Lake Clark National Park and Preserve

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Lake Clark National Park and Preserve
IUCN Category II (National Park)
Lake Clark National Park and Preserve
Location Alaska, USA
Nearest city Anchorage
Coordinates 60°58′0″N 153°25′0″W / 60.96667, -153.41667
Area 4,030,025 acres (16,308 km²)
Established December 2, 1980
Visitors 5,320 (in 2006)
Governing body National Park Service

Established in 1980 by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, Lake Clark National Park and Preserve is a United States National Park in southwestern Alaska. The park includes many streams and lakes vital to the Bristol Bay salmon fishery. The park allows a wide variety of recreational activities year-round.

Lake Clark
Lake Clark


Lake Clark has been called "the essence of Alaska", for it concentrates in a relatively small area of the Alaska Peninsula, Southwest of Anchorage, a variety of features not found together in any of the other Alaska Parks: the junction of three mountain ranges, (the Alaska Range from the North, the Aleutian Range from the South, and the park's own rugged Chigmit Mountains), two active volcanoes (Iliamna and Redoubt), a coastline with rainforests on the East (similar to South East Alaska), a plateau with tundra on the West (similar to Arctic Alaska), and turquoise lakes.

No roads lead to the park and it can only be reached by small aircraft, floatplanes being the best method. The park, one of the least visited in the National Park System, averages fewer than 5,000 visitors per year.

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