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  • One of several refurbished White Model 706 touring buses operating in Yellowstone National Park today. These historic Yellow Tour Buses were originally used in the park during the 1930s, replacing stagecoach travel.
    Yellow-Tour-Bus-Yellowstone-9585.jpg
  • Autumn color displayed in a golden abstract of Aspen trees near Aspen, Colorado.
    Autumn Gold.jpg
  • Colorful Southwest sun art on display in a gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
    Southwest-art-NM-7498.jpg
  • Aspen trees and summer wildflowers combine with a motion blur to create a dreamy scene in Aspen, Colorado.
    Aspen-trees-blur-1431.jpg
  • Mount Sneffels and the Sneffles Range of the Rocky Mountains (called the Dallas Divide) in springtime near Ridgway, Colorado
    Sneffels-Rocky-mountains-CO-9469.jpg
  • Aspen trees backlit by the afternoon sun show their golden fall color along Kebler Pass in the Colorado Rocky Mountains
    aspen-trees-fall-foliage-1455.jpg
  • A tunnel of gold aspens near Boreas Pass, high along the crest of the Front Range in central Colorado
    Aspen-trees-foliage-gold-fall-0923.jpg
  • IMG_4038.jpg
  • Basement arches of the Library of Congress, the nation's oldest federal cultural institution, which serves as the research arm of Congress. It is also the largest library in the world, with millions of books, recordings, photographs, maps and manuscripts in its collections.
    Library-of-Congress-0474.jpg
  • Bryce Canyon National Park in Southern Utah is distinctive due to geological structures called hoodoos, formed by wind, water and ice erosion of the river and lake bed sedimentary rocks. The intricate hoodoos, eroded from soft limestone, glow with warm shades of red, orange, pink, yellow and cream with the right light. This was taken from Sunset Point.
    Bryce-Canyon-hoodoos-UT-5410.jpg
  • Bryce Canyon National Park in Southern Utah is distinctive due to geological structures called hoodoos, formed by wind, water and ice erosion of the river and lake bed sedimentary rocks. The intricate hoodoos, eroded from soft limestone, glow with warm shades of red, orange, pink, yellow and cream with the right light. This was taken from Sunset Point.
    Bryce-Canyon-hoodoos-UT-5410.jpg
  • The area around Rainbow Vista in Valley of Fire State Park is one of the most colorful places on earth. The 200 million-year-old petrified sand dunes and rocks sculpted by water, wind and time appear in hues from yellow, red, orange, white, brown, pink, and mauve to purple.
    Valley-of-Fire-road-4864.jpg
  • The Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad travels 45 miles each way along the Animas River from Durango to Silverton, an old mining town high in the San Juan Mountains. The Animas River is one of the last free-flowing rivers in the western United States and cuts through some of Colorado's most striking canyon scenery. Closer to Silverton, you can see the rocks along the sides of the river are discolored yellow and orange. This is from contaminants of the mining operations there.
    Durango-Silverton-railroad-8468.jpg
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Rozanne Hakala Photography

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