Randy Olson, Melissa Farlow Photography

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  • Cruise ships dock at Ketchikan's harbor, while another waits its' turn. In spite of the 200 inches of rain the region receives every year, nearly a million cruise ship passengers visit Alaska, sometimes doubling a town’s population on a summer day. As many as six cruise ships make daily stops and as many as 500 a year. The Inside Passage is a network of channels between islands along the coast of Alaska, British Columbia and Washington state. Tourism is Southeast Alaska’s fastest growing industry.<br />
The former logging town of Ketchikan, now relies on tourism. Travelers can shop for native art and souvenirs or diamonds in one of many jewelry stores along what was a former red-light district during the Gold Rush.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1073531.TIF
  • The Inside Passage is a draw for cruise ship passengers to shop and sightsee in Ketchikan. Travelers can shop for Native art and souvenirs or diamonds in one of many jewelry stores.<br />
Once a logging town, the city now depends on a growing tourism industry. Nearly a million cruise ship passengers visit Southeast Alaska every year—sometimes doubling a town’s population in one day.
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  • A cruise ship docks at Ketchikan's harbor bringing a city full of tourists for shopping and sightseeing. The once logging town is dependent on the growing tourism industry. Nearly a million cruise ship passengers visit Alaska, sometimes doubling a town’s population on a summer day. <br />
The ships travel the Inside Passage, a network of waterways between islands along the coast of Alaska, British Columbia and Washington state. <br />
Travelers can shop for native art and souvenirs or diamonds in one of many jewelry stores along what was a former red-light district during the Gold Rush. The Misty Fjords National Monument is one of the area’s major attractions.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1075021.TIF
  • In spite of the 200 inches of rain the area receives every year, nearly a million cruise ship passengers visit Alaska, sometimes doubling a town’s population on a summer day. As many as six cruise ships make daily stops - and as many as 500 a year - bringing tourists on the Inside Passage, the route through a network of passages between islands along the coast of Alaska, British Columbia and Washington state. Tourism is Southeast Alaska’s fastest growing industry.<br />
One of the stops in Alaska’s Panhandle is the former logging town of Ketchikan. Travelers can shop for Native art and souvenirs or diamonds in one of many jewelry stores along what was a former red-light district during the Gold Rush.
    MM7258_20050819_07149.tif
  • Nearly a million cruise ship passengers visit Alaska, sometimes doubling a town’s population on a summer day. As many as six cruise ships make daily stops in Ketchikan - and as many as 500 a year - bringing tourists on the Inside Passage. Tourism is Southeast Alaska’s fastest growing industry.<br />
Travelers can shop for Native art and souvenirs or diamonds in one of many jewelry stores along what was a former logging town.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1075023.TIF
  • Passengers line up under the starts to wait to board a cruise ship after a rainy afternoon in the dry season in Alaska's Southeast. Tourism is once again a growing business driving the economy in coastal communities.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1075037.jpg
  • Easter Island is the most remote inhabited island in the world.  The nearest population center is Chile (2300 miles) and the nearest Polynesian center in the opposite direction is Tahiti (2600 miles).  Easter Island, (Rapa Nui, Isla de Pascua) is famous for Moai everywhere along the coast and littered abandoned in the center along the Moai roads used to transport them.  Polynesians had a knack for colonizing even the most inhospitable oceanic rock.  They were adept sailors, explorers, colonizers and their experience taught them the best way to escape war or famine was to sail east - to go windward in search of new islands.  There is no evidence that a 2nd group reached the island in early history as Heyerdall alledges – in fact it points to the opposite.  Easter Island had military rule until 1965 and had cashless societies of fishing and farming that have since been broken apart by independence and a dependence on tourism.  Rapa Nui are strict with marriage records and it is possible to trace this culture's roots to 30 or so couples who survived 19th century.
    MM8059_20110616_10548.tif
  • Tourists mug for a friend's photograph on the streets of Zermatt.<br />
Zermatt grows from 5 thousand to 20 thousand people from tourism in high season.  There is a tension between welcoming the tourists, which drives the economy, and yet limiting the impact.  Zermatt bans cars from the street—visitors take a train or tax from a nearby town and the streets are filled mostly with foot traffic except a few buses.
