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  • A bright rainbow forms in the mist of Wallace Falls, a 367-foot (112 meter) waterfall that is the tallest of three falls in Wallace Falls State Park near Gold Bar, Washington. Wallace Falls was named for Joe and Sarah Kwayaylsh, members of the Skykomish tribe, who were the first homesteaders in the area; "Wallace" is a mispronounciation of their name.
    Wallace-Falls_Rainbow_4969.jpg
  • The alpha-male elk checks out the females during the fall rut at Gold Bluffs, near Klamath, California. American Elk (Cervus canadensis) are also known as Wapiti.
    Elk_FallRut_GoldBluffs_0694.jpg
  • The Space Needle, shown on April 21, 2012, the 50th anniversary of the opening of the World’s Fair in Seattle, Washington, displays its original "galaxy gold" color. The fair, officially called the Century 21 Exposition, highlighted space and science achievements and the Space Needle was built specifically for the occasion. Ten million people attended the Seattle World’s Fair, which ran from April 21 to October 21, 1962.
    SpaceNeedle_GalaxyGold_7397.jpg
  • The walls of an open area of Upper Antelope Canyon on Navajo Nation land near Page, Arizona, take on different colors based on how much direct sunlight they receive. Sections near the slot canyon ceiling appear yellow and gold, while portions in deep shadow are purple. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon_Textured-Walls_6218c.jpg
  • The walls of an open area of Upper Antelope Canyon on Navajo Nation land near Page, Arizona, take on different colors based on how much direct sunlight they receive. Sections near the slot canyon ceiling appear yellow and gold, while portions in deep shadow are purple. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon_Colorful-Chamber_622...jpg
  • The rugged Superstition Mountains are reddened by the setting sun. The mountains, also known as the Superstitions, are located east of Phoenix, Arizona, and are involved in many superstitions. The legend of the Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine is centered in the range. Some Apaches also believe that the mountains contain a hole that leads to the lower world.
    SuperstitionMountainsAZ.jpg
  • The walls of an open area of Upper Antelope Canyon on Navajo Nation land near Page, Arizona, take on different colors based on how much direct sunlight they receive. Sections near the slot canyon ceiling appear yellow and gold, while portions in deep shadow are purple. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon_Colorful-Chamber_709...jpg
  • The walls of a particularly narrow passage of Upper Antelope Canyon in Page, Arizona, take on different colors based on how much direct sunlight they receive. Sections near the slot canyon ceiling appear yellow and gold, while portions in deep shadow are purple. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon-Beam_S2574-01.jpg
  • The walls of an open area of Upper Antelope Canyon on Navajo Nation land near Page, Arizona, take on different colors based on how much direct sunlight they receive. Sections near the slot canyon ceiling appear yellow and gold, while portions in deep shadow are purple. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon_Colorful-Chamber_622...jpg
  • The full range of fall colors—red, yellow, gold, violet and even green—are visible in the leaves of these intertwined trees along the Bellevue Botanical Garden in Bellevue, Washington.
    Fall-Color_Bellevue-Botanical_7655.jpg
  • Several Joshua Trees (Yucca brevifolia) grow in a carpet of goldfields (Lasthenia chrysotoma) in the Indian Wells Valley, northeast of Mojave California.
    CA_JoshuaTrees_Goldfields_IndianWell...jpg
  • Camera movement during a long exposure blurs the fall color on a vine maple near Nason Creek in Washington state.
    FallColor_VineMaple_Abstract_NearNas...jpg
  • A Vine Maple (Acer circinatum) displaying a variety of its fall colors grows around a tree still displaying green leaves near Merritt, Washington.
    VineMaple_FallColor_NearNasonCreek_0...jpg
  • Fall color is represented by a single yellow leaf, floating off Foster Island in the Seattle Arboretum.
    FloatingLeafArboretum.jpg
  • Three coconut palm trees (Cocos nucifera) are rendered in silhouette against a golden sunrise on Kaua`i, Hawai`i.
    Kauai_CoconutTrees_GoldenSunrise_768...jpg
  • Fall color lines both banks of the Wenatchee River as it flows through Tumwater Canyon near Leavenworth, Washington.
    FallColor_TumwaterCanyon_WenatcheeRi...jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color line frame Liberty Bell Mountain (left) and the Early Winters Spires in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees.
    NorthCascades_EarlyWintersLibertyBel...jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color frame Blue Lake and several peaks near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees. Of the mountains in the cluster at left, Liberty Bell Mountain is the leftmost peak; the Early Winters Spires are the tight cluster of three peaks at the center of the mountains shown.
    NorthCascades_BlueLake_GoldenLarches...jpg
  • Golden aspens, at the peak of their fall color, stand at the base of the Sangre de Christo mountain range near Zapata, Colorado.
    AspensSangreDeChristoCO.jpg
  • The sun shines on wet maple seeds after a rainstorm passes over Snohomish County, Washington.
