Devils Lake State Park, North Dakota: Shoreline Riprap and Wetland
July 2015 — Devils Lake State Park in North Dakota.
Explore photos tagged North Dakota.
July 2015 — Devils Lake State Park in North Dakota.
July 2015 — Sunset at Woodland Resort on Devil's Lake in North Dakota.
July 2015 — Grass near Starkweather North Dakota
July 2015 — Highway 17 near Starkweather, North Dakota.
July 2015 — Highway near Wolford, North Dakota.
July 2015 — The North Dakota badlands as seen from the Theodore Roosevelt Expressway.
July 2015 — Charbonneau, North Dakota Ghost Town
July 2015 — Oil rig in Charbonneau, North Dakota.
July 2015 — The Fairview Lift Bridge over the Yellowstone River in North Dakota. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.
July 2015 — A elevator in Charbonneau, North Dakota.
July 2015 — North Dakota oil fields in July 2015 in the middle of the night.
July 2015 — Allis-Chalmers tractor found in North Dakota.
July 2015 — Campsite at Sportsmen Centennial Park in Garrison, North Dakota.
July 2015 — Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park overlook and the Missouri River in North Dakota.
July 2015 — Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park in Bismark, North Dakota
July 2015 — An abandoned schoolhouse in Crystal Springs, North Dakota.
May 2016 — The Sorlie Memorial Bridge in Grand Forks, ND. The bridge is over the Red River.
July 2018 — A weathered pumpjack rises from the red clay of western North Dakota, slowly rocking under the midday sun. Once a quiet symbol of rural industry, it now stands as a reminder of the region’s deep ties to oil production and the changing energy landscape of the American Plains.
July 2018 — Sunlight glints off the rusted steel of a working pumpjack, its rhythmic motion cutting through the quiet plains air. Shot from below, the towering machine looms against the sky—a reminder of the human industry that continues to shape the remote oil fields of the American West.
July 2018 — Killdeer Waterworks building in North Dakota.
July 2018 — Viewed from behind the machinery, the pumpjack overlooks a sweeping stretch of North Dakota badlands. Its rusted gears and faded paint contrast sharply with the vivid red earth and green hills—a scene that captures both the rugged beauty and industrial imprint of the oil fields.