Self-Guided Trail in Devil’s Den State Park.<br />
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Devil's Den State Park is an Arkansas state park located in the Lee Creek Valley of the Boston Mountains in the Ozarks. Devil’s Den State Park contains one of the largest sandstone crevice areas in the U.S. The park contains many geologic features such like crevices, caves, rock shelters, and bluffs. The park is also known for its well-preserved Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) structures built in the 1930s. These structures, still in use today include cabins, trails, a dam, and shelter.<br />
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Devil’s Den State Park has approximately 64 miles of trails that are popular with hikers, mountain bikers and horseback riders. One popular trail is the Devil’s Den Self-Guided Trail (1.5 miles long) that passes by Devil’s Den Cave (550 feet), Devil’s Den Ice Box, numerous rock crevices, and Twin Falls. Another popular trail is the Yellow Rock Trail (3.1 miles) that leads to expansive views of the Lee Creek Valley.
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  • A hike pauses just off the Devil’s Den Self-Guided Trail in Devil’s Den State Park.<br />
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Devil's Den State Park is an Arkansas state park located in the Lee Creek Valley of the Boston Mountains in the Ozarks. Devil’s Den State Park contains one of the largest sandstone crevice areas in the U.S. The park contains many geologic features such like crevices, caves, rock shelters, and bluffs. The park is also known for its well-preserved Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) structures built in the 1930s. These structures, still in use today include cabins, trails, a dam, and shelter.<br />
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Devil’s Den State Park has approximately 64 miles of trails that are popular with hikers, mountain bikers and horseback riders. One popular trail is the Devil’s Den Self-Guided Trail (1.5 miles long) that passes by Devil’s Den Cave (550 feet), Devil’s Den Ice Box, numerous rock crevices, and Twin Falls. Another popular trail is the Yellow Rock Trail (3.1 miles) that leads to expansive views of the Lee Creek Valley.
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  • A kayaker examines an iceberg from the McBride Glacier on a Muir Inlet beach near Van Horn Ridge in Glacier National Park and Preserve in southeast Alaska.
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  • (L-R) Haines residents Connie Staska and Sue Nelson tour the recently restored fire hall located on the grounds of historic Fort William H. Seward in Haines, Alaska during an open house to celebrate the completion of the restoration. Staska and Nelson are watching a slideshow documenting the restoration work.<br />
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After being absent from the historic Fort Seward skyline since approximately the 1930s, the 60-foot tower of the fort’s fire hall has been restored to its original height. The building and tower, built around 1904 in Haines, Alaska, was shortened to approximately half its height in the 1930s for unknown reasons. The restoration included rebuilding a missing 35-foot section of the 60-foot tower whose purpose was to dry fire hoses. The tower restoration was completed by building its four sections on the ground and then hoisting those sections with a crane into place on top of each other.<br />
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Through the years, the historic Fort Seward area, a former U.S. Army post, has been referred to as Fort William H. Seward, Chilkoot Barracks, and Port Chilkoot. The National Historic Landmarks listing record for the fort says that "Fort Seward was the last of 11 military posts established in Alaska during the territory's gold rushes between 1897 and 1904. Founded for the purpose of preserving law and order among the gold seekers, the fort also provided a U.S. military presence in Alaska during boundary disputes with Canada. The only active military post in Alaska between 1925 and 1940, the fort was closed at the end of World War II.” <br />
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The bottom portion of the fire hall is being leased as commercial space. Due to fire code restrictions there is no public access to the upper portion of the tower. <br />
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The fire hall was restored over a two-year period by owners Joanne Waterman and Phyllis Sage who also own the fort’s original guardhouse located next door to the fire hall. That building, now known as the Alaska Guardhouse, is a bed and breakfast.
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo near a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-12.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while hiking to a lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong at work in a blind in south-central Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong enjoys his tradition of eating a plate of chicken wings after spending the morning photographing grouse. (Editor's note: See before and after photos). ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong enjoys his tradition of eating a plate of chicken wings after spending the morning photographing grouse. (Editor's note: See before and after photos). ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-44.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-33.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-30.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in south-central Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-28.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong at work in a blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong at work on a greater sage-grouse lek in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong enjoys his tradition of eating a plate of chicken wings after spending the morning photographing grouse. (Editor's note: See before and after photos). ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-43.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-35.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-31.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo in his blind in south-central Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-27.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong at work in a blind in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-25.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong trying to locate a greater sage-grouse lek in southwest Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong takes a photo with his iPhone in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Mosquito bites on the back of the hand of John L. Dengler. Photo taken on a backpacking trip in Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong enjoys his tradition of eating a plate of chicken wings after spending the morning photographing grouse. (Editor's note: See before and after photos). ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
    Noppadol Paothong-46.jpg
  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo next to native American petroglyphs at the White Mountian petroglyphs site in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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  • Wildlife photojournalist Noppadol Paothong poses for a photo while working in Wyoming. ©John L. Dengler / DenglerImages.com
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