INTO THE WOODS & DESERTS
WILDLIFE WONDERS
PARKS BY REGION
ICONIC LANDFORMS
FAMOUS FIRST & FACTS
200

This park in California is named after a spiky, twisted member of the yucca family that looked like the biblical figure Joshua stretching his arms to the sky.

Joshua Tree National Park

200

This massive, shaggy-furred animal is the official national mammal of the U.S. and can easily be seen blocking traffic in Yellowstone.

Bison (or Buffalo)

200

You'll need to travel out west to sunny Arizona to gaze into the massive, mile-deep colorful gorges of this world-famous park.

Grand Canyon National Park

200

This spectacular, predictable geothermal feature in Yellowstone draws massive crowds every day to watch it shoot boiling water high into the air.

Old Faithful Geyser

200

Signed into law by President Ulysses S. Grant in 1872, this spectacular place holds the title of America's very first official National Park.

Yellowstone National Park

400

Holding the record for the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth, this low-lying California desert park features vast, crusty salt flats.

Death Valley National Park

400

If you visit the beautiful Great Smoky Mountains, you'll want to keep an eye out for this large, dark-furred, tree-climbing predator.

Black Bear

400

Located at the southern tip of Florida, this subtropical wilderness park is famous for its slow-moving sawgrass rivers and wild alligators.

The Everglades

400

Yosemite Valley is famous for its massive granite rock formations, including a sheer 3,000-foot vertical wall known by this Spanish name meaning "The Captain."

El Capitan

400

President Woodrow Wilson officially created this government agency in 1916 to protect and manage all of our beautiful public lands.

The National Park Service

600

Located in Arizona, this unique park is famous for its colorful, ancient tree logs that have completely turned into solid quartz crystal over millions of years.

Petrified Forest National Park

600

 In 1995, wildlife biologists successfully reintroduced this predatory pack animal back into Yellowstone to restore the natural balance of the ecosystem.

Wolf (Wolves)

600

Head out to Utah to see the towering, cream-and-pink sandstone cliffs of this stunning canyon park, famous for a trail called "The Narrows."

Zion National Park

600

Located in Utah, this park looks like a landscape from another planet with over 2,000 natural, freestanding wind-sculpted sandstone windows.

Arches National Park

600

Located in California, this park was specifically established to protect its ancient, towering groves of giant sequoia trees.

Yosemite National Park

800

This Washington state park features the Hoh Rain Forest, one of the quietest and greenest places in America, covered in thick blankets of hanging moss.

Olympic National Park

800

Visitors flock to the icy waters of Alaska's Glacier Bay National Park to watch these magnificent, singing marine mammals breach out of the water.

Humpback Whales

800

Situated on the rugged Atlantic coastline of Maine, this beautiful park is the very first place in the U.S. to see the sunrise during the fall and winter.

Acadia National Park

800

Located in Alaska, this towering mountain is the highest peak in all of North America, measuring an incredible 20,310 feet tall.

Denali (formerly Mount McKinley)

800

If you want to visit every official National Park in the United States, you'll have to pack your bags for quite a few trips—there are currently this many parks in total.

63

1000

Located in New Mexico, this spectacular underground park features a massive cave cavern known simply as "The Big Room," filled with thousands of bats.

Carlsbad Caverns National Park

1000

This small, large-eared desert animal is famous for its incredible ability to survive the blistering, extreme heat of Death Valley without ever needing to drink water.

The Kit Fox

1000

This massive park located way up in Alaska is the single largest national park in the country—it is actually the same size as six Yellowstones put together.

Wrangell–St. Elias National Park

1000

This famous dome-shaped granite rock stands proud at the eastern end of Yosemite Valley and looks as if a giant knife sliced it perfectly in half.

Half Dome

1000

This beautiful park down in Florida holds the title of the first underwater national park system, protecting vibrant coral reefs and shipwreck trails.

Biscayne National Park