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  • A couple, rendered in silhouette, walk past a wind-swept tree on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean at Ecola State Park near Cannon Beach, Oregon.
    WindSweptTreeCouple.jpg
  • An Atlantic puffin (Fratercula arctica) shows off its tongue, which is specially adapted to allow it to carry many fish in its bill at one time. Atlantic puffins typically carry about 10 fish in their bills at one time, using their tongues to hold their catch against spines on their palate. This Atlantic puffin was photographed on the Látrabjarg bird cliff in Iceland; about 60 percent of all Atlantic puffins breed in Iceland.
    Puffin_Atlantic_Tongue_Latrabjarg_44...jpg
  • A few determined trees have managed to take hold and grow on an otherwise smooth granite dome in Yosemite National Park, California.
    Yosemite_TreeDome_0779.jpg
  • Five North American Beavers (Castor canadensis) rest on top of their lodge in North Creek, Bothell, Washington. Beavers, the largest rodent in North America, live in lodges that are designed to protect them from predators. The mud that holds the sticks together freezes like concrete, making the structure virtually impenetrable. During large winter floods, however, the beavers occasionally have to evacuate the lodge and rest on its roof until the flood waters recede.
    Beavers_Lodge_FiveOnTop_NorthCreek_8...jpg
  • A mating pair of familiar bluet damselflies (Enallagma civile) lay eggs in the Ronald Bog in Shoreline, Washington. The male, above, holds the female by the "neck" while she deposits her eggs beneath the surface of the water.
    Damselflies_FamiliarBluet_Mating_958...jpg
  • A juvenile bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) holds its wings out to its side, sunning itself after one of its early flights.
    BaldEagle_Juvenile_WingsOutstretched...jpg
  • Two mating pairs of familiar bluet damselflies (Enallagma civile) lay eggs in the Ronald Bog in Shoreline, Washington. The male, hovering above, holds the female by the "neck" while she deposits her eggs beneath the surface of the water.
    Damselflies_FamiliarBluet_Mating_956...jpg
  • Seen from the air, the rolling hills of Walla Walla, Washington look like giant, patch-work dunes. The rolling hills of Eastern Washington were formed by massive floods near the end of the last ice age as a ice dam holding back billions of gallons of water over present-day Missoula, Montana would regularly break, releasing a torrent of water that scoured and shaped the landscape.
    WallaWallaDunesAerial.jpg
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