    MapleSeeds_Raindrops_8449.jpg
  • Several Quaking Aspens (Populus tremuloides) display their golden fall color in a valley in the Wenatchee National Forest of Washington state.
    Aspens_Quaking_Golden_WenatcheeNF_05...jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color frame Whistler Mountain (left) and Cutthroat Peak in the North Cascades of Washington state. The half moon begins to set behind Cutthroat Pass. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees.
    NorthCascades_CutthroatPass_GoldenLa...jpg
  • MissouriRiverJudith1.jpg
  • Western buttercup (Ranunculus occidentalis) covers a meadow in Bothell, Washington.
    buttercup_meadow_Bothell_2576.jpg
  • WesternGrebeFallColor.jpg
  • Bright streaks fall down the curved walls of Upper Antelope Canyon in the Navajo Nation, Arizona. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon_Streaks_6235.jpg
  • Fall color seems to spill like a waterfall down Sunrise Ridge in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington.
    Fall-Color-Falls_Rainier-Sunrise-Rid...jpg
  • Golden California poppies (Eschscholzia californica) grow on the rolling hills of the Morgan Territory Regional Preserve near Antioch, California. Mount Diablo, a prominent upthrust peak that rises 3,849 feet (1,173 meters), is visible in the background.
    CA_Morgan-Territory_Poppies_Mount-Di...jpg
  • Golden leaves at the peak of their fall color frame the bright white trunks of several Quaking Aspens (Populus tremuloides) in the Wenatchee National Forest of Washington state.
    Aspens_Quaking_Golden_FramedTrunks_0...jpg
  • A variety of trees and shrubs display their fall colors along the banks of Nason Creek, east of Stevens Pass in Washington state.
    FallColor_NasonCreek_0521.jpg
  • Bracken ferns (Pteridium aquilinum) display a variety of fall colors on a bluff above Deception Creek near Stevens Pass, Washington.
    FallColor_Brackens_StevensPass_0432.jpg
  • A Golden Larch tree (Pseudolarix amabilis) bends over Blue Lake near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees.
    NorthCascades_BlueLake_BentLarch_035...jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color line Blue Lake and several peaks near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees. Of the mountains in the cluster at left, Liberty Bell Mountain is the leftmost peak; the Early Winters Spires are the tight cluster of three peaks at the center of the mountains shown.
    NorthCascades_BlueLake_GoldenLarches...jpg
  • MissouriRiverJudith2.jpg
  • The standstone in a wash in the Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada shows colorful streaked patterns. This wash is comprised of several different layers of sandstone, which have been exposed through erosion.
    vof-color-wash.jpg
  • A heart shape appears among the curves of the ceiling of Upper Antelope Canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone slot canyon, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon_Heart_7110.jpg
  • The sun shines on wet maple seeds after a rainstorm passes over Snohomish County, Washington.
    MapleSeeds_Raindrops_8636.jpg
  • The red and golden fall color of a maple tree provides an autumn backdrop for a spider web in Snohomish County, Washington.
    SpiderWeb_FallColor_4526.jpg
  • A male Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) searches for food on a decaying Pacific Silver Fir tree (Abies amabilis) in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. Pileated Woodpeckers are the largest woodpeckers and are typically found in mature forests where they feed on carpenter ants. Male Pileated Woodpeckers can be identified by the red color at the base of their bills; all Pileated Woodpeckers have red feathers at the top of their crown.
    Woodpecker_Pileated_Arboretum_Golden...jpg
  • A golden autumn leaf floats in a narrow channel near Foster Island in the Washinton Park Arboretum, Seattle, Washington.
    Arboretum_FloatingLeaf_4863.jpg
  • Three mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) rest on a pond surrounded by fall colors in the Wenatchee National Forest of Washington state.
    FallColor_Ducks_NasonCreek_0624.jpg
  • A Vine Maple (Acer circinatum) displaying a variety of its fall colors is intertwined with an evergreen tree near Merritt, Washington.
    VineMaple_FallColor_Merritt_0495.jpg
  • The first snow of the winter caps the mountains surrounding St. Mary Lake as the cottonwood trees still show their golden fall color. St. Mary Lake is the second-largest lake in Glacier National Park, Montana.
    StMaryLakeFall.jpg
  • Wallace Falls is one of the tallest measured waterfalls in Washington's North Cascades. The top tier of this waterfall plunges 265 feet. The falls are named after Sarah Kwayaylsh, a native of the Skykomish tribe who homesteaded in the area near Goldbar, Washington.
    WallaceFalls.jpg
  • Golden Larch trees (Pseudolarix amabilis) at the peak of their fall color surround Blue Lake near Washington Pass in the North Cascades of Washington state. Golden Larches, while not considered true larches, are known for shedding their needles each fall. The needles grow back each spring and transition from deep green to blue green over the course of the summer. In late September or early October, the needles turn golden and drop, just like the leaves on deciduous trees. Several peaks are visible above the lake. From left to right, the peaks are Liberty Bell and the Early Winters Spires.
