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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Middle Fork of the Salmon River Salmon-Challis National Forest, Idaho 104 miles protected since 1968
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Photograph by Alex Saberi From "
Visions of Earth " National Geographic November 2011
United Kingdom—A lone mute swan stretches its wings upon a brook as the mists of dawn filter through London's Richmond Park. By tradition, the British monarch has the right to claim ownership of unmarked birds of this species in open water.
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Photograph by Joel Sartore From "
Africa's Rift Valley " National Geographic November 2011
A tree-climbing lion stirs in Uganda’s Queen Elizabeth National Park.
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Photograph by Robert Clark From "
Anglo-Saxon Treasure " National Geographic November 2011
The wall built by Roman emperor Hadrian runs along the top of a cliff at a place known as Peel Crags. From that vantage soldiers could have seen across the countryside for miles.
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Photograph by Joel Sartore From "
Africa's Rift Valley " National Geographic November 2011
Elephants have miles of unbroken savanna to roam inside Uganda's Queen Elizabeth Park, where their numbers total 2,500, a dramatic rise after heavy poaching in the 1980s. Outside the preserve villagers kill elephants that trample and eat crops, though attacks have diminished with the digging of trenches to protect fields from wild trespassers.
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Chattooga River Sumter National Forest, South Carolina 58.7 miles protected in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia since 1974
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Tinayguk River Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve, Alaska 44 miles protected since 1980
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Art by Daniel Dociu From "
Anglo-Saxon Treasure " National Geographic November 2011
The treasure's flashy ornaments announced the status of men like this aristocrat riding to war. At the battlefield he would have dismounted and joined the rest of the warriors as they formed a defensive wall with their shields. Combat was gory, conducted at close range with swords, spears, and axes.
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Merced River Yosemite National Park, California 114.5 miles protected since 1987; 8 additional miles since 1992
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Bruneau River SystemBruneau-Jarbidge Rivers Wilderness, Idaho94.7 miles protected since 2009
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Photograph by Joel Sartore From "
Africa's Rift Valley " National Geographic November 2011
In a region bursting with people, a few big open spaces remain—like the Rift floor in Queen Elizabeth Park, pocked with crater lakes formed by volcanic explosions. If protected areas hadn't been set aside in the Albertine Rift from the 1920s to the 1960s, conservationists doubt any large wilderness areas would exist today.
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Snake River Headwaters Bridger-Teton National Forest, Wyoming 387.5 miles protected since 2009
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Photograph by Robert Clark From "
Anglo-Saxon Treasure " National Geographic November 2011
Hadrian's Wall, named for the second-century Roman emperor who built it, stretches 73 miles across Britain. It separated the civilized realm of Rome from the "barbarians"—restless Picts in the north. As the Romans withdrew, the northern tribes stormed across the border.
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011 Tlikakila River Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Alaska 51 miles protected since 1980
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Photograph by Christopher Swann, Biosphoto From "
Visions of Earth " National Geographic November 2011
Mexico—Surfacing in warm winter waters off the Baja California coast, a gray whale flashes its baleen plates by a boat. The area's lagoons and bays provide breeding and calving grounds for the giants, which migrate from as far north as the Bering Sea.
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Owyhee River Owyhee River Wilderness, Idaho 120 miles protected in Oregon since 1984 and 67.2 more since 1988; 171.1 miles protected in Idaho since 2009
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Photograph by Carsten Peter From "
Africa's Rift Valley " National Geographic November 2011
Exhaling clouds of gas, a cauldron of lava boils in the mile-wide crater of Nyiragongo, an active volcano in the Congo that threatens two million people. Eruptions have blistered the region for millions of years, since the African tectonic plate began to split apart to create the Albertine Rift.
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Photograph by Joel Sartore From "
Africa's Rift Valley " National Geographic November 2011
African buffalo create tracks in the salty mud at the edge of a crater lake in Queen Elizabeth National Park.
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Snake River Headwaters Bridger-Teton National Forest, Wyoming 387.5 miles protected since 2009
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Photograph by Joel Sartore From "
Africa's Rift Valley " National Geographic November 2011
Alert to human visitors, a young mountain gorilla and its mother sit tight in Bwindi Impenetrable Park. When the park opened in 1991, villagers resented losing access to forest where they had gathered honey and wood. Today the park shares the fees from gorilla-watching tours with the locals, a small victory in the Rift's unending clashes for livable space.
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Photograph by Michael Melford From "
America's Wild Rivers " National Geographic November 2011
Allagash River Moonlight bathes a birchbark canoe on Maine's Allagash River, a tranquil spot for paddlers.
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