Kobuk Valley National Park

Cloudy skies and brown sand dunes of Kobuk Valley

Kobuk Valley National Park was established on December 2, 1980, under the Alaska National Interest Conservation Act to maintain the environmental integrity of the natural features of the Kobuk River Valley, including the Kobuk, Salmon, and other rivers, the boreal forest, and the Great Kobuk Sand Dunes, in an undeveloped state, to protect and interpret, in cooperation with Alaskan Natives, archaeological sites associated with Native cultures; to protect migration routes for the Arctic caribou herd; to protect habitat for, and population of, fish and wildlife including but not limited to caribou, moose, black and grizzly bears, wolves, waterfowl and to protect the viability of subsistence resources.

Kobuk Valley National Park is approximately 1.7 million acres and encompasses a nearly enclosed mountain basin on the middle section of the Kobuk River in northwest Alaska.

News from Kobuk Valley National Park

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    Last updated: June 1, 2022