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  • Tourists photograph a Rapa Nui native dancer in body paint. Approximately 6,000 Rapa Nui live on Easter Island, which belongs to Chile. They numbered only 111 in 1877 after slave traders and disease decimated the population. <br />
Most people associate Easter Island with the famous, ancient statues known as moai and are unaware that descendants of the Polynesian culture inhabit the island today.
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  • A native dancer, a tourist and a dog at Ahu Tahia in modern day Easter Island.<br />
Situated near the town of Hanga Roa, the ahu sits near a canoe ramp and was restored by an archaeologist in 1974. <br />
It is perched alone on a ceremonial platform.<br />
Tahai is thought to be among the earliest ahu structures on the island dating back to 690 AD.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493965.JPG
  • Tourists dive on Easter Island's reef encounter a moai that was made for a 1994 Hollywood movie and then sunk offshore. The reef is healthy, although it is overfished. <br />
Easter Island is the most remote inhabited island in the world, 2300 miles from Chile and the nearest Polynesian center the opposite direction is Tahiti, 2600 miles to the west.
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  • A Rapanui impresario takes a break at home while waiting for tourists to arrive at his restaurant.
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  • Tourists at Diego Rivera's Detroit Industry fresco.
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  • The Heidelberg Project, an outdoor art museum started by Tyree Guyton in 1986.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MT6613_1457243.jpg
  • Dressed in elegant formal wear, a bride and groom walk to the helicopter to fly up onto a glacier for their wedding ceremony in Southeast Alaska.
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  • Hands clasped, a couple shows their rings after the wedding on Mendenhall Glacier.
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  • A bride picks up the groom for the kiss completing the wedding ceremony. The couple strapped on crampons beneath their formal wear and flew by helicopter onto the Mendenhall Glacier for a memorable experience in Southeast Alaska.
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  • Float planes dock to board and carry tourists, then take off over cruise ships to sightsee glaciers, whales and bears. The Misty Fjords National Monument is one of the area’s major attractions.
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  • Tourists are drawn to the beauty of Alaska and its glaciers, and some come for the ultimate and most unlikely experience—donning crampons for their wedding on ice.<br />
If the weather cooperates, couples can arrange for a limousine pickup from a cruise ship to the airport for a helicopter flight onto a glacier. They had a traditional ceremony with tuxedo and white wedding dress and extra touches including wedding cake, music, and flowers.<br />
The groom pops the cork on a bottle of champagne provided by the planner who married this couple on the Mendenhall Glacier.
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  • A tourist walk on top of a worn pyramid above a tomb and archeological site.<br />
The Huaca Rajada, of Sipán, Peru, is a Moche Pyramid near Chiclayo, Peru in the Lambayeque Valley, famous for the tomb of the Lord of Sipán, Peru, excavated in 1987. The ruins of Sipán are dated from 50–700 AD, during the Moche culture.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187659.jpg
  • Tourists walk through the ruins of Monte Alban, a Zapotec capital in the Valley of Oaxaca. Inhabited over a period of 1,500 years by a succession of peoples – Olmecs, Zapotecs and Mixtecs – the terraces, dams, canals, pyramids and artificial mounds of Monte Albán were literally carved out of the mountain and are the symbols of a sacred topography. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site with unique architecture.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187614.jpg
  • People play in the surf along the beach during soft summer light in La Serena, Chile's premier beach resort. La Serena enjoys a transitional climate between the arid northern desert of the Atacama and the pleasant Mediterranean climate of the central coast.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187584.jpg
  • Tourists explore the salt flats near San Pedro, in the Atacama Desert. Salar de Atacama is surrounded by mountains, and has no drainage outlets. Water evaporates leaving small deposits of crusted salt.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187558.jpg
  • Hikers walking along the top ridge of a large dune in the Atacama Desert a region in north Chile that is considered the driest place on earth. Located between the Andes and Coastal mountains, the parched desert is formed by wind and erosion.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187547.jpg
  • This Mexican photographer has been selling Polaroid instant color photographs to tourists at the base of Cascada Cola de Caballo, Horsetail Falls, for 50 of his 73 years. The waterfall makes a dramatic 75-foot drop through Cumbres de Monterrey in Las Cumbres National Park south of Monterrey.  The falls and surrounding park are a draw for Mexican families for picnics.
