Straddling the California–Nevada border, the park includes Death Valley, the northern section of Panamint Valley, the southern part of Eureka Valley and most of Saline Valley. Death Valley boasts colorful badlands, snow-covered peaks, beautiful sand dunes and rugged canyons.
Death Valley is a land of extremes: at 282 feet below sea level at its lowest point, Badwater Basin on Death Valley’s floor is the second-lowest depression in the Western Hemisphere, while Mount Whitney, only 85 miles to the west, rises to 14,505 feet and is the tallest mountain in the contiguous United States.
From the vastness of the valley floor to the wide panoramas of jagged mountains, Death Valley offers a host of photographic opportunities.
- Folds 1 Zabriskie Point, Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Folds 2 Zabriskie Point, Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Morning Stillness Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Crackles Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Death Valley Sunrise Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Patterns Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Sky Fire Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Band of Venus Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Dunes I Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Dunes II Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Dunes III Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- S Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Dunes Sunset Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Cracked Sunrise Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Cracked Mud Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Zabriskie Sunrise Zabriskie Point, Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Pastel Panorama Zabriskie Point, Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Lines in the Sand Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022
- Pastel Dunes Death Valley National Park | Jan 2022