[[Image:Interior fall.jpg|thumb|300px|Fall in Interior Alaska]]
The '''Alaska Interior''' covers most of that [[U.S. state]]'s territory. It is largely [[wilderness]]. Mountains include [[Mount McKinley]] (Denali) in the [[Alaska Range]] and the [[Wrangell Mountains]].

The largest city
in the interior is [[Fairbanks, Alaska|Fairbanks]], [[Alaska]]'s second-largest city, in the [[Tanana Valley]]. Other towns include [[North Pole, Alaska|North Pole]], just south of Fairbanks, [[Eagle, Alaska|Eagle]], [[Tok, Alaska|Tok]], [[Talkeetna, Alaska|Talkeetna]], [[Glennallen, Alaska|Glennallen]], [[Delta Junction, Alaska|Delta Junction]], [[Nenana, Alaska|Nenana]], [[Anderson, Alaska|Anderson]], [[Healy, Alaska|Healy]] and [[Cantwell, Alaska|Cantwell]].

== Climate ==
Interior Alaska experiences seasonal temperature extremes. Winter temperatures in Fairbanks average
24 °C (−12 °F) and summer temperatures average +17 °C (+62 °F). Temperatures there have been recorded as low as63 °C (−82 °F) in mid-winter, and as high as +38 °C (+101 °F) in summer.

The average annual precipitation in Fairbanks is 28.7 cm (11.3 inches). Most of this comes in the form of snow during the winter. Most storms in the interior of Alaska originate in the [[Gulf of Alaska]], south of Alaska.

On clear winter nights, the [[aurora borealis]] can often be seen dancing in the sky. Like all subarctic regions, the months from May to July in the summer have no night, only a twilight during the night hours. The months of November
to January have little daylight. Fairbanks receives an average 21 hours of daylight between [[May 10]] and [[August 2]] each summer, and an average of less than four hours of daylight between [[November 18]] and [[January 24]] each winter.

The interior of Alaska is largely underlined by discontinuous [[permafrost]], which grades to continuous permafrost as the [[Arctic Circle]] is approached.

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[[Category:Regions of Alaska]]