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http://www.nps.gov/wrst/whatsspecial.htm
What's So Special About This
Place?
Preeminent Mountain Wilderness
Incredible. You must see Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
and Preserve to believe it. Number and scale loom large here,
magnified by splendid isolation. The largest U.S. national
park, it equals six Yellowstones, with peaks upon peaks and
glaciers after glaciers. Follow any braided river or stream to
its source and you will find either a receding, advancing, or
tidewater glacier.
The park lets you sample representative Alaska wildlife as
well as historic mining sites. Hike its mountains, float its
rivers, ski its glaciers, or fly over this landscape and you
witness living geology.
You sense discovery, the feeling you might be the first to see
such sights.
The peaks' sheer numbers quickly quell
your urge to learn their names. Just settle back and
appreciate their beauty, mass, and rugged grandeur. That
roads are few means many travelers will not enter the park
itself, but major peaks -- Blackburn, Sanford,
Drum, and Wrangell -- are seen from nearby
highways. Or position yourself in one spot and watch
sun, clouds, and storms play hide and seek with single peaks
or ridges. Watch moods change by the minute here. Four major
mountain ranges meet in the park, which includes nine of the
16 highest peaks in the United States. The Wrangells
huddle in the northern interior. The Chugach
guard the southern coast. The
Saint
Elias
Mountains
rise abruptly from the
Gulf of Alaska
to thrust northward past the Chugach on toward the Wrangells.
The eastern end of the Alaska Range -- mapped as the Nutzotin
and Mentasta mountains -- forms part of the preserve's
northern boundary.
The Wrangells
are volcanic in origin, but only
Mount Wrangell
remains active (last report erupting in 1900) with vents of
steam near its summit. With adjoining
Kluane National Park in
Canada, all these ranges form
North America'
s premier mountain wilderness. Covered year-round with snow,
the high-country stands cloaked with icefields and glaciers.
Near the coast,
North America'
s largest subpolar icefield, Bagley
Icefield, spawns giant glaciers, the Tana, Miles,
Hubbard,and Guyot.
The Malaspina
Glacier flows out of the St. Elias
Range
between Icy and Yakutat bays in a mass larger than the state
of
Rhode Island
. So much glacial slit rides it that plants and trees take
hold on the glacier's extremities and grow to maturity only to
topple over the edge when it melts. Flowing from glaciers are
multitudes of meandering rivers and braided streams. Largest
is the
Copper River, forming the park's western boundary. The Copper
rises in the Wrangells and empties into the Gulf of Alaska
in Chugach
National Forest.
In the early 1900s the Kennecott Mining Co. transported copper
from its mines near McCarthy by railroad along the Chitina and
Copper rivers to ships at Cordova. Ore
was extracted from these productive mines between 1911 and
1938 and lured many people to the area. Gold was
extracted from the Nabesna area, then too. Mining
still takes place on private lands in the park, and
evidence of earlier mining includes ruins
of the Kennecott mines, now listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. In mining's heyday the Indian
villages expanded and several new towns sprang up. Copper
Center
, Chitina,
Gulkana,
and Chistochina are among the old
Athabascan settlements. The town of
Yakutat
is a traditional Tlingit fishing village.
While vegetation may appear sparse,
especially in the interior, the park is home to a variety of wildlife.
Mountain slopes have a diversity of plants, dwarf shrubs, and
grasses where dall sheep and mountain goats patrol the craggy
peaks. Interior and coastal spruce forests are home to shrubs,
such as blueberry and prickly rose. Caribou feed on lichens
and sedges on the slopes of the Wrangells. Moose browse in the
sloughs and bogs of the forested lowlands, while bears
roam throughout the park. Many rivers, streams, and lakes
provide spawning grounds for salmon and other fish. The
Copper River
drainage marks major flyways for migratory birds and provides
nesting sites for trumpeter swans. Coastal areas are habitat
for marine mammals, including sea lions and harbor seals.
Wrangell-St. Elias, Kluane National Park
in Canada, Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, and
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park in British Columbia are together a World
Heritage site -- at 24 million acres
the world's largest internationally protected area --
recognized for exceptional interest and universal value. At
more than 9.6 million acres, the parks' designated
wilderness represents nearly 10 percent of the entire
National Wilderness Preservation System. These facts are not
the end of superlatives! Explore the park and discover others
for yourself.
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