It all depends on what part of Alaska you will be visiting. Please take a look at the National Parks Service website for information of all the landmarks in Alaska. You can follow this link to see a complete list of the landmarks in Alaska:http://www.nps.gov/akso/cr/akrcultural/NHL.htm
Seward and Kenai FjordsSitka Mendenhall Glacier in JuneauDenali National ParkWrangell-St. Elias National ParkBarrowRound Island Walrus SanctuaryWinter sunsets in Fairbanks and areas northThe longest day of the year (June 21) at Eagle Summit on the Steese HighwayThe drive from Fairbanks to ValdezThe smiling faces of family and friends as they watch moose, bears, mountains, flowers, meet nice Alaskans, learn about Alaskan Native cultures, and freeze their hair into wild styles as they soak in outdoor hot springs below the aurora borealis at 20 below zero.
The back side of visitors leaving..... LOL.It s not so much to see - it s to experience. Like driving down a road for four hours and not seeing another car - or a piece of trash - for hours.My favorite - Cape St. Elias Lighthouse. Has a 700 foot pinacle dead in front of it that sticks up like the pointed end of a lance from the sand. Only way you can view it is from helicopter or small plane out of Cordova. There are lots and lots of things to see in Alaska. It just matters how sturdy you are and how you plan to get there.
Palin s front porch, you can see russia from there
Mt. McKinley, Barrow, Nome and Murphy Dome