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Bering Land Bridge National Preserve

United States · Americas

Bering Land Bridge National Preserve

About Bering Land Bridge National Preserve

The Bering Land Bridge National Preserve is a preserve in Arctic Alaska. The preserve, which is crossed by the Continental Divide, is dotted with lava fields, tundra, and crossed by the Arctic Circle.

Bering Land Bridge National Preserve travel guide

Understand

History

Native Americans Over ten thousand years ago, the Bering Strait was above sea level. Native Americans were able to cross this land from 25,000 to 10,000 years ago, go through the Bering Land Bridge Preserve, and enter North and South America. However, some tribal groups settled in the region, with tribal populations scattered similar in number to today. Around 1900, the gold rush in Alaska brought American settlers. They colonized the Nome region, south of the preserve. Population in the Bering Strait region must have been at least 20,000, since 12,000 lived in Nome and 5,000 lived in Teller for a brief period. However, by the 1910 census, populations had declined dramatically. This continued to decline as diseases swept through the area, resulting in the Nome Serum Run in 1925. The Bering Land Bridge Preserve now receives thousands of tourists a year, despite the remote location and bears.

Landscape

Flora Most of the land in the preserve is tundra, underlain by permafrost. The tundra supports a variety of low and slow-growing plants. The landscape is dominated by grasses and sedges, such as cottongrass. Large trees cannot survive on the tundra. Tree species are limited to dwarf species like Arctic willow, Alaska willow and dwarf birch. Berry-bearing plants in the preserve include bog blueberry, crowberry, low-bush cranberry and cloudberry or salmonberry. Lichens are found in rocky areas. Mosses and liverworts in the preserve include Sphagnum peat mosses, Aulacomnium bog mosses, Dicranum forked mosses, Polytrichum haircap mosses and Rhizomnium. In spring the preserve features a variety of wildflowers, including Alpine Arnica, fireweed, Kamchatka rhododendron, Labrador tea, monkshood, one-flowered cinquefoil, harebell and alpine forget-me-not.

Fauna Caribou are survivors of the ice age environment in the preserve, together with reintroduced muskoxen. The muskoxen were reintroduced to the area in 1970, after being wiped out in the early 20th ce

Getting there

There are no roads into the preserve. Access to the preserve is by bush planes or boats during summer months and by ski planes, snowmobiles or dog sleds during the winter.

Getting around

Apart from grizzly bear habitats, the Bering Strait Preserve is open to the public to explore. There are multiple lodges around the preserve, one of which contains a bathhouse. There are no roads in the preserve.

See

There are lava fields in the south of the park. Mountains are scattered around the park, the highest of which passes 3,000 feet (914 m).

Serpentine Hot Springs. The preserve's most visited location. Serpentine Hot Springs, (Inupiaq: Iyat, the Inupiaq word for cooking pot, or Uunaatuq), previously known as Arctic Hot Springs, is on the northern part of the Seward Peninsula at 65°51′N, 164°43′W. The springs are on the right bank of Hot Springs Creek which flows to the Serpentine River, 47 miles NW of Imuruk Lake. (updated Apr 2022) Other notable locations in the preserve include the Trail Creek Caves, Devil Mountain Lakes, and the Lost Jim Lava Flow.

Sleep

There are no accommodations in the preserve.

Overview adapted from Wikipedia, travel guide fromWikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。Photography via Wikimedia Commons.

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