Caribou Migration — Alaska
Peak season
Photo: Unknown · CC
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Fauna · Gates of the Arctic NP, Alaska, United States

Caribou Migration — Alaska

The Western Arctic caribou herd — nearly 500,000 strong — undertakes one of the longest land migrations on Earth across the Alaskan tundra each year.

When
Sep — Jun
Best viewing
A vast, unhurried river of nearly half a million caribou crossing remote Alaskan tundra — raw wilderness on a continental scale. Expect extreme remoteness, unpredictable timing, and one of Earth's most breathtaking mass-animal events.
Category
Fauna
Status
Peak season

About this spectacle

Witnessing the Western Arctic caribou herd move across the Alaskan tundra is one of the most overwhelming wildlife experiences on the planet. Nearly 500,000 animals flow across treeless hills and river valleys in a living river of antlers and breath, hooves drumming against frost-hardened ground. In spring the herd pushes north toward calving grounds on the coastal plain; in autumn it retreats south before the deep freeze. The scale defies easy comprehension — animals stretch to every horizon, their clicking tendons audible before you can make out individual forms. The tundra landscape itself shifts around them: autumn herd movements coincide with blazing red and gold dwarf shrubs, while spring crossings happen against snowfields and ice-edged rivers. Wolves and grizzlies shadow the margins. The silence between surges of movement is as striking as the spectacle itself.

When to go

Sep — Jun

Getting there

Nearest airport: BTT. Nearest city: Fairbanks.

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