Great Basin Geosphere is a National Parks in the Midwest region of the United States inspire us with their history, beauty, and phenomenal natural resources. This program features over a dozen National Park sites throughout the Midwest region of the United States. Beginning in North Dakota and traveling on to iconic sites in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska & Kansas.
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North Dakota:
• Theodore Roosevelt National Park
• Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site
• Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site -
Michigan:
• Isle Royale National Park
• Mackinac Island National Historic Landmark
• Keweenaw National Historical Park
• Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore
• Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore -
Wisconsin:
• Apostle Islands National Lakeshore -
Minnesota:
• Grand Portage National Monument
• Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness - • Voyagers National Park
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Nebraska:
• Scotts Bluff National Monument
• Agate Fossil Beds National Monument
• Homestead National Monument of America
- • Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
55 minutes
Available on DVD, Blu-ray and Download
NP31 REVIEW: Booklist
This picturesque video travels to North Dakota, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, Nebraska, and Kansas to visit 16 national treasures, including parks, monuments, historic sites, nature preserves, and wilderness areas. Beautiful footage captures Theodore Roosevelt National Park and Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site, in North Dakota. Enjoy the rugged wilderness of Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, in Wisconsin; Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, in Minnesota; and Isle Royale National Park, in Michigan. Nebraska sites include Scotts Bluff National Monument, and Kansas is represented by Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve. Richly descriptive voice-over narration supplements commentaries from tour guides, park rangers, and natural-history experts providing interpretations and historical context. This thirty-first entry in the recommended Discoveries . . . America National Parks series inspires viewers to head for the Midwest. — Carol Holzberg