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Alaska
Alaska is truly one of the world's special places. Those who
visit can't help marveling at the exotic wildlife, magnificent
mountains, glacier-carved valleys and steep, rocky coastline.
And after they spend several days encountering one wonder after
another, they marvel at just how much of this special place there
is to see.
The sheer size of Alaska is hard to imagine: It is one-fifth the
size of the rest of the United States. The town of Barrow on the
northern Alaska coast is more than 1,350 mi/2,174 km north of
Ketchikan (the same distance as New York City to Miami). Likewise,
Attu (at the west end of the Aleutian chain) is more than 1,500
mi/2,413 km west of Anchorage (a distance nearly equaling that
of Los Angeles to Houston). Acreage aside, Alaska is large in
lots of other ways: It has six distinct climatic regions, the
tallest mountains, the biggest glaciers, the most plentiful fishing
and the wildest nature preserves on the continent.
With such abundance, it's no wonder that more and more travelers
visit Alaska each year, particularly aboard cruise ships. Because
of this heavy traffic, some towns in southeastern Alaska and such
attractions as Denali National Park and Portage Glacier can seem
a bit overrun at times. It must also be noted that Alaska isn't
cheap: Per-day expenses in remote parts of the state are comparable
with those in New York City or London.
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