Waterton Lakes National Park
Waterton
Lakes National Park is a national park located in the southwest corner of Alberta,
Canada, and borders Glacier National Park in Montana, United States.Waterton
was Canada's fourth national park, In 1932, Waterton-Glacier International
Peace Park was formed from Waterton and Glacier. It was dedicated to world
peace by Sir Charles Arthur Mander on behalf of Rotary International. Although
the park has a lot of diversity for its size, the main highlight is the
Waterton lakes the deepest in the Canadian Rockies overlooked by the historic
Prince of Wales Hotel National Historic Site. The park is part of the
Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park, designated as World Heritage Site in
1995 for their distinctive climate, physiographic setting, mountain-prairie
interface, and tri-ocean hydrographical divide.
They are areas of significant
scenic values with abundant and diverse flora and fauna. In 1979, Waterton and
bordering Glacier National park in the US were designated as World Biosphere
reserves, preserving mountains, prairie, lakes and freshwater wetlands
ecosystems. Habitats represented in the parks' range include: prairie
grasslands, aspen grove forests, alpine tundra/high meadows, lower subalpine
forests, deciduous and coniferous forests. Operated by Parks Canada, Waterton
is open all year, but the main tourist season is during July and August. The
only commercial facilities available within the park are located at the
Waterton Park townsite.
The
park was the subject of a short film in 2011's National Parks Project, directed
by Peter Lynch and scored by Cadence Weapon, Laura Barrett and Mark Hamilton.
It is formed in 1895 and named afterWaterton Lake, in turn after the Victorian
naturalist and conservationist Charles Waterton. The park contains 505 km2(195
sq mi) of rugged mountains and wilderness.
Gift from mother nature....
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