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  • A Suri boy wearing body paint poses for tourists.
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  • A Rapanui dancer entertains tourists.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493952.JPG
  • Rapanui dancers perform for tourists.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493953.JPG
  • A Rapanui dancer with body paint listens to native musicians.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493970-2.JPG
  • A Rapanui dancer with body paint listens to native musicians.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493970-1.JPG
  • A Rapanui dancer with body paint listens to native musicians.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493970.JPG
  • A Rapanui dancer paints his body.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493950.JPG
  • A Rapanui sands wooden Moai for sale to tourists.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493957.JPG
  • Moai display in Santiago, Chile, airport.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493987.JPG
  • Tourists take photographs of a shark swimming overhead inside Ocean Park Aquarium. The amusement park and oceanarium merges entertainment and education as well as conservation advocacy although it is criticized by wildlife advocates for practices including wild capture of dolphins and orcas.
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  • Store window reflections mirror cruise ships arriving to unload shoppers and sightseers in the former logging town of Ketchikan located in Alaska’s Panhandle. Travelers can shop for Native art and souvenirs or diamonds in one of many jewelry stores along what was a former red-light district during the Gold Rush.
    MM7258_20050905_12198.tif
  • Women sing out 'Stop in the Name of Love' in the spot where Diana Ross recorded the song.
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  • A freshly engaged couple on 150-foot-tall ferris wheel on Navy Pier.
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  • Tourists are wed on Mendenhall Glacier in the Tongass National Forest. He marks the spot of their ceremony with a GPS while behind them a guide leads hikers up an icy trail. She blissfully basks in the sun as they wait for their helicopter return back to Juneau.
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  • A bride and groom cut the cake and kiss after their wedding ceremony that was held on the Mendenhall Glacier. Champagne, flowers, music and a linen table cloth set the scene for their atypical, romantic celebration.
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  • A bride and groom are fitted for crampons before taking a helicopter flight to the Mendenhall Glacier to be married in the icefield.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1075138.TIF
  • A surreal and beautiful setting for the wedding ceremony. A cake and champagne are placed on a table covered with a linen cloth. A camera on a tripod records the couple's wedding vows taken on the Mendenhall Glacier. They said they were married in "God's Cathedral."
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  • A couple arrives by helicopter and carefully negotiates walking on ice onto the Mendenhall Glacier for their wedding ceremony in Juneau, Alaska.
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  • A couple steadies themselves with crampons and kiss while waiting for their wedding on the icy Mendenhall Glacier in Southeast Alaska.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1075133.TIF
  • A couple rides in a limousine to the airport to take a helicopter to the Mendenhall Glacier for their wedding. Holding flowers for the ceremony, they share a warm moment in anticipation of the event.
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  • Tourists don blue jackets and hike in the rain to Mendenhall Glacier through the Tongass National Forest. The region earns its reputation for receiving up to 200 inches of rain a year creating a lush, green and moss-covered environment.
