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  • Aerial of River accessable only Garden Creeek Ranch owned by the Nature Conservany on the Snake River in Hells Canyon south of Lewiston Idaho with Washington State on foreground side of river.
    SnakeHellsNatureConserv2646Crop.jpg
  • Aerial of River accessable only Garden Creek Ranch owned by the Nature Conservany on the Snake River in Hells Canyon south of Lewiston Idaho with Washington State on foreground side of river.
    SnakeHellsNatureConserv2649.jpg
  • Aerial of River accessable only Garden Creeek Ranch owned by the Nature Conservany on the Snake River in Hells Canyon south of Lewiston Idaho with Washington State on foreground side of river.
    SnakeHellsNatureConserv2648.jpg
  • Fog Band Sunset Glow at Silver Creek on the Nature Conservancy on a cold winter evening in Late November.  Licensing and Limited Edition Prints of 17 includes all sizes.
    SilverCreek-FogbandSunset-Edit.tif
  • Silver Creek Summer Panorama at the Nature Conservancy near Picabo Idaho. Licensing and  Editions of 25.
    SilverCrkNatureConsSummerPano612.tif
  • Morning Winter scenic at Silver Creeks Nature Conservancy near Picabo in south central Idaho after a light snow storm blankets the landscape in a soft layer of white. Open Edition Prints and Licensing
    SilverCreekWinter11-2010-32.tif
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    Shoshone Falls Rainbow.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    Shoshone Falls 3064.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    SnakeShoshoneFalls3001.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    SnakeShoshoneFalls2983-Edit.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeShoshoneFalls3064.jpg
  • Sub zero morning on Silver Creek just above Purdy’s Bridge on the Nature Conservancy a snow island forms mid-stream
    SilverCreekWinterSnowIsland2811.jpg
  • Editions of 8<br />
Summer storm threatens rain at the Nature Conservancy's Silver Creek Preserve in Picabo Idaho.
    Silver Creek Clouds 67.jpg
  • Two men in a canoe paddle down Silver Creek at the Nature Conservancy near Picabo idaho with a fly fisherman looking on from near by in summertiem in south central Idaho
    SilverCreekCanoe-Fisherman4615.tif
  • Early summer afternoon at Silver Creek.  Thunderheads building up north of the Nature Conservancy promise a brief rainstorm later near Picabo in south central Idaho.
    SilverCreek45---V.tif
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    Shoshone Falls Rainbow.jpg
  • Perfect summer day on Silver Creek at the Nature Conservancy near Picabo in south central Idaho with world class fly fishing and breathtaking landscape
    SilverCreekSummerVertical4643.tif
  • Silver Creek at the Nature Conservancy near Picabo in south central Idaho is a fly fishing destination haunted by the likes of Ernest Hemingway and Gary Cooper and originally owned by the Union Pacific Railroad during the early days of Sun Valley Resort. Winter Scenic view from the overlook
    SilverCreekWinterPano-9745.tif
  • Perfect summer day on Silver Creek at the Nature Conservancy near Picabo in south central Idaho with world class fly fishing and breathtaking landscape
    SilverCreekSummerPanoCrop4630.tif
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    SnakeShoshoneFalls3064.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeShoshoneFalls2989.jpg
  • Editions of 8<br />
Silver Creek Summer Panorama at the Nature Conservancy near Picabo Idaho
    WC Silver Creek Pano 8.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls in snow is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeCShoshoneFallsWinter2304.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Lone fisherman on Sullivans Pond at the Nature Conservancy at Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho fishes in cold winter conditions
    Silver Creek Fisherman.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    ShoshoneFalls6946.jpg
  • Sunrise comes to the Nature Conservancy at Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho destination for world class flyfishing and recreation.  Open Edition Prints and Licensing.
    SilverCreekSunrise2033-3.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints and Licensing. <br />
Winter morning with cold temperatures and sunrise at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek in South Central Idaho
    SilverCreekFrostyWinterMorning2790.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Winter Full Moonrise on Purdy's Pond at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek near Picabo in South Central Idaho
    MoonSilverCreekPurdys_1621.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Winter Full Moonrise on Purdy's Pond at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek near Picabo in South Central Idaho
    MoonSilverCreekPurdys_1636-Edit.jpg
  • Sunset Fog Band on the Nature Conservancy at Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho on a cold winter evening.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SilverCreek-FogbandSunset-Edit.tif
  • Black Labrador Retriever named, Blue, holds for next adventure at the Nature Conservancy at Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho on a winter morning.  Open Edition Prints and Licensing.
    SilveCreekBlueLabradorRetriever8154.tif
  • Black Labrador Retriever named, Blue, holds for next adventure at Stalker Creek at the Nature Conservancy at Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho on a winter morning.  Open Edition Prints and Licensing.
