This Alaska Site is your guide to
Salmon and Rainbow Trout Fishing Vacations in The Last Frontier
.
Explore the history, the cities & regions, and the many opportunities offered by Alaska.




 

The Alaska Site -
Your guide to the Last Frontier!

 

 




 

 

 

 

 

 


Alaska Facts are a good starting point
for a closer look at the Last Frontier:

Alaska has over 6,640 miles of ocean coastline and, including islands, the total is increased to 33,904 miles of shoreline.

Origin of the Name "Alaska": Russian version of an Aleut word, Alakahak, for "peninsula," "great lands," or "land that is not an island"

The U.S. bought Alaska from Russia in October 1867 for 7.2 million dollars, or two cents per acre. Many Americans thought this was a waste of money and called Alaska "Seward’s Folly," after Secretary of State William H. Seward who arranged the purchase.

Alaska has one of the longest rivers in the world, the Yukon river, runs about 2,300 Miles, 1,400 in Alaska and 900 in Canada. There are more than 3,000 rivers in Alaska and over 3 million lakes. The largest, Lake Iliamna, encompasses over 1,000 square miles.

Every year Alaska has approximately 5,000 earthquakes, including 1,000 that measure above 3.5 on the Richter scale. Of the ten strongest earthquakes ever recorded in the world, three have occurred in Alaska.

Of the nation's 20 highest mountains, 17 are in Alaska. Mount McKinley ( 20,320 feet ) in the Alaska Range is the highest in North America and is the featured attraction in Denali National Park.

The National Park Service oversees more than 50 million acres of Alaska land. Six million-acre Denali National Park and Preserve is its most visited.

The Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, known as the Last Great Race on Earth, attracts mushers worldwide for the Anchorage to Nome trek, about 1,100 miles.

Alaska Extremes: the coldest day ever recorded: minus 80 degree's F at Prospect Creek Camp, Jan.23, 1971.The hottest day: 100 degree's F at Fort Yukon, June 27, 1915. The deepest single snowfall ever recorded in Alaska: 62 inches, Thompson Pass, Dec. 7, 1955.

Alaska has more than 5,000 glaciers covering 100,000 square miles. There are more active glaciers and ice fields in Alaska than in the rest of the inhabited world. The largest glacier is the Malaspina at 850 square miles. Five percent of the state, or 29,000 square miles, is covered by glaciers.

Alaska boasts the northernmost (Point Barrow), the easternmost (Semisopochnoi Island in the Aleutians), and the westernmost (Little Diomede Island) points in the United States. This is possible because Alaska straddles the international dateline.

On March 27, 1964, North America’s strongest recorded earthquake, magnitude 9.2 on the Richter scale, rocked central Alaska.

Admitted to Statehood: January 3, 1959
Capital: Juneau
Nicknames: Great land and Last Frontier
State Motto: "North to the Future"
Bird: Willow Ptarmigan
Fish: King Salmon
Flower: forget me not
Gem: Jade
Tree: Sitka Spruce
Song: "Alaska's Flag"

 

 

Alaska's Largest Cities:

1. Anchorage - estimated population 278,700

2. Fairbanks - estimated population 31,142

3. Juneau - estimated population 30,737

Note: All other cities and villages in Alaska have a population of less than 10,000. The total population of the state of Alaska is estimated to be about 675,000.


Links of Interest:

Alcan Highway information and maps.

- Have fresh Wild Alaskan Salmon shipped to your door.

- Buy your own Alaska fishing, vacation or hunting property.

Some great Alaskan Outdoor Adventures.

 

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