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  • School children explore a worn pyramid on an archeological site. The Huaca Rajada, of Sipán, Peru, is a Moche Pyramid near Chiclayo, Peru in the Lambayeque Valley, famous for the tomb of the Lord of Sipán, Peru excavated in 1987. The ruins of Sipán are dated from 50–700 AD, during the Moche culture.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187661.jpg
  • An overlook viewing modern downtown Santiago, Chile's capital city. Approximately three decades of uninterrupted economic growth have transformed Santiago into one of Latin America's most sophisticated metropolitan areas, with extensive suburban development, dozens of shopping malls, and impressive high-rise architecture.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187653.jpg
  • Sunlight floods the doorway as Christian worshipers file into Lo Vasquez  sanctuary. They walked during a religious pilgrimage to the Catholic cathedral located near both Santiago and Valparaiso, Chile.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187647.jpg
  • Tourists walk on an outcrop in a wildlife sanctuary, Reserva Nacional de Paracas, Peru. Dunes line the most important wildlife sanctuary, Reserva Nacional de Paracas, on the Peruvian coast known for it's eroded, sculpted rocks and arches and birds and marine life.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187638.jpg
  • Tourists climb down steep steps the ruins of Monte Alban, a Zapotec capital with impressive architectural remains in the Oaxaca Valley in Mexico. <br />
It was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Inhabited over a period of 1,500 years by a succession of peoples – Olmecs, Zapotecs and Mixtecs – the terraces, dams, canals, pyramids and artificial mounds of Monte Albán were literally carved out of the mountain and are the symbols of a sacred topography.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187612.jpg
  • Tourists walk through the ruins of Monte Alban, a Zapotec capital that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Located in the Oaxaca Valley, it is an important archeological site founded in 6th century B.C.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187610.jpg
  • Tourists stand on the ruins of Monte Alban, a Zapotec capital. It is a large pre-Columbian archeological site including pyramids and terraces in the Mexican state of Oaxaca.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187608.jpg
  • A lone tourist walks among the El Tatio geysers in the Atacama desert north of San Pedro at 4300 meters above sea level in the Andes Mountains. The world's highest geyser field has over 80 active geysers with a steaming field of boiling water that spews and sprays at sunrise leaving white mineral deposits.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187594.jpg
  • People play in the surf in La Serena, Chile's premier beach resort north of Santiago. The white sand beach is rain free nine months of the year and enjoys a transitional climate between the arid northern desert of the Atacama and the pleasant Mediterranean climate of the central coast.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187581.jpg
  • Hikers walking along the top ridge of a large sand dune in the Atacama Desert. Known as the driest place on earth, the desert is also considered the oldest. It has experienced semi-arid conditions for over 150 million years, and the inner core—the driest spot—has been hyper-arid for over 15 million years.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187548.jpg
  • A lone hiker climb atop weathered desert sand landscape of driest place on earth. The Atacama Desert sometimes goes more than a century without recorded precipitation. The Atacama Desert is also considered the oldest desert on earth. On the whole, it has experienced semi-arid conditions for over 150 million years, and the inner core—the driest spot—has been hyper-arid for over 15 million years.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187540.jpg
  • Hikers follow a trail in the last light at dusk and climb to the top of weathered desert landscape for a view of the driest place on earth. The Atacama Desert sometimes goes more than a century with no recorded measurable precipitation. The Atacama Desert is considered the oldest desert on earth. On the whole, it has experienced semi-arid conditions for over 150 million years, and the inner core—the driest spot—has been hyper-arid for over 15 million years.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187536.jpg
  • Three tourists walk toward the staircase that leads to the top of the Pyramid of the Sun and Moon at Teotihuacán Aztec site. Teotihuacán was Mexico's biggest ancient city, pre-Columbian and pre-Hispanic empire with perhaps 200,000 people at its peak. <br />
Centuries after its fall, it was still a pilgrimage site for Aztec royalty who believed the gods had sacrificed themselves here to start the sun moving. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the most visited archeological site in Mexico.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187470.jpg
  • American tourists don sombreros and sing with a mariachi band at a cantina bar in Nuevo Laredo, a quirky border town.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187052.jpg
  • A diner watches people cross El Zócalo, Mexico City's grandiose main square, from the elegant Gran Hotel's rooftop restaurant. Built atop ruins of the ancient Aztec city of Tenochtitlán, the zócalo is now surrounded by sprawling Spanish colonial architecture, the most prominent being the Metropolitan Cathedral.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_1187014.jpg
  • Hamar, wearing body paint, stand on stilts and beg from tourists.
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  • Villagers cover themselves in body paint for tourists.
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  • Tourists in cheetah-print dresses take photographs of locals in Jinka.