    SilverCreekBlueDog8153.tif
  • Open Edition Prints and Licensing. Aerial photograph of Silver Creek near Picabo looking north over the Nature Conservancy near Picabo.
    SilverCreekAerialConservancy-69.tif
  • Editions of 35<br />
Early summer afternoon at Silver Creek.  Thunderheads building up north of the Nature Conservancy promise a brief rainstorm later near Picabo in south central Idaho.
    Silver Creek (V).jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls in sub-zero temperatures is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeRiverShoshoneFalls04951.jpg
  • Sullivans Pond at the Silver Creek Nature Conservancy in Central Idaho on a blustery spring evening.  Licensing and Open Editions Prints.
    SilverCreekSpringStorm--6529.jpg
  • Spring Runoff Rainbow. Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    ShoshoneFallsSpringRunoff-2665.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls in sub-zero temperatures is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeShoshoneFallsSpringRunoff.jpg
  • Dawn Light allows for a slow exposure onShoshone Falls. A waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used   Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    ShoshoneFallsDawn--2384.jpg
  • Editions of 17<br />
Silver Creek Early Spring Sky with dormant colors just coming alive with green at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho
    SilverCreekConservancySunrise-1846.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints and Licensing. <br />
Autumn evening as the temperatures drop at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek in South Central Idaho
    SilverCreek2521.jpg
  • Licensing and Editions of 17<br />
Early summer afternoon at Silver Creek.  Thunderheads building up north of the Nature Conservancy promise a brief rainstorm later near Picabo in south central Idaho.
    IdahoSilverCreekConservancy-22035.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints and Licensing. Near Conservancy Headquarters on a Winter morning with cold temperatures and fresh snow at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek in South Central Idaho near Picabo
    SilverCreekWinterViewConserv2300.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints and Licensing. Near Conservancy Headquarters on a Winter morning with cold temperatures and fresh snow at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek in South Central Idaho near Picabo
    SilverCreekConservancyFootbridge2297.jpg
  • Editions of 8<br />
The Nature Conservancy at Silver Creek comes slowly alive with new buds of greens near Picabo Idaho
    SilverCreekSpringPano-8.tif
  • Morning Winter scenic at Silver Creeks Nature Conservancy near Picabo in south central Idaho after a light snow storm and fog blankets the landscape in a soft layer of white. Open Edition Prints and Licensing
    SilvCrConservancyWinter-4957.tif
  • Salmon River with the Challis Hills along a dirt road with man in the distance enjoying nature.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SalmonRiverChallisHills755.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints and Licensing. Old cabins near Sullivans Pond on a Winter morning with cold temperatures and fresh snow at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek in South Central Idaho near Picabo
    SilverCreekConservancyCabin2279.jpg
  • Editions of 17<br />
Silver Creek Autumn Sky with fall colors at the Nature Conservancy on Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho
    SilverCreek10-2017--0358.tif
  • Editions of 35<br />
Early summer afternoon at Silver Creek.  Thunderheads building up north of the Nature Conservancy promise a brief rainstorm later near Picabo in south central Idaho.
    Silver Creek (H).jpg
  • Two trekkers hike through the natural beauty of the Milford Track experiencing all weather conditions and drama of New Zealands Fiordland National Park
    Milford Track 0891.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition PrintsBox Canyon Spring near Wendell Idaho is a pure source of water emerging out of the base of the cliff walls from a subterranean Lost River.
    SnakeBoxCanyonSpring0050-Edit-2.jpg
  • Swedish aspen leaf Populus trumula erecta in golden orange on fresh asphalt with rain water on surface. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    AspenLeaf6715.jpg
  • Limited Edition of 50 All Sizes Top view of a Punga Palm located in the native bush of New Zealand on the North Island
    Punga Palm Detail.jpg
  • Cottonwood tree Populus freemontii in early spring before any growth occurs near Bishop California black and white.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CottonwoodBishop119.jpg
  • Aerial view of the Snake River near Jackson Wyoming in its autumn glow during morning first light.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakeRiverAutumnAerial91591.jpg
  • Mackay Falls - Waterfalls abound on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Mackay Falls New Zealand 1112.jpg
  • Fern leaves, fungi, tree leaves, and rainforest ground cover near Fox Glacier on the South Island of New Zealand.
    Rainforest Detail 45.jpg
  • Fall colors and a brilliant day create a wetlands oasis in Trail Creek Canyon near Sun Valley Idaho.  Limited Editions of 75 includes all sizes.
