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Kobuk Valley National Park

Moonlight over Kobuk Valley

Kobuk Valley National Park contains about 1,669,813 acres that sit maybe 25 miles north of the Arctic Circle in northwest Alaska. Gates of the Arctic National Park & Preserve is about 32 miles to the east, the Selawik National Wildlife Refuge is just over the Waring Mountains to the south and the Noatak National Preserve is just over the Baird Mountains to the north. Kobuk Valley is also in that area where the mountains descend to the Chukchi Sea, from boreal forestland to open tundra. To say this area is remote is a serious understatement.

Kobuk Valley National Park is noted as a crossroads for massive migrations of the "local" caribou herds. The 400,000-strong Western Arctic Caribou Herd criss-crosses Kobuk Valley in spring and fall as they travel between summer foraging grounds at Noatak and winter foraging grounds at Selawik. Another interesting feature of Kobuk Valley are the Great Kobuk Sand Dunes: 25-square-miles of crescent-shaped dunes left behind when the glaciers retreated at the end of the last ice age.

As big, beautiful and remote as Kobuk Valley is, it's hard to imagine that only 847 people visited the park in 2007... the only way in is by air.

For More Information
Kobuk Valley National Park
PO Box 1029, Kotzebue, Alaska 99752
907-442-3890

National Park Service web page
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Development of Leahs.com is funded in part by a grant from Ken McGurn
Photo of caribou antlers in the snow courtesy of Jo Goldmann, US Fish & Wildlife Service
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