I have been surprised by how Canada has quite a few National Parks which are "remote" to say the least. I suppose considering how a large portion of Canada is in the "far North" I should not be surprised by this. Perhaps a more accurate way to say this would be to say I am so impressed by how Canada is choosing to preserve remote places - whether lots of people will travel there or not! Apparently in Canada National Parks are not just places for lots of people to spend their vacations, they are places of incredible beauty worth preserving and protecting - Vuntut National Park is one such place for sure!
- Vuntut National Park covers 4,345 square kilometers above the Arctic Circle in northern Yukon and is one of Canada's most remote National Parks.
- There are no roads in Vuntut National Park, and fewer than 25 people visit each year.
- Vuntut translates to "among the lakes" in the local Gwich’in language and is pronounced as, "Voon-toot".
- The park is distinctly split into two very different geographical zones: Old Crow Flats (South): A sprawling Ramsar-designated wetland complex featuring over 2,000 shallow lakes and peat bogs and The British Mountains (North): Two-thirds of the park consists of rolling foothills, rocky peaks, and river valleys.
- Because Vuntut Old Crow Flats was part of Beringia, it was never glaciated during the Ice Ages, leaving the permafrost rich in ancient fossils.
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