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  • A pedestrian shopping area in downtown Guangzhou at night.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176317.JPG
  • The Window on the World amusement park in Shenzhen allows Chinese to travel the world in an afternoon. Behind “Mount Rushmore” in this photo are actors playing Africans in huts and Egyptians at the Great Pyramids of Giza. Historically, during Mao, Chinese have not been able to travel. But for now they have to look at the “Eiffel Tower” and “Mount Rushmore” at Window on the World. Because of China’s one-child policy, instituted in 1978, this is the first generation in the world’s history in which a majority are single children, a group whose solipsistic tendencies have been further encouraged by a growing obsession with consumerism, the Internet, and video games. At the same time, today’s young Chinese are better educated and more worldly than their predecessors. Whereas the so-called Lost Generation that grew up in the Cultural Revolution often struggled to finish high school, today around a quarter of Chinese in their 20s have attended college. The country’s opening to the West has allowed many more of its citizens to satisfy their curiosity about the world: some 37 million will travel overseas in 2007. In the next decade, there will be more Chinese tourists traveling the globe than the combined total of those originating in the U.S. and Europe.
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  • Tourists at the Window of the World amusement park in Shenzhen.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176284.JPG
  • Tourists at the Window of the World amusement park in Shenzhen.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176283.JPG
  • A jewelry store with a gold chariot built to attract tourists.
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  • A jewelry store with a gold chariot built to attract tourists.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7339_1223005.TIF
  • Wildebeests cross road in front of jeep.
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  • Tourists photographing from minibuses in the Serengeti.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7314_1023366.JPG
  • Tourists riding camels on the beach under a cloudy sky.
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  • A woman struggles in wind to photograph tourists on camels on beach.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7112_763195.JPG
  • Chilean newlyweds in festive paint and feathers celebrate marriage Rapa Nui style. Many of the 100,000 visitors to the island are from Chile which dwarf the less than 6,000 inhabitants.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1477349.JPG
  • Canoe floats in placid waters along the bank of the St. Mary's River as warm rays of sun fade after sunset. The river originates in the Okefenokee Swamp and flows toward the Atlantic Ocean forming a border between Florida and Georgia.
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  • Boys herd goats through the streets for tourists to see.
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  • Japanese tourists view the Matterhorn and pose for photos with the iconic St. Bernard dogs in the Alps. Around two million tourists visit annually to Switzerland's most popular destination nearby Zermatt.
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  • Children learn about at an ancient skull on a tour of the museum.
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  • Tourists with a Rapanui dance group.
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  • Tourists with a Rapanui dance group.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493948.JPG
  • A lone canoe is seen from the air in the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. The swamp's prairies are filled with a thick growth of aquatic plants where trails are cut for wilderness paddling trips.
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  • Fishermen power through the fog and waters through Billy's Lake in the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. West entrance of the swamp's open water is also the origin of the Suwanee River that flows into Florida to the Gulf of Mexico.
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  • A silhouetted man push poles his boat away from shore into the St. Mary's River in Florida. Vibrant colors of sunset reflect in the water in the fading light.
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  • Canoes are tied up for the night as paddlers camp on a wilderness trip through the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. Summer storms build in the distance at sunset over the wetlands prairie.
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  • Flat bottom boats tied at a dock on a foggy morning at Stephen Foster State Park west entrance to Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge.
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  • A still life of a canoe with a paddle floating in still waters reflecting the prairie in the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge.
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  • Canoes stacked for the evening are mirrored in reflections in still waters of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge in Georgia.<br />
<br />
Paddlers access the swamp through the Suwanee Canal dug in the 1890's by Atlanta lawyer Capt. Harry Jackson, who planned to drain the swamp for farmland before his company went bankrupt.
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  • Bottles of maple syrup.
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  • Tapping sugar maple trees to collect sap.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_1114733.jpg
  • Taku Glacier advances in the Juneau Ice Field.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_1114731.jpg
  • A water taxi ferries people to and from the airport on an island.
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  • A bar attracts crowds of tourists from the cruise ships.
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  • A luxury spa and overnight inn in the Mendenhall Valley.
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  • Ice tunnels and crevices in Mendenhall Glacier.
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  • A photographer poses with an imitation polar bear.
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  • Seaplane over Ketchikan Harbor with one of the many cruise ships.
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  • Houses built above Ketchikan Harbor where many cruise ships dock.
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  • A man holds a yellow eye fish he caught off of Prince of Wales Island.
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  • Father and son fish off of Prince of Wales Island.
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