Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Teklanika River (Lower Tanana: Tach'edhaneek'a) is a 91-mile (146 km) tributary of the Nenana River in the U.S. state of Alaska. [1] The Nenana is a tributary of the Tanana River , which is part of the Yukon River drainage in the central interior region of the state. [ 3 ]
There are four camping areas located within the interior of the park (Sanctuary River, Teklanika River, Igloo Creek, and Wonder Lake). Camper buses provide transportation to these campgrounds, but only passengers camping in the park can use these particular buses. At mile marker 53 on road is the Toklat River Contact Station.
Teklanika River campground is the most central, but has no electric or water hookups. Still, it's as deep as you can get into the park by private vehicle, and the views of the mountains, rivers ...
The Teklanika Archeological District is a 22-acre (8.9 ha) collection of archeological sites located on a knoll overlooking the Teklanika River, that was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1976. [1] It includes two contributing sites designated HEA-1 and HEA-2. It includes sites interpreted by archaeologists as a camp ...
Logo of the Alaska State Park system Campsite at Bluberry Lake SRS in the Chugach Mountains Denali seen from Denali State Park. Alaska’s state park system is managed by the Alaska Department of Natural Resources division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation. The system contains over 120 units spanning 3,427,895 acres, making it far larger than any ...
As of March 2007, about 9.8 million acres (15,000 sq mi; 40,000 km 2) have been conveyed, including 6.6 million acres (10,000 sq mi; 27,000 km 2) in surface and subsurface estate (fee Owned) and 3.2 million acres (5,000 sq mi; 13,000 km 2) of subsurface estate corresponding to surface estate owned by villages corporations in the Doyon region.
The 1940s bus was taken to a remote trail about 60 years ago (from 2020) by a road crew, according to Denali Borough Mayor, Clay Walker. Visitors to the site had to cross the Teklanika River. In 2019 a newlywed Belarusian woman drowned trying to cross the swollen river on her way to the site. Another drowning took place in 2010.
The Stampede Trail is a remote road and trail located in the Denali Borough in the U.S. state of Alaska.Apart from a paved or maintained gravel road for 8 miles (13 km) between Eight Mile Lake and the trail's eastern end, the route consists of a primitive and at times dangerous hiking or ATV (all-terrain vehicle) trail following the path of the original road, which has deteriorated over the years.