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  • The Liberty Bell, an icon of American independence, hangs in the Liberty Bell Center in Independence National Historical Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Liberty Bell is perhaps best known for its distinctive crack. Cast in London in 1752, the bell's rim cracked the first time it was rung. It was recast two times in America; the crack it is known for today developed sometime between 1817 and 1846. The inscription on the bell reads in part, "Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof." Independence Hall, the building where both the United States Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution were debated and adopted, is visible in the background. The Liberty Bell is three feet tall, has a circumference of 12 feet, and weights 2080 pounds.
    Liberty-Bell_3001.jpg
  • Hunters Run drops more than 20 feet (7 meters) at Springfield Falls, which is surrounded by summer wildflowers, in western Pennsylvania.
    PA_SpringfieldFalls_8520.jpg
  • A variety of wildflowers, including blazing star (Liatris spiciata), grow along the foggy banks of the Allegheny River in the Allegheny National Forest in Pennsylvania.
    PA_AlleghenyRiver_Wildflowers_8742.jpg
  • Moss, ferns, and trees grow from a large rock outcropping near the Minister Valley in Allegheny National Forest in Warren, Pennsylvania. The Allegheny Front was once part of a vast delta and layers of a hard, sandstone congolomerate were deposited. Between 250 and 320 million years ago, the Allegheny Front was lifted, forming hills and mountains. Over time, erosion exposed, split, or dislodged and moved the former sedimentary rock, resulting in large rock outcroppings.
    PA_Allegheny_Outcropping_Roots_8652.jpg
  • The sun shines between a tree and a large rock outcropping in the Minister Valley area of the Allegheny National Forest in Warren County, Pennsylvania. The Allegheny Front was once part of a vast delta and layers of a hard, sandstone congolomerate were deposited. Between 250 and 320 million years ago, the Allegheny Front was lifted, forming hills and mountains. Over time, erosion exposed, split, or dislodged and moved the former sedimentary rock, resulting in large rock outcroppings.
    PA_Allegheny_Minister_Outcropping_86...jpg
  • The sun shines through the canopy of a second- or third-generation forest in the proposed addition to the Hickory Creek Wilderness in the Allegheny National Forest, Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_Forest_Sunburst_8582.jpg
  • The golden light of sunrise colors this stand of second-growth forest in the Allegheny National Forest near Tidioute, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_Forest_Tidioute_8726.jpg
  • Fallen trees stretch across East Hickory Creek near the southern boundary of the Hickory Creek Wilderness in the Allegheny National Forest, Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_HickoryCreek_8748.jpg
  • Logan Run drops about 20 feet (7 meters) at Logan Falls, located in the Allegheny National Forest near Balltown, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_LoganFalls_8786.jpg
  • Ferns frame trumpet chanterelle (Cantharellus tubaeformis) mushrooms growing on the moist hardwood forest floor of the Allegheny National Forest in Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_Chanterelles_8836.jpg
  • Logan Run drops about 20 feet (7 meters) at Logan Falls, located in the Allegheny National Forest near Balltown, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_LoganFalls_8807.jpg
  • A spindle-shaped yellow coral mushroom (Clavulinopsis fusiformis) begins to grow from the moist hardwood forest floor in the Allegheny National Forest, Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_CoralMushroom_8840.jpg
  • Rock outcroppings provide a vantage point to take in a sweeping view of the Minister Valley in the Allegheny National Forest in Warren County, Pennsylvania. The Allegheny Front was once part of a vast delta and layers of a hard, sandstone congolomerate were deposited. Between 250 and 320 million years ago, the Allegheny Front was lifted, forming hills and mountains. Over time, erosion exposed, split, or dislodged and moved the former sedimentary rock, resulting in large rock outcroppings.
    PA_Allegheny_MinisterValley_Overlook...jpg
  • Tree roots spread out and nearly cover the face of a rock outcropping near Minister Valley in the Allegheny National Forest, Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_Outcropping_TreeRoots_8...jpg
  • Moss, ferns, and trees grow from a large rock outcropping near the Minister Valley in Allegheny National Forest in Warren, Pennsylvania. The Allegheny Front was once part of a vast delta and layers of a hard, sandstone congolomerate were deposited. Between 250 and 320 million years ago, the Allegheny Front was lifted, forming hills and mountains. Over time, erosion exposed, split, or dislodged and moved the former sedimentary rock, resulting in large rock outcroppings.
    PA_Allegheny_Outcropping_Roots_8656.jpg
  • Tree roots spread out and nearly cover the face of a rock outcropping near Minister Valley in the Allegheny National Forest, Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_Outcropping_TreeRoots_8...jpg
  • Several evergreen wood ferns (Dryopteris intermedia) grow on a mossy rock outcropping near the Minister Valley in the Allegheny National Forest in Warren County, Pennsylvania. The Allegheny Front was once part of a vast delta and layers of a hard, sandstone congolomerate were deposited. Between 250 and 320 million years ago, the Allegheny Front was lifted, forming hills and mountains. Over time, erosion exposed, split, or dislodged and moved the former sedimentary rock, resulting in large rock outcroppings.
    PA_Allegheny_Minister_Fern_Rock_8643.jpg
  • Several evergreen wood ferns (Dryopteris intermedia) grow on a mossy rock outcropping near the Minister Valley in the Allegheny National Forest in Warren County, Pennsylvania. The Allegheny Front was once part of a vast delta and layers of a hard, sandstone congolomerate were deposited. Between 250 and 320 million years ago, the Allegheny Front was lifted, forming hills and mountains. Over time, erosion exposed, split, or dislodged and moved the former sedimentary rock, resulting in large rock outcroppings.
    PA_Allegheny_Minister_Fern_Rock_8642.jpg
  • The sun shines through the canopy of a second- or third-generation forest in the proposed addition to the Hickory Creek Wilderness in the Allegheny National Forest, Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_Forest_Sunburst_8601.jpg
  • Thick fog covers the valley surrounding the Allegheny River in the Allegheny National Forest near Tidioute, Pennsylvania. Radiation fog is common in river valleys, especially in the late summer and autumn, when cold air sinks into moist air.
    PA_AlleghenyRiver_Fog_Tidioute_8736.jpg
  • Logan Run drops about 20 feet (7 meters) at Logan Falls, located in the Allegheny National Forest near Balltown, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_LoganFalls_8787.jpg
  • Thick morning fog begins to lift over the Allegheny River and Courson Island in this view from the Tidioute Overlook in the Allegheny National Forest, Pennsylvania. Radiation fog is common in river valleys, especially in the late summer and autumn, when cold air sinks into moist air.
    PA_AlleghenyRiver_Fog_Tidioute_8779.jpg
  • Sunlight and trees are reflected on East Hickory Creek, which flows over rocks in the Hickory Creek Wilderness in the Allegheny National Forest in Warren County, Pennsylvania.
    PA_Allegheny_HickoryCreek_Abstract_8...jpg
  • Colorful, abstract shapes make up the bark of the Stewartia x henryae tree in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. This hybrid first occurred as a spontaneous cross between Stewartia monadelpha and Stewartia pseudocamellia at the Henry Foundation for Botanical Research in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania, though the majority of plants that make up the Stewartia species are native to China.
    Arboretum_Stewartia-Henryae_Bark_036...jpg
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