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  • The last ray of sunlight from the setting sun basks on the Sitakaday Narrows in the main bay of Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in this view seen from Young Island located in the Beardslee Islands of the park in southeast Alaska. At left is Marble Mountain, and in the far background is Mount Abdallah.
    Sitakaday Narrows sunset.jpg
  • Early evening sunlight bathes the rolling hills of the nearly 11,000 acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of Kansas in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy.
    Tallgrass prairie.jpg
  • Male Columbian sharp-tailed grouse perform their mating dance on a lek during the pre-dawn in southern Wyoming.<br />
<br />
The Columbian sharp-tailed grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus columbianus) is one of the seven recognized subspecies of North American sharp-tailed grouse. It is also the rarest and smallest of the subspecies of sharp-tailed grouse. Columbian sharp-tailed grouse have experienced declines in distribution and population due to overuse and development of the mountain shrub and grasslands that it favors. It is native to the sagebrush steppe of the western United States and British Columbia. First described by the Lewis & Clark expedition, Columbian sharp-tailed grouse were once the most abundant grouse in the West. Today, Columbian sharp-tailed grouse no occupy less than 10 percent of its historic range. It is currently considered a Species of Concern in several U.S. states.<br />
<br />
Like other grouse, Columbian sharp-tailed grouse congregate year after year in the spring on a small area known as a lek. Males perform highly animated dancing courtship displays to impress females to mate. These displays consist of rapidly stamping their feet at blur-like speed while keeping with their wings extended, often rotating in a circle.
    Columbian sharp-tailed grouse dancin...jpg
  • Unidentified passengers on the Alaska Marine Highway System ferry m/v Malaspina enjoy the scenery of the Lynn Canal as the sun sets behind the Chilkat Range near Haines, Alaska.
    Chilkat Range sunset on the Lynn Can...jpg
  • Death Valley National Park Visitors come not only to experience the record heat but also the beauty. Despite the desert conditions, the park is known for its spring wildflowers. Under perfect conditions, the park experiences a rare event known as a wildflower "super bloom" which produces a sea wildflowers. Most of the desert wildflowers are annuals. This ensures their survival as this allows them to lie dormant as seeds during times of drought. Here, a field of Desert Gold, also known as Hairy Desert Sunflower, explodes into a sea of yellow during the super bloom of 2016 in Death Valley National Park. In the background is Corkscrew Peak.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Desert gold super bloom.jpg
  • Under the setting moon, rising sun and a bald eagle flying above, Steve Lewis, Raptor Management Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (left) and Rachel Wheat, a graduate student at the University of California Santa Cruz wait for bald eagles to land on the traps they set on the gravel bar of the Chilkat River. Each morning under the cover of darkness they would set their traps. The traps are being used to capture bald eagles that will be used in a study being conducted by Wheat. Once the traps 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. 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 - 68.jpg
  • A bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) sits in a tree in the morning sun in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve along the Chilkat River near Haines, Alaska. 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 in tree-3.jpg
  • A rests on a sunny day along the Byers Creek Trail near Byers Peak in the Byers Peak Wilderness located in the Arapaho National Forest in Colorado. The Byers Peak Wilderness encompasses 8,801 acres in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests near Winter Park, Colorado. The wilderness area was established in 1993. The wilderness area and the 12,804 foot peak are named after William N. Byers, founder of Colorado’s first newspaper, the Rocky Mountain New
    Byers Peak Trail.jpg
  • Death Valley National Park Visitors come not only to experience the record heat but also the beauty. Despite the desert conditions, the park is known for its spring wildflowers. Under perfect conditions, the park experiences a rare event known as a wildflower "super bloom" which produces a sea wildflowers. Most of the desert wildflowers are annuals. This ensures their survival as this allows them to lie dormant as seeds during times of drought. Here, the golden light of sunset bathes Desert Gold, also known as Hairy Desert Sunflower, in Death Valley National Park.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Desert Gold in sunset light.jpg
  • Sun rises on Denali and the Alaska Range as seen from Wonder Lake in Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska. Also pictured is the setting moon, above Denali. Denali is North America's tallest peak at 20,310 feet and towers over 18,000 feet above the surrounding lowlands.
