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Environment Web

25 images Created 27 Mar 2014

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  • Alaska_2010.-Camp Parigon in Homer and on The Parigon fishing in the Cook Inlet. Photo by Tom Lynn
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  • Great Lakes, nws, lynn, 17.-Michelle Hefty, Park Maager of Newport State Park, holds a picture of the once prstine beach in Door County before the Cladophora moved in and covered the whole beach.  Envasive species in the great lakes are the reason for the Cladophora the that is hitting beaches all over Lake Michigan.  Photo by Tom Lynn/TLYNN@JOURNALSENTINEL.COM
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  • An ultralight aircraft operated by Operation Migration trains a group of Whooping Cranes to migrate south from Necedah National Wildlife Refuge in Necedah Wisconsin in September 2007. Photo by Tom Lynn
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  • Sandhill Cranes fly into the Wisconsin River with numbers increasing as they prepare to migrate south,
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  • Ice forms in the Milwaukee Harbor on the morning of Tuesday, January 13, 2009, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. More snow is on the way Wednesday and bitter cold temperatures will make a tough week. (Tom Lynn/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel/MCT) ORG XMIT: 1068118
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  • Canada
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  • Sandhill Cranes, 500,000 strong, fly into the Platte River in Nebraska during their annual spring migration.  Cranes are the oldest living birds on the planet dating back 10,000 years.  The Platte River Valley is the most important stopover on the migration.  The river provides a perfect spot to rest and food is abundant in the nearby fields.  The energy gained along the Platte River allow the cranes to finish their migration as far north as Alaska.  Photo by Tom Lynn
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  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
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  • An ultralight aircraft operated by Operation Migration trains a group of Whooping Cranes to migrate south from Necedah National Wildlife Refuge in Necedah Wisconsin in September 2007. Photo by Tom Lynn
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  • tlynn2010-selects14.-The end of the rainbow.  A rainbow appears on the horizen on Cook's Inlet in Alaska.   Photo by Tom Lynn/TLYNN@JOURNALSENTINEL.COM
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  • Alaska_2010.-Brown Bear and two cubs on Katmai. Photo by Tom Lynn
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  • An ultralight aircraft operated by Operation Migration trains a group of Whooping Cranes to migrate south from Necedah National Wildlife Refuge in Necedah Wisconsin in September 2007. Photo by Tom Lynn
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  • Alaska2010.-A Bald Eagle flies over in Homer Alaska.
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  • Alaska2010.-The sun sets over Denali the largest mountain in North America located in Denali National Park Alaska.
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  • Alaska2010.-Brown Beers on the Kenai Peninsula.
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  • Alaska2010.-A Bald Eagle flies over fisherman netting Salmon in Homer Alaska.
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  • ICF_Prairie.-Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa) with an incoming storm. The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
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  • ICF_Prairie.-An amazing cloud formation over Prairie Coreopsis (Coreopsis palmata).  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
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  • Strartrails over the prairie.
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  • The red mail drop building on Tobin Harbor at Isle Royale National Park.
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  • Lake Superior stones on the beach in Copper Harbor MI.
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  • A abandon boat along Tobin Harbor at Isle Royale National Park. Boat registration tags date back to 1935.
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  • Water from the Mukwaonago River rushes by toward Lulu Lake. Lulu Lake is located in Waukesha and Walworth Counties. The rich marshes of the upper Mukwonago River and 86 acre kettle lake are some of the best water quality in the state. 14 differant types of natural communities are protected at Lulu Lake. Thursday May 28, 1998.
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  • WATER, NEW, TOM LYNN, 9 of many.-The sun peaks through a bridge over Coon creek in the Bohemian Valley Wednesday July 25, 200.
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