Wolf Creek Pass is a high-mountain route that’s notoriously difficult to navigate in winter, with steep drops in elevation as the road descends from the peak. While these trees were damaged by wildfire—always a threat here in the Rockies—trees in the surrounding forest have been ravaged by a different menace—the spruce beetle. The tiny but deadly beetles have infested up to 90 percent of the Englemann spruce trees in Colorado’s high elevations, including around Wolf Creek Pass, laying waste to large swaths of the forest.
Fire-damaged forest near Wolf Creek Pass, Colorado
Today in History
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A hint of spring
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A visit to Limerick on Limerick Day
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Splendid leaf frog
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Paradise, found
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An ultralight aircraft flying over the sands of Namibia
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Celebrating a young girl s age-old discovery
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Eastern grey kangaroos in Australia’s Kosciuszko National Park
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Iguazu Falls at the border of Argentina and Brazil
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Decorating for Diwali
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Design for Each and All
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A shell of many colors
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Heavens Gate Cave, Tianmen Mountain National Park, China
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The persistence of Perito Moreno
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Old Town in Prague, Czech Republic
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The Tre Cime di Lavaredo, Italy
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Lake Tyrrell, Victoria, Australia
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World Whale Day
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Amber Fort, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India
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Dreaming of the Tyrrhenian Sea
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Sitting down and taking a stand
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An avian predator built for the snow
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Unearthing a queen s lost tale
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Autumn in the cypress swamp
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Fallow deer, Bradgate Park, Leicestershire, England
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A path lain with petals
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Happy World Photography Day!
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Have you turned off your electronic device?
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Mountain goats at Glacier National Park in Montana
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A giant relic in Java
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Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, Washington
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