    Denali sunrise with moon.jpg
  • The sun dramatically disappears behind clouds above the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve. The 10,894-acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is located in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy.
    Sunset.jpg
  • Power lines are bathed in sunset evening light in Chase County in Kansas near the Schrumpf Hill Overlook along Kansas State Highway 177. The highway, a National Scenic Byway travels through the Flint Hills in Kansas. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas.
    Power lines sunset.jpg
  • Evening sunset light bathes evening primrose and the rolling hills of the 10,894-acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of Kansas in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy.
    Evening primrose.jpg
  • A bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) sits in a tree in the afternoon sun in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve along the Chilkat River near Haines, Alaska. 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 in tree-6.jpg
  • Sun rises on Denali and the Alaska Range as seen from Wonder Lake in Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska. Also pictured is the setting moon, above Denali. Denali is North America's tallest peak at 20,310 feet and towers over 18,000 feet above the surrounding lowlands. Other mountain peaks pictured include: Mount Brooks, Mount Silverthrone, Mount Tatum, Mount Carpe and Mount Foraker. SPECIAL NOTE: This image is a panorama composite consisting of multiple overlapping images stitched together.
    Denali sunrise moon panorama.jpg
  • A hiker makes their way up the Byers Creek Trail near Byers Peak in the Byers Peak Wilderness located in the Arapaho National Forest in Colorado. The Byers Peak Wilderness encompasses 8,801 acres in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests near Winter Park, Colorado. The wilderness area was established in 1993. The wilderness area and the 12,804 foot peak are named after William N. Byers, founder of Colorado’s first newspaper, the Rocky Mountain New
    Byers Peak Trail.jpg
  • Two unidentified spectators take advanatage of the sun during a break in the action at the 42nd Annual Missouri Whitewater Championships. The Missouri Whitewater Championships, held on the St. Francis River at the Millstream Gardens Conservation Area, is the oldest regional slalom race in the United States.
    Spectators warming in the sun.jpg
  • Sun rises on Denali and the Alaska Range as seen from Wonder Lake in Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska. Also pictured is the setting moon, above Denali. Denali is North America's tallest peak at 20,310 feet and towers over 18,000 feet above the surrounding lowlands. Other mountain peaks pictured include: Mount Brooks, Mount Silverthrone, Mount Tatum, Mount Carpe and Mount Foraker. SPECIAL NOTE: This image is a panorama composite consisting of multiple overlapping images stitched together.
    Denali sunrise moon panorama.jpg
  • Sunrise on coastal mountains seen from Alaska Airlines flight from Seattle to Juneau in southeast Alaska.
    Coastal mountains sunrise from air 1.jpg
  • A moss-covered boulder is lit by a sliver of sunlight along the 4.5-mile roundtrip Avalanche Lake Trail.<br />
<br />
Glacier National Park in the Rocky Mountains of Montana encompasses more than 1 million acres. The park’s nickname is the “Crown of the Continent Ecosystem.” The park was established in May 1910. Soon after, hotels and chalets were established in the park, including the Lake McDonald Lodge. In 1932 construction began on the Going-to-the-Sun Road, allowing automobiles to traverse the park. Climate change is affecting the park. As of 2010, only 25 active glaciers remain in the park, down from the 150 that existed in the mid-19th century.
    Moss on boulder.jpg
  • Cathedral Mountain, a butte in Gloss Mountain State Park, rises above an unnamed dry creek bed. The park near Fairview, in northwest Oklahoma, is located in the Gloss Mountains (sometimes referred to as the Glass Mountains) which sparkle in sunlight because the are rich in selenite crystals, a form of the mineral, gypsum. Gypsum leaching out of the ground can be seen in the white ring around the top of Cathedral Mountain. This ring is most visible when the ground is damp. The state park, open from sunrise to sunset offers hiking trails and picnic areas. There is no camping.
