Each fall a quarter-million caribou come together to form the Western Arctic Caribou Herd, a group that makes an epic migration through northwest Alaska. The caribou move south from their calving grounds in the Utukok River Uplands to their winter range on the Seward Peninsula. Fall is also the time when scientists attach radio collars to members of the herd, to track their location and health, and to gain information that will help conserve the species. When spring arrives, the caribou will complete the trip again in reverse, covering a total of 2,000 miles each year, give or take.
Caribou on the move
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Frozen fun in the Canadian cold
-
Just a couple of yellow-billed hornbills
-
Tigh Mor Trossachs on Loch Achray, Scotland
-
Green fields of grain
-
Ancient art in the Amazon
-
Village of Labro, Italy
-
International Sloth Day
-
Singing praises of the oceans
-
Rapa Valley in Sarek National Park, Sweden
-
Black grouses lekking
-
Computer Science Education Week
-
Via Krupp, Capri, Italy
-
Borobudur Temple, Java, Indonesia
-
Great wildebeest migration at Mara River, Kenya
-
El Valle de la Luna, Chile
-
Get amped for Glastonbury
-
Skaftafell, Vatnajökull National Park, Iceland
-
Father s Day
-
Pascua Florida Day
-
The Cathedral of Florence, Italy
-
Misool, Raja Ampat Islands, Indonesia
-
Winter solstice
-
Brown bears in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Alaska
-
Manatee Appreciation Day
-
Night view of the RMS Queen Mary, Long Beach, California
-
Social climbing
-
Summer winds down in the Southern Hemisphere
-
Take the stairs
-
Iguazu Falls at the border of Argentina and Brazil
-
Its Halfway Day!
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

