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Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site

Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve, National Marine Conservation Area, and Haida Heritage Site, usually referred to simply as Gwaii Haanas (/ˌɡw ˈhɑːnəs/), is located in southernmost Haida Gwaii (formerly known as Queen Charlotte Islands), 130 kilometres (81 miles) off the mainland of British Columbia, Canada. Gwaii Haanas protects an archipelago of 138 islands, the largest being Moresby Island and the southernmost being Kunghit Island. "Gwaii Haanas" means "Islands of Beauty" in X̱aayda kíl, the language of the Haida people.

Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site
Haida Gwaii Map; Gwaii Haanas is at the southern end
Location of Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve in Canada
Location of Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve in British Columbia
LocationHaida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
Nearest citySandspit
Coordinates52°23′21″N 131°28′16″W / 52.38917°N 131.47111°W / 52.38917; -131.47111
Area1,470 km2 (570 sq mi)
Established1988
Governing bodyGwaii Haanas Archipelago Management Board
Websiteparks.canada.ca/pn-np/bc/gwaiihaanas

The Haida Heritage Site is within the territory of the Haida people, who have lived in Haida Gwaii for at least 14,000 years.[2][3] Ḵ'aygang.nga (the Haida canon of oral histories) say Haida lived in Gwaii Haanas when the first trees arrived at Xaagyah Gwaay.yaay (Bolkus Islands) as glaciers retreated. Pollen samples indicate trees first arrived 14,500 years ago.[4]

Numerous films have covered Gwaii Haanas, including the 2011 short National Parks Project, directed by Scott Smith and scored by Sarah Harmer, Jim Guthrie and Bry Webb.[citation needed]

Establishing Gwaii Haanas edit

From the 1970s through the early 1980s, plans to expand logging to Burnaby Island led to controversy, and the first concerted efforts to protect Gwaii Haanas. The "South Moresby Wilderness Proposal" was drawn up in an effort to stem natural resource exploitation.

To prevent logging, the Haida Nation designated the "Haida Heritage Site" in 1985, encompassing roughly the southern third of the archipelago. Importantly, the Heritage site included a swath of land and sea, both terrestrial and marine areas. However, logging continued, amidst legal and political battles. In 1987, logging ended when the governments of Canada and British Columbia signed the South Moresby Memorandum of Understanding.

This accord led to the South Moresby Agreement a year later, which created South Moresby National Park Reserve.[5] It was not a full national park; it was an area reserved to become a national park, because there were outstanding claims to land ownership among federal and tribal governments. But the measure safeguarded the area, and permitted shared stewardship. It would be managed as if it were a national park, pending land claims.

Cooperatively managed edit

In 1993, the Government of Canada and the Council of the Haida Nation signed the Gwaii Haanas Agreement, which changed the name of the national park reserve to a native name. This Agreement expresses respect for both Canadian and Haida designations and interests, and includes a mutual commitment to the protection of Gwaii Haanas. Because the park reserve and the Haida Heritage Site nearly coincide (on land), its official name reflected both designations: Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site.

Based on the Agreement, Gwaii Haanas is cooperatively managed by the Archipelago Management Board (AMB), which is made up of an equal number of representatives from the Council of Haida Nation and the Government of Canada. The AMB is responsible for all aspects of planning, operation, and management of Gwaii Haanas.[6]

Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve edit

For the Haida, the marine and terrestrial environments are inseparable. The boundary between earth and ocean exists only on a map.[7] Such is not the case with the park reserve. While the heritage site includes both land and sea, the national park reserve overlaps with only the terrestrial portion of the site. The Gwaii Haanas Agreement provided for native–federal negotiations on managing the marine portion of the site, which eventually bore fruit in 2010 when an enveloping protected area was created. Like the national park reserve it surrounds, the marine reserve is reserved for future designation to full park system status, pending sea claim settlements.