    BeaverPonds8b45V.jpg
  • Limited Edition of 50 All Sizes Include. The top view of a native Punga Palm in New Zealand in a lush tropical rainforest on the North Island
    Punga Palm Detail.jpg
  • Palisades Lake is form by the South Fork of the Snake River near Alpine Junction Wyoming with the lake slowly filling up in springtime leaving vast expanses of lake bed shore. Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakePalisadesLakeShore8947.jpg
  • Palisades Lake is form by the South Fork of the Snake River near Alpine Junction Wyoming with the lake slowly filling up in springtime leaving vast expanses of lake bed shore. Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakePalisadesLakeShore--8944.jpg
  • The Teton Range at sunset is a mountain range of the Rocky Mountains in North America. A north-south range, it is on the Wyoming side of the state's border with Idaho, just south of Yellowstone National Park. Most of the range is in Grand Teton National Park.<br />
<br />
Early French Voyageurs used the name "les Trois Tétons" (the three breasts).[1] It is likely that the Shoshone people once called the whole range Teewinot, meaning "many pinnacles".[2]<br />
<br />
The principal summits of the central massif, sometimes referred to as the Cathedral Group, are Grand Teton (13,770 feet (4,200 m)), Mount Owen (12,928 feet (3,940 m)), Teewinot (12,325 feet (3,757 m)), Middle Teton (12,804 feet (3,903 m)) and South Teton (12,514 feet (3,814 m)). Other peaks in the range include Mount Moran (12,605 feet (3,842 m)), Mount Wister (11,490 feet (3,500 m)), Buck Mountain (11,938 feet (3,639 m)) and Static Peak (11,303 feet (3,445 m)).
    SnakeTetonGrandClouds-7782.jpg
  • Fern leaves detail in the rainforest near Fox Glacier on the South Island of New Zealand. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    Fern Detail NZ 0952.jpg
  • Waterfalls abound on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Track NZ Waterfall 1054.jpg
  • Two hikers traverse the trail on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Track NZ 0933.jpg
  • Fern leaves, fungi, tree leaves, and rainforest ground cover near Fox Glacier on the South Island of New Zealand. Limited Edition of 25 includes all sizes.
    Rainforest Detail 45.jpg
  • Winter sunrise on the Teton Range is a mountain range of the Rocky Mountains in North America. A north-south range, it is on the Wyoming side of the state's border with Idaho, just south of Yellowstone National Park. Most of the range is in Grand Teton National Park.<br />
<br />
Early French Voyageurs used the name "les Trois Tétons" (the three breasts).[1] It is likely that the Shoshone people once called the whole range Teewinot, meaning "many pinnacles".[2]<br />
<br />
The principal summits of the central massif, sometimes referred to as the Cathedral Group, are Grand Teton (13,770 feet (4,200 m)), Mount Owen (12,928 feet (3,940 m)), Teewinot (12,325 feet (3,757 m)), Middle Teton (12,804 feet (3,903 m)) and South Teton (12,514 feet (3,814 m)). Other peaks in the range include Mount Moran (12,605 feet (3,842 m)), Mount Wister (11,490 feet (3,500 m)), Buck Mountain (11,938 feet (3,639 m)) and Static Peak (11,303 feet (3,445 m)).
    TetonsWinterMorning45-ISI.jpg
  • Beach detail of a rock and kelp with tidal design created by waves.  Licensing and Limited Edition of 50 includes all sizes color or black and white.
    RockKelpColor45Crop-3.jpg
  • Beach detail of a rock and kelp with tidal design created by waves.  Licensing and Limited Edition of 50 includes all sizes color or black and white.
    RockKelpBW45Crop-2.jpg
  • Frozen blades of grass trapped in icy Trinity Lake surface with patterns of frost and ice in Central Idaho. Limited Edition of 35 includes all sizes.
    TrinityFrozenGrass8b-H45.jpg
  • Wild lupine plant just before flowering stalks appear.  Sawtooth National Forest, Idaho. Limited Edition of 25 includes all sizes.
    Wild Lupine.jpg
  • Fall colors and a brilliant day create a wetlands oasis in Trail Creek Canyon near Sun Valley Idaho. Limited Editions of 8
    BeaverPonds8b45H.jpg
  • Waterfalls abound on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Track NZ Waterfall 1052.jpg
  • Waterfalls abound on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Track Waterfall 1023.jpg
  • Storm Clouds lift on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Track NZ 0941.jpg
  • A tour boat admires the many Waterfalls that abound in Milford Sound in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Sound Cruise 1273.jpg
  • Waterfalls abound on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Track NZ Waterfall 1004.jpg
  • Boulder Beaver Ponds and Boulder Mountains in springtime in Central Idaho near Sun Valley.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    BoulderBeaverPondCrop-0341.jpg
  • The Snake River released from Jackson Lake Dam merges clear with the free flowing wild river of Pacific Creek in its spring runoff chocolate brown color. Aerial View. Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakeRiverPacificCreekConfluence9004.jpg
  • Limited Editions of 25 All Sizes. Fern leaves, fungi, tree leaves, and rainforest ground cover near Fox Glacier on the South Island of New Zealand.