    Cathedral Mountain -3.jpg
  • Ice forms on the Chilkat River as the sun bathes the mountains of Takhin Ridge including Chunekukleik Mountain in early morning sunlight at sunrise. The fog-like layer is blowing dust from the river's silt. 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.
    Chilkat River ice sunrise.jpg
  • Early morning sunlight reaches the top peaks of Mt. Emmerich as fog-like blowing dust from the silt of banks the Chilkat River blows down the river. 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.
    Mt. Emmerich sunrise - 1.jpg
  • The Takhinsha Mountains near Haines, Alaska are bathed in the morning sunlight in this photo taken from the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve along the Chilkat River. Mountains in the Haines area are a popular destination for heli-skiing. SPECIAL NOTE: This image is a panorama composite consisting of multiple overlapping images stitched together.
    Takhinsha Mountains sunrise panorama.jpg
  • This aerial photo of the upper Chilkat River valley taken above Mosquito Lake shows the upper portion of the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. At upper left is the Kelsall River valley. Identifiable mountains include: Hiteshitak Mountain (left of center), Tohikah Mountain (center), and Mount Raymond (rear right in sunlight area). 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.
    Upper Chilkat River valley aerial.jpg
  • Morning sunlight bathes the rolling hills of the nearly 11,000 acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of Kansas in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy.
    Tallgrass prairie.jpg
  • Afternoon sunlight shines on the slopes of Mount Jonathan Ward outside Haines, Alaska near the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Mountains in the Haines area are a popular destination for heli-skiing.
    Mount Jonathan Ward.jpg
  • The knife-edged spines of cliffs in Kalalau Valley bask in sunlight at sunset in Na Pali Coast State Wilderness Park. Continious erosion of the volcano that created Kauai has produced the razor-thin cliffs that are the signature of the Na Pali coast. The view is from the Kalalau Lookout in Kokee State Park on the island of Kauai in Hawaii.
    Kalalau Valley.jpg
  • Morning sunlight dances around in the grass at the base of eucalyptus trees in the Namakanipaio campground in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island of Hawaii.
    Eucalyptus and grass.jpg
  • Cathedral Mountain, a butte in Gloss Mountain State Park, rises above an unnamed dry creek bed. The park near Fairview, in northwest Oklahoma, is located in the Gloss Mountains (sometimes referred to as the Glass Mountains) which sparkle in sunlight because the are rich in selenite crystals, a form of the mineral, gypsum. Gypsum leaching out of the ground can be seen in the white ring around the top of Cathedral Mountain. This ring is most visible when the ground is damp. The state park, open from sunrise to sunset offers hiking trails and picnic areas. There is no camping.
    Cathedral Mountain -2.jpg
  • Cathedral Mountain, a butte in Gloss Mountain State Park, rises above an unnamed dry creek bed. The park near Fairview, in northwest Oklahoma, is located in the Gloss Mountains (sometimes referred to as the Glass Mountains) which sparkle in sunlight because the are rich in selenite crystals, a form of the mineral, gypsum. Gypsum leaching out of the ground can be seen in the white ring around the top of Cathedral Mountain. This ring is most visible when the ground is damp. The state park, open from sunrise to sunset offers hiking trails and picnic areas. There is no camping.
    Cathedral Mountain -4.jpg
  • Cathedral Mountain, a butte in Gloss Mountain State Park, rises above an unnamed dry creek bed. The park near Fairview, in northwest Oklahoma, is located in the Gloss Mountains (sometimes referred to as the Glass Mountains) which sparkle in sunlight because the are rich in selenite crystals, a form of the mineral, gypsum. Gypsum leaching out of the ground can be seen in the white ring around the top of Cathedral Mountain. This ring is most visible when the ground is damp. The state park, open from sunrise to sunset offers hiking trails and picnic areas. There is no camping.