Meantime, the Gwaii Haanas NMCAR will balance protecting marine ecosystems, while also allowing ecolgocially sustainable use. This includes traditional harvesting, recreational and commercial fishing.[8]

The appearance of "Haida Heritage Site" in both the names of the national park reserve and the marine reserve is a duplication of name, but not of reference. As part of the national park reserve name, it refers to the terrestrial portion of the site. As part of the marine reserve name, it refers to the marine portion of the site. Still, there are areas of the heritage site—both land and sea—which are outside both federal reserves. These are all in the northernmost parts of the site.

Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve, which covers 3,400 square kilometres, is "a primary feeding habitat"[9] of the humpback whale (North Pacific population) protected by Canada's Species at Risk Act (SARA).[9][10][11]

With the NMCAR established, nearly 5,000 square kilometres of Gwaii Haanas are protected. This is one of the only places in the world where a representative area is protected from mountain top to ocean depth.

Gwaii Haanas Crest edit

 
Source[12]

The AMB's crest crafted by local Haida artist Giitsxaa represents the unique joint management relationship.

The AMB chose the sea otter and the sea urchin because of the creatures' significance in the history and tradition of the protected area and because of their ecological significance.[8]

Populations of sea urchin, a kelp-grazing species, were once kept in check by sea otters, ensuring an abundance of kelp and species that depend upon kelp communities. With the extirpation of sea otters during the Maritime Fur Trade, the natural balance between species in the community was disturbed.[13] As a result, the sea urchin population has increased dramatically over time and the health of kelp forests is threatened. The loss of the sea otter is a powerful reminder of the vulnerability of individual species and entire ecosystems.[8]

World Heritage and National Historic Site Haida Village edit

SG̱ang Gwaay Llnaagay
 
A former Haida village at the site
TypeCultural
Criteriaiii
Designated1981 (5th session)
Reference no.157
RegionEurope and North America
Official nameNan Sdins National Historic Site of Canada
Designated1981
 
Detail of Haida totem pole from Tanu, Haida Gwaii (Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge)

Ninstints (Nan Sdins) or SG̱ang Gwaay Llnaagay on Anthony Island, located in the southernmost part of Gwaii Haanas, just west of Kunghit Island, was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a National Historic site of Canada in 1981. The remains of a Haida village on the eastern side of the island — SG̱ang Gwaay Llnaagay — represent an outstanding example of a traditional Northwest Coast First Nations village site, complete with standing totem poles and the remains of cedar longhouses.[8]

Haida people have a continuing presence at SG̱ang Gwaay and four other village sites between May and September as part of the Haida Gwaii Watchmen Program. Between two and four Watchmen live at each site serving as guardians to protect the natural and cultural heritage of these sites.[8]

Other historical villages within the boundaries of Gwaii Haanas included Cumshewa, Clew (Tanu) and Djí-gua.

Potential expansion edit

In 2004, Parks Canada, on behalf of the Government of Canada, added the entirety of Gwaii Haanas to its tentative list of potential future World Heritage Sites, pending approval by UNESCO.[14]

Ecology edit

Terrain and climate edit

The landscapes of Gwaii Haanas vary from deep fjords to rugged mountains, salmon spawning streams to sub-alpine tundra. Close to 90% of Gwaii Haanas is forested, 9% is alpine and sub-alpine tundra. The remaining 1% is made up of lakes and wetlands.[15]

As water drains from the highest mountains - including the rugged San Christoval Range with peaks over 1,100 metres (3,609 feet) - it helps fill over 40 freshwater lakes.[5] In turn, this water drains through more than 100 salmon spawning streams.[16]

The reserve includes the Hotspring Island, with a hot spring.

A small off the grid community located in Rose Harbour, Kunghit Island is thriving on the only private piece of land in the Southern Gwaii Haanas area. The community's economy is mostly based on small scale ecotourism where it is possible to find accommodation, meals, guides and sea kayaking. Rose Harbour property was until the 1940s an important whaling station off the North Coast of British Columbia.

