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Photo Gallery - Door Peninsula, WI

This 70-mile long peninsula in Lake Michigan is well known for its mixture of northern hardwood and boreal forests, unusual plant communities, occurrence of rare and endemic plants, and 250 mile shoreline with sand dunes and dolomite bluffs.

Modern shore line of Lake Michigan with boreal forest, Newport State Park, Wisconsin.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Shoreline from Nippissing stage of Lake Michigan, 3,000 years before present, now 1/4 mile inland and colonized by trees,  Newport State Park, Wisconsin.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Seagulls and shoreline of Lake Michigan.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Shoreline of Green Bay, white cedar forest along water with beech-maple forest inland, Peninsula State Park, Wisconsin.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Black cherry in a gap, Newport State Park.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Old growth beech forest, Newport State Park.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Above and Below: Beech-maple-hemlock forest on 3,000 year old sand dunes, Newport State Park.  Photos by Lee Frelich.

 

Red oak seedling colonizing sand dunes, Newport State Park.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Dwarf lake iris, a Great Lakes endemic species, Newport State Park.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Dwarf ginseng, Newport State Park.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Spotted coral root, Newport State Park.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

Large-flowered Trillium, Newport State Park.  Photo by Lee Frelich.

 

Department of Forest Resources | College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

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