Alaska - Seward Peninsula

The Seward Peninsula on Alaska's western coast is a remnant of the Bering Land Bridge connecting Siberia with mainland Alaska during the Pleistoscene Ice Age.It projects about 200 miles into the Bering Sea between the Norton Sound, the Bering Strait, the Chukchi Sea, and Kotzebue Sound just south of the arctic circle. Our main interest here was wildlife photography, specifically musk oxen. We traveled with guide Carol Gates of Roam Nome.

Tundra flowers:

Narcissus-flowered anemone, Anemone narcissiflora:

flower flowers

Alpine azalea, Loiseleuria procumbens:

flower

Wooly lousewort, Pedicularis kanei:

flower

Moss campion, Silene acaulis:

flowers flowers

Alaska cotton, Eriophoram scheuchzeri:

Dandelion, Taraxacum sp.

dandelion

Mountain avens, Dryas octopetala

flower flowers

Tall Jacob's ladder, Polemonium acutiflorum:

flowers

Lapland diapensia, Diapensia lappnicum ssp. obovata

flowers

Alaska poppy, Papaver alaskanum:

flowers

Labrador tea, Ledum palustris ssp. groenlandicum:

flowers flowers

Purple oxytrope, Oxytropis nigrescens

flowers

The main town is Nome, population around 3500.

Nome

Three gravel roads link Nome to Council, the Kougarok River, and Teller.

road sign

Nome-Council Road

Nome-Taylor (Kougarok) Road

Nome-Teller Road


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Last modified 29 November 2023