Everyone knows that Alaska is the largest state, but there are some other reasons that Alaska is the roughest, toughest, most amazing state in the union. Alaska just has to be different and epic all the time. The great land is vast and chock full of wildlands and endless mountain ranges, adorned with glittering glaciers and gorgeous vistas. Check out these tidbits that make Alaska the biggest, baddest, most extra state of all.
1. Alaska has the highest mountain in the United States.
Alaskans must fly or take the ferry to access the center of Alaska's government, but it's so incredibly beautiful, you'll understand why the capital is in this difficult to reach place.
Point Barrow, just north of the community of Utqiaġvik (formerly Barrow), is the northernmost point in the U.S. The city has a population of about 4000. It has an extreme climate where the sun sets in the winter and it is dark for 65 days.
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4. Alaska also has the westernmost point in the U.S.
Amatignak Island, Alaska is technically the westernmost point in the U.S. by longitude. The long chain of the Aleutian Islands heads out into the Bering Sea and crosses the international dateline.
5. Alaska also has the easternmost point in the U.S.!
For the triple crown, Pochnoi Point, Semisopochnoi Island, Alaska on the Aleutian chain is on the other side of the east-west divide, making it the easternmost point in all U.S. territory by longitude.
6. Alaska has the highest Male-to-Female Ratio of any state
According to the U.S. Census, there are 3% more men than women in Alaska. That makes Alaska the most male state in the union. Like they say, the odds are good, but the good are odd.
Starting on 3 June 1942, a small Japanese force occupied the islands of Attu and Kiska in the Aleutian Islands, part of the Alaska Territory, in the Pacific theater of World War II. The remoteness of the islands and the challenges of the climate delayed a larger U.S.-Canadian force for nearly a year, but eventually the Japanese were ejected.
In North Pole, Alaska lies Santa Clause House, widely accepted as the actual residence of Santa. At least, he gets his mail here and millions of letters are replied to from this address.
In the Bering Sea lie two tiny islands. Little Diomede, a part of Alaska, and Big Diomede, a part of Russia, are just 2.5 miles apart. So probably, technically, you could be in a house in Alaska and see Russia, if the fog and clouds ever cleared.
11. The midnight sun grows the biggest cabbages ever!
The heaviest cabbage EVER weighed 138.25 lb and was entered at the Alaska State Fair by Scott A. Robb (USA). It was weighed in Palmer on August 31, 2012. Pumpkins and zuchinni grow to enormous sizes, too.
Everyone plays baseball and soccer, but in Alaska we hitch a bunch of dogs to a sled and head out over the open tundra for hundreds of miles, just for fun.
The Hammer Museum in Haines has thousands of hammers for you to peruse, and there are rumored to be thousands more in storage. For only $5, you can learn everything you ever wanted to know about hammers. Now that's metal!
The top ten tallest peaks in the U.S. are Denali, Mount Saint Elias, Mount Foraker, Mount Bona, Mount Blackburn, Mount Sanford, Mount Fairweather, Mount Hubbard, Mount Bear, and Mount Hunter.