    North-Cascades_Blue-Lake_Larches_Gol...jpg
  • Golden autumn leaves float in a narrow channel near Foster Island in the Washinton Park Arboretum, Seattle, Washington.
    Arboretum_FloatingLeaves_4998.jpg
  • South Silver Falls, framed by golden fall color, plunges 177 feet into a canyon in Silver Falls State Park, Oregon. South Silver Falls is one of ten named waterfalls in the park.
    SouthSilverFallsWideFallColor.jpg
  • JudithRiverBend.jpg
  • Two butterflies feed on yarrow (Achillea millefolium) along Gold Creek near Snoqualmie Pass. The butterfly at the bottom right is a Lorquin's Admiral (Limenitis lorquini), a butterfly that is widespread in the Pacific Northwest and is typically found near streams. The butterfly at the upper left is a Clodius Parnassian (Parnassius clodius), a butterfly that is found at high altitudes in western North America.
    Butterflies_GoldCreek_4422.jpg
  • The moon gets ready to set near the base of a large saguaro cactus (Carnegiea gigantea) in the Superstition Wilderness near Gold Canyon, Arizona. Saguaro are native to the Sonoran Desert and are known for their "arms," which take ages to grow. The saguaro can take 10 years to reach its first inch of height and another 60 years to produce its first flowers. By 95-100 years, saguaros can be 15-16 feet tall and may finally produce their first arm, though some of the cacti never generate one.
    Saguaro_Moon_Superstition-Wilderness...jpg
  • A large rock frames Weavers Needle, a distinctive 4,555-foot (1,388-meter) spire in the Superstition Wilderness in Arizona. Weavers Needle is made up of heavily-eroded fused volcanic ash, called tuff, and is a prominent and distictive peak that's visible for miles. It played a significant role in the stories of the Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine, with its shadow supposedly pointing toward to golden treasure.
    Superstition-Wilderness_Weavers-Need...jpg
  • The colorful, thermal-powered Champagne Pool formed in an a 700-year-old explosion crater near Rotorua, New Zealand. The blue water is full of gas bubbles containing carbon dioxide. The dramatic orange rim contains arsenic and antimony sulphur compounds, including gold and silver. The water temperature in the pool averages 74 degrees Celcius (164 degrees Fahrenheit). The pool is located within the Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, a protected park on New Zealand's north island.
    NZ_ChampagnePool_0188.jpg
  • Water collects in a small pool in a ravine in the Superstition Wilderness near Gold Canyon, Arizona. The water source in the Sonoran Desert was important to the Native American Hohokam people, who settled in the area as early as 500 A.D. The Hohokams left behind some petroglyphs, which are visible on the rocks in the upper left corner of the image.
    Superstition-Wilderness_Hieroglyphic...jpg
  • Weavers Needle, a distinctive 4,555-foot (1,388-meter) spire in the Superstition Wilderness in Arizona, is turned golden by the setting sun. Weavers Needle is made up of heavily-eroded fused volcanic ash, called tuff, and is a prominent and distictive peak that's visible for miles. It played a significant role in the stories of the Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine, with its shadow supposedly pointing toward to golden treasure. Peralta Canyon, a popular hiking destination in the Tonto National Forest, is visible at the base of Weavers Needle.
    Superstition-Wilderness_Weavers-Need...jpg
  • Swirling patterns and streaks of gold are visible in an exposed stump that had been submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The stump was exposed when the lake level dropped during a drought.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Stump_Detai...jpg
  • The walls of a particularly narrow passage of Upper Antelope Canyon in Page, Arizona, take on different colors based on how much direct sunlight they receive. Sections near the slot canyon ceiling appear yellow and gold, while portions in deep shadow are purple. Violent flash floods sculpt the sandstone, leaving undulating, layered walls. The Navajo people call the canyon Tsé bighánílíní dóó Hazdistazí, which means "the place where water runs through rocks."
    Antelope-Canyon_Narrow-Passage_Looki...jpg
  • Water flows into a small pool in a ravine in the Superstition Wilderness near Gold Canyon, Arizona. The water source in the Sonoran Desert was important to the Native American Hohokam people, who settled in the area as early as 500 A.D. The Hohokams left behind some petroglyphs, which are visible on the rocks in the top center of the image.
    Superstition-Wilderness_Hieroglyphic...jpg
  • The colorful, thermal-powered Champagne Pool formed in an a 700-year-old explosion crater near Rotorua, New Zealand. The blue water is full of gas bubbles containing carbon dioxide. The dramatic orange rim contains arsenic and antimony sulphur compounds, including gold and silver. The water temperature in the pool averages 74 degrees Celcius (164 degrees Fahrenheit). The pool is located within the Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, a protected park on New Zealand's north island.
    NZ_ChampagnePool_0199.jpg
  • Crashing Atlantic Ocean waves pound the Cape Canaveral National Seashore in Florida. The waves are blurred by an exposure of nearly one second. The beach is made up of eroded sea shells, giving it its distictive redish-gold color.
    CapeCanaveralWaves.jpg
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