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  1. Off the north and west coasts of Alaska you might spot polar bears, beluga whales, and walruses. More big mammals include black bears, moose, Dall sheep, musk oxen, caribou, and the world’s largest brown bear, the Kodiak. Alaska is also home to birds such as albatross, eagles, and loons. You can see trees including hemlock, pine, cedar, and ...

  2. Why Cruise to Alaska with Celebrity Cruises. Live life to the fullest on a Alaska cruise with Celebrity. We have three ships in Alaska, sailing itineraries ranging from 6 or 7 nights to immersive 9- to 13-night Cruisetours that combine the excitement of sailing Alaska’s rugged coast with the awe-inspiring wilderness of Denali National Park and the towns and cities of the vast interior.

  3. 3 Days in Homer, 6 Day Homer Basecamp & Kachemak Bay, 7 Day Kenai Peninsula Explorer, 21 Day Grand Alaska Loop. About. Things to Do. Where To Stay. Homer Advice. Visit Homer Alaska (1:57) Homer is billed as the "Halibut Fishing Capital of Alaska," but there's so much more in this charming, end-of-the-road Alaska town.

  4. fr.wikipedia.org › wiki › AlaskaAlaska — Wikipédia

    Alaska signifie « grande Terre » ou « continent » en aléoute 3. Cette région, que l'on appelait au XIXe siècle l'« Amérique russe », tire son nom d'une longue presqu'île, au nord-ouest du continent américain, à environ mille kilomètres au sud du détroit de Béring, et qui se lie, vers le sud, aux îles Aléoutiennes.

  5. The best time to see the northern lights in Alaska is from late August to mid-April, when the nights are long and dark. (You won’t see them during the summer months because of Alaska’s midnight sun.) Plan to look for the spectacular, multi-colored lights from 11 p.m. to 2 a.m., when the sky is at its darkest and the auroras are the most active.

  6. Alaska - Native Tribes, Arctic Wildlife, Glaciers: People have inhabited Alaska since 10,000 bce. At that time a land bridge extended from Siberia to eastern Alaska, and migrants followed herds of animals across it. Of these migrant groups, the Athabaskans, Unangan (Aleuts), Inuit, Yupiit (Yupik), Tlingit, and Haida remain in Alaska. As early as 1700, Indigenous peoples of Siberia reported the ...

  7. 2. Drive to the Matanuska Glacier. Scenic driving, glacier, ice climbing, rafting, ziplining. Just 2.5 hours from Anchorage, the 4-mile-wide face of the great Matanuska Glacier invites you to a day full of adventure – climbing the ice, rafting the river, or flying through the air on Alaska’s fastest zip line.Drive along the scenic Glenn Highway from Anchorage to Mile 101, where you can ...

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