The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
and Caribou
By Paul Senner
This picture is courtesy of www.senate.gov/~leahy/issues/environment/anwr.html
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
is one of the most beautiful and untouched landscapes left in
the world. It covers 13,000 square miles of tundra and mountains.
Its coastal plain is the calving ground for the thousands of caribou
in the Porcupine Herd. Threatened by oil development, this is
one of Alaska's most important wild places.
Caribou
Bibliography
ANWR
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