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  • Wild horses dash on the high desert on the Warm Springs Reservation below Mount Jefferson's peak that reaches 10,497 feet. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Wild, wild horses
  • Seattle Times Page A1 (January 22, 2017)
    2017 01 22 A01
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Arbor quest
  • Snow geese from a flock on Fir Island fly past Mt. Baker in the distance. Each year about 60,000 - 100,000 Snow geese migrate from Wrangel Island in Russia to the estuaries of the Fraser and Skagit rivers. During the 3,000-mile journey, they may reach altitudes near 3,000 feet and speeds approaching 50 miles per hour. The sound of a flock of Snow geese can be heard from a mile away. (Mark Harrison / The Seattle Times)
    Plump flight
  • At Howard Tietan Park in Walla Walla, more than 30 hot air balloons lift off a few minutes after sunrise.  The balloons have no steering capability so the pilots depend on the wind to take them wherever.  Balloonists from Utah, Idaho, Texas, Nevada and Washington took part.  The balloons vary in size from 80,000 to 100,000 cubic feet.  They are about 60-feet in diameter and 80-feet tall.<br />
<br />
Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times
    Balloons on the Rise
  • Keema, all 835-pounds of grizzly bear, rolls on a pile of snow from Crystal Mountain brought in for him and his twin brother Denali for their 20th birthday at Woodland Park Zoo.  The bears were originally at WSU and have lived their lives in captivity.  It's believed about 10 grizzly bears live in the North Cascades in Washington State compared to 25,000 to 30,000 black bears.   <br />
<br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Happy Birthday Keema!
  • Wildflowers and Goode Mountain and Goode Glacier in one frame.  Breathtaking views greet hikers near the end of the seven-mile North Fork Bridge Creek Trail that ends tucked up up against the 9,000 ft. high Mount Logan.  (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Wildflowers and glaciers
  • This billboard was displayed in the early 1970s during a recession that saw Boeing lay off about 70,000 workers. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1971)
    Sign of the times
  • Crane unloading 28,000 tons of alumina at Tacoma and Mead, near Spokane. (Seattle Times archives, 1967)
    Waterfront crane
  • Totality is seen from 40,000 feet above the Pacific as a special Alaska Airlines charter jet is the first to experience the solar eclipse. The flight took off from Portland, Ore., in pursuit of the eclipse. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times, 2017)
    Totality above the Pacific
  • The Womxn's March on Seattle flows down South Jackson Street on Saturday. Organizers originally had predicted a crowd of up to 50,000. The number of participants was at least more than double that; organizers are saying 200,000 marched. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Womxn's March Seattle
  • A march estimated at 10,000 people makes its way to Memorial Stadium at Seattle Center on April 7, 1968, for a tribute to Martin Luther King Jr., three days after the civil-rights leader was killed. (Bruce McKim/The Seattle Times, 1968)
    Tribute march
  • With 2,000 persons crowded around the speaker's stand at the west end of the new Lake Washington Floating Bridge, and other thousands gathered at the east end and along the lake shores, the new bridge was dedicated and opened to traffic. (Hack Miller / The Seattle Times, 1940)
    Lake Washington Floating Bridge
  • Pottery water pipes were among some of the unusual goods on sale at the Seattle Pops Festival, a rock festival at Gold Creek Park near Woodinville. An Indian teepee decorated with an American flag was in the background. An estimated 50,000 persons attended the festival. (Alden J. Blethen / The Seattle Times, 1969)
    Water Pipes: Rock Fair Fare
  • Free Show: Sidewalk superintendents looked over the wall at First Avenue and Seneca Street to observe work on the $390,000 ramp under construction from the Alaskan Way Viaduct's northbound deck. (The Seattle Times, 1961)
    Construction of the Seneca Street ramp
  • In 1965, 53,000 fans all but filled the University of Washington Stadium to see the Huskies defeat the University of Idaho, 19 to 7, in the season opener. (Pete Liddell / The Seattle Times)
    1965 Husky Stadium Aerial
  • The future of King Street Station is looking better than ever, and not just as a vital transportation hub. The city plans to transform 17,000 square feet of its empty third floor into a major community arts center. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Future King Street Station arts hub.tiff
  • A 41-foot-tall "Tree for All at the Needle" at the Seattle Space Needle with 36,000 LED lights illuminates the night.<br />
Seattle Times staff photographer
    Christmas Tree at the Space Needle
  • A dip into the lake and a toss of the head is one way to cool off -- and create water sculpture. This young woman's creativity was aided considerably by a 35-millimeter-camera shutter set at 1,000 of a second. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1970)
    Summer shutter sculpture
  • Mount Baker provides a spectacular backdrop for K20, a female born in 1986. Orcas can swim 75 miles a day and more, with bursts of speed up to 30 mph, and are capable of diving deeper than 3,000 feet. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2018)
    Orca and Mount Baker
  • A 1,000-ton wooden floating drydock, purchased by the Lake Union Drydock Company as surplus equipment from the United States Maritime Commission, was shown from the Ballard Bridge as it arrived in Seattle after being towed from Scow Bay, near Port Townsend, by the tugboat Sandra Foss. The drydock was 240 feet long and 64 feet wide. (Roy Scully / The Seattle Times, 1947)
    Towing a dry dock
  • NFC Playoffs | Perfect target | After two straight 1,000-yard season, Doug Baldwin wants to become a Seahawks legend. (Rich Boudet / The Seattle Times)
    Doug Baldwin
  • The nearly 3,000-foot-long Aurora Bridge looms high above Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood. (Ken Lambert/The Seattle Times)
    Aurora Bridge looms above Seattle’s ..hood
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