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2 weeks ago
AWCC BEARS Center construction
STG unloads piping to be used in phase one of the BEARS at AWCC Interpretive Center.
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AlaskaWildlifeCC
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2 weeks ago
BEARS Center Under Construction
The Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center began work on the BEARS Center today by unloading sections of pipe to support the walkway that will span po...
44 views
AlaskaWildlifeCC
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5 months ago
Behind the Scenes Tour
A look at the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center's new behind the scenes tour, as seen on Anchorage KTUU, Channel 2.
233 views
AlaskaWildlifeCC
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1 year ago
Porcupine who thinks he is a puppy!
This 5 year old male was a pet in a home, and now lives at the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center. This little guy had been given an apple to eat,...
desfees • 2,648,905 views
AlaskaWildlifeCC
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2 years ago
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2 years ago
Wood Bison Reintroduction Project
After more than 100 years of extinction in Alaska, wood bison have found their way back to the state of Alaska. The AWCC herd arrived in November 2...
1,792 views
AlaskaWildlifeCC
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2 years ago
Bears Education and Research Sanctuary
AWCC originally opened knowing that interest in wildlife viewing was growing. Over 3 million people have visited the wildlife center since its ince...
142 views
AlaskaWildlifeCC
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About Alaska Wildlife Cons. Center
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AlaskaWildlifeCCLatest Activity
Feb 22, 2012Date Joined
Oct 21, 2009About this user
Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center (AWCC) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving Alaskas wildlife through public education. AWCC takes in injured and orphaned animals year-round and provides spacious enclosures and quality animal care. Animals that cannot be released into the wild are given a permanent home at the center.AWCC provides visitors with the opportunity to view Alaskan wildlife up close. Amateur photographers have the opportunity to take award winning photographs while animals display their natural, wild, behavior. Coyotes peer out from behind the brush while a bald eagle swoops in on the salmon remains left by a grizzly bear. Wood Bison plod through 65 acres of tidal flat terrain, as part of a program that will one day restore the species to the Alaskan wilderness.