Overlanding in Alaska

Understanding place through slow travel and immersion

Traveling by land through Alaska slows perception and stretches time, allowing landscapes, wildlife, and human presence to reveal themselves naturally. Moving between glaciers, forests, and coastal systems, this project explores how sustained immersion—not speed or spectacle—shapes understanding of place. The work unfolds as a visual essay, where photographs and extended captions work together to mirror the rhythms of the journey itself.

Time here is marked not by the clock, but by the changing of the seasons.

Published by National Geographic Traveller UK
Photography and writing by Marisa Marulli
View the published spread →

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