    Cathedral Mountain -5.jpg
  • Early morning sunlight reaches the top peaks of Mt. Emmerich near Haines, Alaska in this photo taken in late October. On July 6, 2015, two Haines women, Jessica Kayser Forster and Jenn Walsh, summited Mount Emmerich. They are believed to be the first women to have summited the 6,400-foot mountain known locally as Cathedral Peaks.
    Mt. Emmerich sunrise - 2.jpg
  • Spectacular sunsets and sunrises attract tourists to the summit area of Haleakalā National Park on the island of Maui, Hawaii. In this photo a hiker watches the fading twilight sunlight after sunset near, Pu‘u‘ula‘ula (Red Hill), the highest point on Maui (10,023 ft.). The 33,265 acre park consists of the Summit District and the coastal Kipahulu District. Haleakalā National Park is known for it volcanic features, cinder cones and clear night skies for star gazing. The Haleakalā Volcano of east Maui is considered dormant, having last erupted sometime between 1480 and 1600 AD.
    Sunset, Haleakalā National Park, Ma...jpg
  • Tree branches covered with hoar frost are silhouetted against morning sunrise sunlight along the Chilkat River in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve near Haines, Alaska.
    Hoar frost.jpg
  • The last ray of sunlight from the setting sun bask on the Sitakaday Narrows in the main bay of Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in this view seen from Young Island located in the Beardslee Islands of the park in southeast Alaska. At left is Tlingit Peak, in the center is Marble Mountain, and at the right is Willoughby Island. In the far center background is Mount Abdallah.
    Sitakaday Narrows sunset panorama.jpg
  • Late afternoon sunlight bathes the rolling hills of the nearly 11,000 acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of Kansas in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Pictured is the main road as it travels through the Windmill Pasture. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy.
    main road.jpg
  • The Takhinsha Mountains near Haines, Alaska are bathed in the morning sunlight in this photo taken from the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve along the Chilkat River. Mountains in the Haines area are a popular destination for heli-skiing.
    Takhinsha Mountains.jpg
  • Slivers of sunlight shine on the slopes of Mount Jonathan Ward outside Haines, Alaska near the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Mountains in the Haines area are a popular destination for heli-skiing.
    Mount Jonathan Ward-3.jpg
  • Four Winds Mountain near Haines, Alaska and near the border with Alaska and British Columbia, Canada is bathed in afternoon sunlight. This view of the mountain is from the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Mountains in the Haines area are a popular destination for heli-skiing.
    Four Winds Mountain.jpg
  • Mauna Loa (13,679 ft.) receives the first sunlight at sunrise in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island of Hawaii. The photo is taken from the Kulanaokuaiki Campground campground in the park. Mauna Loa is the world's largest shield volcano in terms of volume and area covered. Mauna Loa, an active volcano, means "Long Mountain" in Hawaiian and is one of the five volcanoes that make up the Big Island of Hawaii.
    Mauna Loa sunrise.jpg
  • Astronomical observatories atop Mauna Kea (13,803 ft.) bask in the first sunlight at sunrise on the Big Island of Hawaii. Mauna Kea is home to the world's leading astronomical observatories due to the summit being 40% above the the earth's atmosphere and above 90% of the water vapor. Also, the low population of the Big Island keeps light pollution at a minimum. From Mauna Kea all of the northern sky and most of the southern sky can be viewed. Mauna Kea rises more than 30,000 feet from the ocean floor making it the world's tallest mountain (Mount Everest is the tallest mountain above sea level). This photograph was taken from Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
    Mauna Kea sunrise.jpg
  • Morning sunlight begins to shine on the mountains seen from the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve located at the confluence of the Chilkat River and Tsirku River near Haines, Alaska.
    mountains-2.jpg
  • Four Winds Mountain near Haines, Alaska and near the border with Alaska and British Columbia, Canada is bathed in afternoon sunlight. The mountain can be seen from the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve.
