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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