Newfoundland & Labrador National Parks
Newfoundland and Labrador have three national parks. Torngat Park is in the mountains of Labrador,
bordering Quebec.
Gros Morne National Park is situated on the western coast of the
island. and Terra Nova on the north eastern Atlantic Coast.
Clicking on the Parks Canada links will take you to the home page of the park for
more information.
Gros Morne National
Park – Designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987,
this park an area of great natural beauty with a rich variety of scenery, wildlife, and recreational
activities. Visitors can hike through wild, uninhabited mountains and camp by the sea. Boat tours bring
visitors under the towering cliffs of a freshwater fjord carved out by glaciers.
Waterfalls, marine inlets, sea stacks, sandy beaches, and colourful nearby fishing
villages complete the phenomenal natural and cultural surroundings of this national park. Parks Canada
Terra Nova National Park – This is a place where long fingers of the North Atlantic Ocean touch the island boreal
forest of Eastern Newfoundland. Rocky headlands provide shelter from the awesome power of the open
ocean.
The landscape of the park varies from the rugged cliffs and sheltered inlets of the
coastal region to the rolling forested hills, bogs and ponds of the inland. Cultural history abounds in the
remnants of sawmills and past human cultures. Parks Canada
Torngat Mountains National Park – From the Inuktitut word meaning "place of spirits", the Torngat Mountains have been home
to Inuit and their predecessors for thousands of years. The spectacular wilderness of this National Park Reserve
comprises 9,700 km2 of the Northern Labrador Mountains natural region.
The park extends from Saglek Fjord in the south, including all islands and islets,
to the very northern tip of Labrador; and from the provincial boundary with Quebec in the west, to the
iceberg-choked waters of the Labrador Sea in the east.Polar bears hunt seals along the coast, and both the Torngat
Mountains and George River caribou herds cross paths as they migrate to and from their calving grounds.
Parks
Canada
See also
Birding Atlantic Canada
Newfoundland and Labrador
Amphibians in Newfoundland
& Labrador
Reptiles in Newfoundland
& Labrador
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