    Four Winds Mountain-3.jpg
  • Four Winds Mountain near Haines, Alaska and near the border with Alaska and British Columbia, Canada are bathed in afternoon sunlight. The mountain can be seen from the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve.
    Four Winds Mountain-2.jpg
  • The “diamond ring effect” is visible in this photo taken during a total eclipse of the sun. The diamond ring effect, typically lasting only a few seconds, is visible at the beginning and end of totality. It is caused by sunlight passing through the valleys on the moon’s circumference edge, a phenomenon known as Baily’s beads. The diamond of the ring is formed when one of Baily's beads is much brighter than the others.<br />
<br />
Also visible are solar prominences (electric pink in color). Solar prominences are formed from hot hydrogen gas rising from the lower regions of the sun’s atmosphere known as the <br />
chromosphere. Rising from tens of thousands of miles above the sun’s surface, they can be seen past the moon during a total solar eclipse.<br />
<br />
This photo was taken in Columbia Mo. at the Columbia Audubon Nature Sanctuary in Columbia, Mo. on August 21.<br />
<br />
A solar eclipse occurs when a full moon passes between the sun and Earth and blocks the sun when they are in alignment with each other as seen from Earth. The astronomical term for this alignment is known as syzygy.<br />
<br />
The August 21, 2017 eclipse was viewed by millions as it raced across the continental United States from Oregon to South Carolina. The last total eclipse in the continental United States was in 1979. The last total eclipse in Missouri was in 1869. While total solar eclipses will hit any one spot on Earth every 375 years, they take place somewhere about once every 18 months.<br />
<br />
The next total eclipse to have its path through Missouri will occur in 2024.
    Diamond ring effect during total sol...jpg
  • Cathedral Mountain, a butte in Gloss Mountain State Park, rises above an unnamed dry creek bed. The park near Fairview, in northwest Oklahoma, is located in the Gloss Mountains (sometimes referred to as the Glass Mountains) which sparkle in sunlight because the are rich in selenite crystals, a form of the mineral, gypsum. Gypsum leaching out of the ground can be seen in the white ring around the top of Cathedral Mountain. This ring is most visible when the ground is damp. The state park, open from sunrise to sunset offers hiking trails and picnic areas. There is no camping. As sign warns hikers of the presence of rattlesnakes.
    Cathedral Mountain -1.jpg
  • Mount Brooks, a 11,940 foot tall peak in the Alaska Range, is bathed in morning sunlight as seen from the Wonder Lake campground in Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska. Mount Brooks, first climbed in 1952, is located at the confluence of the Muldrow, Traleika, and Brooks glaciers. The mountain is named after geologist Alfred Hulse Brooks who is credited with determining that the Brooks Range, the biggest mountain range in Arctic Alaska, was separate from the Rocky Mountains.
    Mt. Brooks.jpg
  • Afternoon sunlight shines on the slopes of Mount Jonathan Ward outside Haines, Alaska near the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Mountains in the Haines area are a popular destination for heli-skiing.
    Mount Jonathan Ward-2.jpg
  • Sunlight shines on the slopes of Mount Jonathan Ward outside Haines, Alaska near the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve. Mountains in the Haines area are a popular destination for heli-skiing.
    Mount Jonathan Ward-4.jpg
  • Harding Mountain basks in sunlight as the sun sets. Harding Mountain is located across the Lynn Canal from Haines, Alaska. The 90 mile, 2,000 foot deep Lynn Canal is known for its beauty -- magnificent mountains and glaciers. It is the deepest fjord in North American and one of the longest and deepest in the world.
    Harding Mountain sunset.jpg
  • Late afternoon sunlight shines on Kee Beach in Haena State Park on north shore of the island of Kauai in Hawaii. The beach, noted for its snorkeling and being the end of the road on the north shore is located next to the trailhead for the Kalalau Trail which runs along the rugged Na Pali coast. The photo is taken from the Kalalau Trail.
    Kee Beach.jpg