Everything about Kootenay National Park totally explained
Kootenay National Park is located in southeastern
British Columbia Canada covering 1,406 km² (543 mi²) in the
Canadian Rockies and forms part of a
World Heritage Site. The park ranges in elevation from 918 metres (3,011') at the south-west park entrance to 3,424 metres (11,235') at
Deltaform Mountain. Kootenay forms one of the four contiguous mountain parks in the Canadian Rockies; the other three being
Banff National Park directly to the east,
Yoho National Park directly to the north and
Jasper National Park which doesn't share a boundary with Kootenay National Park. Initially called "Kootenay Dominion Park", the park was created in 1920 as part of an agreement between the province of British Columbia and the Canadian federal government to build a highway in exchange for
title (property) to a strip of land on either side of the route. A strip of land 8 km. wide on each side of the newly constructed 94 km. Banff-Windermere Highway was set aside as a national park.
While the park is open all year, the major tourist season lasts from June to September. Most
campgrounds are open from early May to late September while limited winter camping is available only at the Dolly Varden campground.
The park takes its name from the
Kootenay River, one of the two major rivers which flow through the park, the other being the Vermillion River. While the Vermillion River is completely contained within the park, the Kootenay River has its headwaters just outside of the park boundary, flows through the park into the
Rocky Mountain Trench, eventually joining the
Columbia River. The Banff-Windermere Highway, #93 follows the path of both rivers through the park.
Attractions
The park's main attractions include the Hot Springs, Olive Lake, Marble Canyon, Sinclair Canyon and the Paint Pots. The hot springs offer a
hot springs pool ranging from 35°C to 47°C (95°F to 117 °F). The Paint Pots are a group of iron-rich cold mineral springs which bubble up through several small pools and stain the earth a dark red-orange colour. The Paint Pots were a major source of the
Ochre paint pigment for a number of
First Nations groups prior to the 20th century. Because of the relatively small width of the park (five miles on each side of the highway), many of the park's attractions are situated near the road and are wheelchair accessible. A number of recent forest fires in the northern half of the park in the Simpson River, Vermillion Pass, and Floe Creek areas in 2003 and 2004 have left significant burn areas readily visible from the highway.
Just outside the park's south-western entrance is the town of
Radium Hot Springs. The town is named for the odourless hot springs located just inside the park boundary. The name originated at the turn of the 20th century when the promoters tried to sell the hot springs as a therapeutic cure and used the springs very slight radioactivity as a selling point. The area around the hot springs is also home to the
Rubber Boa snake
(External Link
). The park's north-eastern entrance, connects to Castle Junction in
Banff National Park and the
Trans-Canada Highway via Vermillion Pass, a mountain pass across the Continental Divide of the Canadian Rockies on the Alberta/British Columbia border, at an elevation of 1,651 metres (5,416').
Geology
The geology of the park is dominated by mountains made up of exposed faulted sedimentary rock and valleys containing glacial till deposited in the
Pleistocene. Just outside the north-eastern corner of the park, there's an igneous intrusion known as the Ice River Complex containing deposits of
Sodalite, an ornamental stone. The hills immediately around the hot springs are composed mainly of
Tufa, a calcium carbonate deposit that forms by precipitation of supersaturated hot spring water when it reaches cooler surface water.
The rocks in south-western corner of the park are part of the older
Purcell Mountains range while the eastern park mountains are part of the younger
Rocky Mountains range.
World Heritage Site
This park was declared a
UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984, together with the other
national and
provincial parks that form the
Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks, for the mountain landscapes containing mountain peaks,
glaciers, lakes, waterfalls,
canyons and limestone caves as well as
fossils found here.
Image:Kootenay National Park.jpg|View to the south-east from the viewpoint near Sinclair Pass
Image:Kootenay National Park Kootenay River.JPG|Ottertail River
Image:Canada Sheep - Kootenay.JPG|Bighorn Sheep
Image:Bighorn Sheep Resting on Forest Floor.jpg|Bighorn Sheep
Image:Wild Lily Blooming along Dog Lake Trail at Kootenay National Park.jpg|Lilium philadelphicum
Wild lily at Dog Lake Trail
Further Information
Get more info on 'Kootenay National Park'.
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