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Introduction
Gates of the Arctic
Lake Clark
Wrangell-St. Elias
Kobuk Valley
Katmai
North Cascades
Isle Royale
Glacier Bay
Denali
Death Valley

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PARKS

America's Loneliest Parks

GORP Top Ten
Lonely National Parks
By Rich Beattie, GORP Editor
* Gates of the Arctic, Alaska
* Lake Clark, Alaska
* Wrangell-St. Elias, Alaska
* Kobuk Valley, Alaska
* Katmai, Alaska
* North Cascades, Washington
* Isle Royale, Michigan
* Glacier Bay, Alaska
* Denali, Alaska
* Death Valley, California

Other lonely places?
Numbers don't tell the whole story.
Give us your picks!
Tell us.
We've all crowded onto the South Rim of the Grand Canyon to snap that unforgettable photo, only to find that the most memorable thing is bumping elbows with a Clark Griswold-type sporting a huge sombrero.

Welcome to our national parks. In 1999, 23 of them stockpiled at least one million visits each, making them feel more like a New York subway ride than a back-to-nature experience. You endure bumper-to-bumper traffic, only to hear cell phones ringing as Old Faithful erupts. Even in the middle of nowhere, space is a commodity: Getting that snapshot of the Grand Canyon means elbowing aside almost 5 million people; cruising through the Smoky Mountains involves competing with a whopping 21 million.

Lake Clark

Visitor numbers alone don't tell the whole story, though: there are, after all, almost 81 million acres of park to accommodate everyone. A couple million people in Alaska's Wrangell-St. Elias wouldn't matter much—the park is spread out over 13.2 million acres. But Maine's Acadia is allotted only 48,000 acres; the three million visitors per year have to endure an average of 60 people per acre. And if you really want to talk sardines, check out Arkansas's Hot Springs; with 3.3 million visitors squeezing into 5,500 acres, there were—get this—594 people per acre.

Of course, weather's key: Who visits North Dakota in January? According to stats from Theodore Roosevelt NP, hardly anyone. Big surprise. But the 1,600 hardy souls who came in January 1999 ballooned to 111,000 by peak season: August. Down south, it's the opposite: The 57,000 who jammed into Texas's Big Bend in March dwindled to a mere 11,000 by steamy July.

How do you escape the teeming masses? Head to one of America's lonely parks and snag some of your own space. We did the math to give you an idea how much acreage you'll have to yourself. Of course, the majority of these acres are in already-lonely Alaska, but a couple parks may just surprise you. So find your peace here, in places with space enough and few enough numbers to make them gloriously lonely.

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