With one million acres of rugged, northwestern Montana wilderness to explore, a trip to Glacier National Park could fill up an entire summer and more. But let"s just take one day and virtually visit Grinnell Lake. A 7-mile loop trail, a relatively easy one in this mountain wilderness, takes you to the shores of the lake turned emerald green by glacial silt. Grinnell Lake—as well as Mount Grinnell and Grinnell Glacier—is named for the naturalist George Bird Grinnell. For two decades, he lobbied for federal protection of these lands, and on May 11, 1910, the "Crown of the Continent," as Grinnell dubbed the area, became the nation"s 10th national park.
The Crown of the Continent
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
There was gold in them there hills…
-
Mute swans
-
National Find a Rainbow Day
-
With leaves this tasty, who cares about a view?
-
Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
-
World Turtle Day
-
Barcelona bids farewell to summer
-
Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah
-
Celebrating 30 years of eye-opening images
-
A misty morning in Brazil
-
Star Wars Day
-
Camel thorn trees, Namib-Naukluft Park, Namibia
-
Baddest of the badlands
-
Here we mark the price of freedom
-
Porcupine
-
An island in the Highlands
-
Flag Day
-
In the Himalayas for International Mountain Day
-
A city, a cliff, a canyon…and cheese
-
World Wildlife Day
-
Fibonacci Day
-
The Badlands celebrates a milestone
-
International Day for Biological Diversity
-
Upper Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park
-
Spire Cove in Kenai Fjords National Park, Seward, Alaska
-
The owl that loved football
-
Flying high on National Bird Day
-
From pirate port to nature preserve
-
Bodie State Historic Park, California
-
Invisible no longer
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

