The majestic Canadian Rockies span nearly 69,500 square miles between the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta and continue southward into the U.S. states of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico and form the spine of the North American continent. Best know for their jagged, rocky, snow-capped peaks,Read More →

The Bwindi Impenetrable Forest is an ancient rainforest that extends over a series of ridges in the Virunga Volcanoes mountain range in southwest Uganda. Declared a UNESCO world heritage site because of its distinct ecology, biodiversity, and incredible natural beauty, Bwindi is home to about half the world’s remaining mountainRead More →

One of the most remote and breathtakingly beautiful national parks in the world, Auyuittuq National Park on Baffin Island in the northern reaches of Canada is a diverse and awesome Arctic wonderland. Jagged granite peaks and ancient glaciers stand fast over tundra valleys and vertical-walled fjords with winding waterways thatRead More →

As vast is it is remote, the Australian Outback comprises the unpopulated, arid interior of Australia. The Northern Territory’s Red Centre with its small, isolated gateway town of Alice Springs is a perfect example of the Outback. Outback landmarks include Uluru, Australia’s iconic red-rock monolith. In the north, Kakadu NationalRead More →

Arnhem Land is a vast, isolated wilderness area in the northeast corner of Australia’s Northern Territory and is bordered by Kakadu National Park, the Arafura Sea and the Gulf of Carpentaria. Known for its stunning rocky bluffs, gorges, rivers, and waterfalls, Arnhem Land is a truly unique natural treasure. AboriginalRead More →

The world’s fifth largest continent, Antarctica is a land of beautiful if not brutal extremes. The most southern, coldest, driest, and naturally, least populous continent – with a permanent population of scientists numbering only a few thousand – Antarctica has been scarcely touched by man. This frozen land boasts breathtaking, otherworldlyRead More →

About the size of the contiguous United States and covering much of northwestern Brazil and into Colombia, Peru and other South American countries, the Amazon Forest is the world’s largest tropical rainforest. Best known as the lungs of the earth and for its incredible biodiversity – one-in-ten known species callRead More →