Final cleanup of Alaska automobile junkyard is underway
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The final cleanup is underway in Anchorage after the 1964 Great Alaska Earthquake helped turn a sea-side bluff into an auto junkyard.
Here’s a quick look at how the vehicles got imbedded into the 250-foot cliff overlooking Cook Inlet and directly above a wildlife refuge important for migratory birds, and what’s being done to get some of them out:
HOW DID THE PROBLEM START?
On Good Friday in 1964, the second most powerful earthquake ever recorded devastated parts of southcentral Alaska, including the then-young city of Anchorage. Debris from downed or damaged downtown buildings left cars unusable.

