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  • Tourists watch a performance by bottle nose dolphins at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25645.JPG
  • A young girl watches bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25654.JPG
  • Tourists watch a performance by bottle nose dolphins at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25652.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25651.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25650.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25649.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25648.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25647.JPG
  • Tourists watch a performance by bottle nose dolphins at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25646.JPG
  • Tourists watch a performance by bottle nose dolphins at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25643.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25641.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25630.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins perform at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    dolphin_research_center_013.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins jump out of the water at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25668.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25644.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25632.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25642.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25639.JPG
  • Bottle nose dolphins play at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25635.JPG
  • Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19803.JPG
  • Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19802.JPG
  • Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19800.JPG
  • Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19799.JPG
  • Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19796.JPG
  • Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19801.JPG
  • Tourists on horseback watch Atlantic bottlenose dolphins as they swim past during strand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Seabrook Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19798.JPG
  • Tourists watch Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Seabrook Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19797.JPG
  • Atlantic bottlenose dolphins feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19795.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25664.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25663.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25658.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25657.JPG
  • A tourist plays with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25634.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25667.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25666.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25665.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25661.JPG
  • A trainer demonstrates bottle nose dolphin commands to tourists at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25659.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25656.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25655.JPG
  • Young children play with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25640.JPG
  • A tourist plays with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25638.JPG
  • A trainer works with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center as tourists watch June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25637.JPG
  • A tourist plays with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25636.JPG
  • A tourist plays with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25633.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_521037.JPG
  • A tourist plays in the water with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25662.JPG
  • A trainer demonstrates bottle nose dolphin commands to tourists at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25660.JPG
  • Tourists play with a bottle nose dolphin at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25653.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611225a.JPG
  • A brown pelican moves out of the way as Atlantic bottlenose dolphins come ashore to feed on fish they corralled onto the beach during stand feeding at Captain Sam's Inlet September 3, 2014 in Kiawah Island, SC. This unusual practice involves a group of dolphins herding a school of fish onto the beach and then launching their bodies out of the water and onto the shore to feed and is only found in a few places on earth.
    Stand_Feeding_19804.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611230.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611225.jpg
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_521029.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611224.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611228.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611227.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_521033.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611232.JPG
  • Juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611231.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611225.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611229.JPG
  • A trainer comforts a California Sea Lion at the Dolphin Research Center  June 27, 1996 in Marathon Key, FL.  The center is where the original Flipper was trained and specializes in returning trained dolphins to the wild.
    Dolphin_Research_25631.JPG
  • Skyline and Dolphin Fountain Bayfront Park Sarasota, Florida
    Sarasota_Florida_23335.JPG
  • Skyline and Dolphin Fountain Bayfront Park Sarasota, Florida
    Sarasota_Florida_23333.JPG
  • Skyline and Dolphin Fountain Bayfront Park Sarasota, Florida
    Sarasota_Florida_23334.JPG
  • Skyline and Dolphin Fountain Bayfront Park Sarasota, Florida
    Sarasota_Florida_23332.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71713.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71706.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Frederick Sound near Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71806.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Frederick Sound near Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71804.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71768.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71764.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71761.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71760.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71759.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71757.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71755.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71754.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71753.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71752.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71750.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71748.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71745.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71744.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71743.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71739.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71735.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71734.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71732.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71731.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71730.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71729.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71727.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71725.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71723.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71722.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71721.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71710.JPG
  • A pod of wild transient Orcas feed in the Wrangell Narrows off Frederick Sound in Petersburg Island, Alaska. Orcas also known as Killer Whales are the largest members of the dolphin family and frequent the rich waters of the Frederick Sound during summer months.
    Orcas_Alaska_71707.JPG
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