    Rainforest Detail 45.jpg
  • Waterfalls abound on the Milford Track in Fiordland National Park on the South Island of New Zealand considered one of the World's Ten Best Walks
    Milford Track NZ Waterfall 1040.jpg
  • The Teton Range at sunrise is a mountain range of the Rocky Mountains in North America. A north-south range, it is on the Wyoming side of the state's border with Idaho, just south of Yellowstone National Park. Most of the range is in Grand Teton National Park.<br />
<br />
Early French Voyageurs used the name "les Trois Tétons" (the three breasts).[1] It is likely that the Shoshone people once called the whole range Teewinot, meaning "many pinnacles".[2]<br />
<br />
The principal summits of the central massif, sometimes referred to as the Cathedral Group, are Grand Teton (13,770 feet (4,200 m)), Mount Owen (12,928 feet (3,940 m)), Teewinot (12,325 feet (3,757 m)), Middle Teton (12,804 feet (3,903 m)) and South Teton (12,514 feet (3,814 m)). Other peaks in the range include Mount Moran (12,605 feet (3,842 m)), Mount Wister (11,490 feet (3,500 m)), Buck Mountain (11,938 feet (3,639 m)) and Static Peak (11,303 feet (3,445 m)).
    TetonsAMWinterSunrise45-ISI.jpg
  • Fast moving spring storm rolls across the north edge of Silver Creek near Picabo Idaho.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SilverCreekSpringStorm---1485.jpg
  • Hyde Park Oak Tree in Spring Grandeur on a beautiful London Evening.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    TreeGreenLeafLondon6412-2.jpg
  • Teton Mountains view from near Ashton Idaho with the Henry's Fork of the Snake River in the foreground and trees and bushes in their fall colors. Vertical.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    AshtonTetons-0567.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints Snow patterns along the edge of the Snake River near Jackson Hole, Wyoming
    SnowDetailSnakeRiver9678.jpg
  • Iceberg formations floats and transforms minute by minute in the Jokulsarlon Glacial Lagoon in Iceland.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    JokulsarlonGlacialLagoon5771.jpg
  • Water pattern on Snake River in Hells Canyon is caused by varying temperatures colliding on the waters surface.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakeDHellsWaterTempPattern1048.jpg
  • Cottonwood trees withstand springtime runoff flooding along the Snake River near Yellowstone in Wyoming.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CottonwoodTreeRiverFlooding0217.jpg
  • Downriver Aerial View of Snake River just above Jackson Wyoming with the snow covered Grand Teton Mountain Range on right side of frame. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SnakeRiverSpringRunoffJackson-9043.jpg
  • Raging fire moves like a living beast just north of Ketchum Idaho with the sun burning through the smokey clouds as trees go up in flames.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SunFireSmokeForestTrees3756.jpg
  • Raging fire moves like a living beast just north of Ketchum Idaho with the sun burning through the smokey clouds as trees go up in flames.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SunFireSmokeForestTrees3757.jpg
  • McGown Peak at 9860 feet 3005 meters reflects in the tranquil surface of Stanley Lake in the Sawtooth Mountain Range near Stanley Idaho.  Recreation area for boating, fishing, camping, hiking, rock climbing, backpacking.Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SawtoothsStanleyLakeMtMcGowan-4733-E...jpg
  • Historic Spring Runoff blows out with much intensity from the Wood River Basin in Central Idaho in the springtime of 2017. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    WaterRunoffMagicReservoir2763.jpg
  • Boardwalk to viewing platform at Cape Bridgewater along the Great Ocean Road in southern Australia.<br />
Limited Edition of 17
    Australia CapeBridgewater---1207.tif
  • Edition of 35<br />
The Oxbow near Picabo Idaho on Silver Creek in South Central Idaho in winter morning light with lifting clouds
    SilverCreekOxbowWinter.tif
  • Puffin with a beak full of fish on Cape Ingolfshofdi, Iceland. The Atlantic puffin has become an emblematic animal of Iceland, and many visitors want to see this cute black-and-white little bird with its bright orange beak and webbed feet. Luckily, Iceland is one of the best places to see puffins as it is home to the largest colony of puffins in the world, and over half of the world’s population nest here each year.<br />
<br />
Although numbers have been sadly declining in recent years, it is estimated that over 5 million Atlantic puffins nest in Iceland each year during the spring and summer months. However, even though there are millions of these little birds in Iceland, they are not always the easiest to find. <br />
Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    Puffin Iceland 6052.jpg
  • Aerial view of Emma Matilda Lake with Jackson Lake and snow capped Teton Mountain Range in the background in Teton National Park.<br />
Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakeAerialTetons18985.jpg
  • Lone male stands at end of Bandon Jetty on the Oregon Coast as waves crash into end of jetty from the Pacific Ocean at sunset
    Bandon Solitaire 2267.jpg
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Kirk Anderson Photography

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