USA, CA - Death Valley
Read MoreDante's view, Death Valley, USA
Dante's view offers a panoramic view over the Death Valley deep below
Dante's view, Death Valley, USA
Dante's view offers a panoramic view over the Death Valley deep below
Dante's view, Death Valley, USA
Dante's view offers a panoramic view over the Death Valley deep below
Dante's view, Death Valley, USA
Dante's view offers a panoramic view over the Death Valley deep below
Dante's View, Death Valley, USA
Panoramic overlook from Dante's View over Death Valley deep below
Dante's View in Death Valley National Park
Breathtaking scenery: Dante's View over Death Valley deep below
Access road to Dante's View in Death Valley National Park
Dante's View is named from Dante Alighieri, who wrote the Divina Commedia (Divine Comedy). Keep in mind that the elevation at Furnace Creek is sea level and Dante's View is 5,476 feet. As the sign says at the summit, there is usually a 25 degrees temperature change between the valley floor and the summit.
Death Valley National Park, California, USA
Somewhere between Dante's View and Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park, California, USA
Death Valley National Park, California, USA
Somewhere between Dante's View and Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park, California, USA
Death Valley National Park, California, USA
Colorful sandstone formations along California State Route 190 near Furnace Creek in Death Valley National Park, USA
Zabriskie Point in Death Valley
Zabriskie Point with Manly Beacon at the Amargosa Range east of Death Valley National Park in California, USA
Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park, California, USA
Perhaps the most famous Death Valley viewpoint; an elevated overlook of a huge area of yellow-brown-black badlands, with the white salt flats in the main valley beyond.
Devil's Golf Course in Death Valley National Park
Devil's Golf Course in Death Valley National Park in California, USA
Salt water pool at Badwater Basin in Death Valley National Park, California, USA
The low, salty pool at Badwater, just beside the main park road 18 miles south of Furnace Creek, is probably the best known and most visited place in Death Valley. The actual lowest point (-282 feet) is located several miles from the road and is not easily accessible