'Katmai National Park and Preserve' is a
United States National Park in southern
Alaska, notable for the
Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes and for its
brown bears. The park covers 7,383 mi² (
19,122 km²). Most of this is a designated
wilderness area, including 5,288 mi² (13,696 km²) of the park. The park is named after
Mount Katmai, its centerpiece
stratovolcano.

Mount Katmai and its crater lake
Park history

Satellite image of the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes and surrounding area.
Established on
December 2,
1980, the park is located on the
Alaska Peninsula, across from
Kodiak Island, with headquarters in nearby
King Salmon, about 290 air miles southwest of
Anchorage. Originally, on
September 24,
1918, the area was designated a
national monument to protect the area around the major
1912 volcanic eruption of
Novarupta, which formed the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, a forty square mile (100 km²), 100 to 700 foot deep,
pyroclastic flow.
Attractions

Brown bears at Brooks Falls.

Novarupta lava dome
Activities at Katmai include
hiking,
backpacking,
camping,
backcountry skiing,
fishing,
kayaking, boat tours, and interpretive programs.
There are at least fourteen active
volcanoes within the national park, most recently
Fourpeaked Volcano, which became active September 17, 2006 after more than 10,000 years of dormancy. This park contains numerous
archaeological sites which indicate a long history of prehistoric occupations from the Paleoarctic tradition up to the Thule tradition.
Katmai is also well known for
brown bears and the
salmon which attract both bears and people. Katmai contains the world's largest protected brown bear population, estimated to number in excess of 2,000. Bears are especially likely to congregate at
Brooks Falls, where there is a viewing platform, and many well known photographs of brown bears have been taken there.
The vast majority of Katmai visitors come to
Brooks Camp, one of the only developed areas of the park, and few venture further than the bear viewing platforms. Rangers at the park are extremely careful not to allow bears to obtain human food or get into confrontations with humans. As a result, bears in Katmai Park are uniquely unafraid of and uninterested in humans, and will allow people to approach (and photograph) much more closely than bears elsewhere.
See also
★
List of nationally protected areas of the United States
★
Timothy Treadwell
External links
★ Official site:
Katmai National Park
★
Photos of Katmai National Park - Terra Galleria
★
Seattle to Aleutian Islands Expedition
★
Alaska Peninsula Trek