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Visit the boundary between boreal and deciduous forest at the Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge

MAINE

       
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Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge
The Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge is a 5,400-acre (22 km) National Wildlife Refuge made up of several parcels of land along 50 miles (80 km) of Maine's southern coast. Created in 1966, it is named for environmentalist and author Rachel Carson, whose book Silent Spring raised public awareness of the effects of DDT on migratory songbirds, and of other environmental issues.
This description uses material from the Wikipedia article on Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License (view authors).
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