[17]

Flora edit

The west coast of Gwaii Haanas can receive over 4,000 millimetres (157.5 inches) of rain annually. Extreme exposure to wind and rain makes the forests on the west coast boggy and stunted, and are dominated by western red cedar and hemlock . Forests of the leeward, or eastern side of Gwaii Haanas, are classic coastal temperate rainforests, dominant overstorey species include large western hemlock, Sitka spruce and western red cedar trees.[18]

Fauna edit

Distinct island flora and fauna have evolved over thousands of years. Species here often differ from those found on the mainland. Many common continental species are not found on the islands, or have evolved into unique subspecies such as the black bear which is larger than its mainland cousin. Other species have been introduced relatively recently, such as the Sitka deer, ermine, raccoon, squirrel and beaver. Introduced species now exist in large numbers, much to the detriment of native plants and animals.[7]

An estimated 750,000 seabirds nest along the shoreline of Gwaii Haanas from May through August.[5] Many are burrow-nesters, such as the rhinoceros auklet, ancient murrelet and tufted puffin. Bald eagles are a common sight and nest along the coastline. Because the islands are situated along the Pacific flyway, dozens of species of migrating birds stop here in spring and fall.[7]

Access edit

Gwaii Haanas came first in a survey of US and Canadian National Parks in National Geographic Traveler magazine, recognized for its pristine environment and sustainable management practices.[19]

Gwaii Haanas is a remote location, accessible by sea kayak, boat or chartered floatplane only.

An orientation is provided to all visitors before they enter Gwaii Haanas.

See also edit

Affiliations edit

The museum is affiliated with: CMA, CHIN, and Virtual Museum of Canada.

References edit

  1. ^ "Protected Planet | Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve Of Canada And Haida Heritage Site". Protected Planet. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  2. ^ Fedje, Daryl W (2005). Human History from the Time of the Loon to the Time of the Iron People. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-7748-0921-4.
  3. ^ "Earliest sign of human habitation in Canada may have been found". cbc.ca. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  4. ^ "Ts'ahl Arrives" (PDF). Haida Laas. Council of the Haida Nation: 3. April 2017. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  5. ^ a b c AMB, Public Planning Program, Newsletter No.1, September 1993
  6. ^ Parks Canada Website 2007-02-19 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ a b c Parks Canada Website 2005-05-30 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ a b c d e AMB, Gwaii Haanas Visitor Guide, April 2008
  9. ^ a b Order Amending Schedule 1 to the Species at Risk Act, vol. 148, Canada: The Gazette, April 19, 2014, retrieved April 23, 2014
  10. ^ Chung, Emily (April 22, 2014), Humpback whale losing 'threatened' status amid Northern Gateway concerns, CBC
  11. ^ Humpback whale's critical habitat off the coast of British Columbia overlaps with tankers shipping route between Canada and its eastern trade partners. In 2005 the humpback whale (North Pacific population) was listed as threatened under Canada’s Species at Risk Act (SARA). In April 19, 2014 the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) recommended an amendment to (SARA) to downgrade the status of the humpback whale off the coast of British Columbia from "threatened" to "species of special concern."
  12. ^ . 1 April 2017. Archived from the original on 9 April 2017. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  13. ^ Hsu, Rodney. . Archived from the original on 2009-03-17. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  14. ^ Gwaii Haanas – UNESCO World Heritage Centre
  15. ^ Norm Sloan (ed.) 2007. Gwaii Haanas State of the park report. AMB, Gwaii Haanas, Queen Charlotte, B.C.
  16. ^ Norm Sloan (ed.) 2007. Gwaii Haanas State of the park report. AMB, Gwaii Haanas, Queen Charlotte, B.C. p. 8
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 1999-11-04.
  18. ^ P.M. Bartier, D.W. Burles, B.Johnson, P.Lee, C.L.K. Robinson, N.A. Sloan, I.J.Walker | Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site - Technical Compendium to the 2007 State of the Park Report | Archipelago Management Board | September 2007
  19. ^ "Destination Scorecard: National Parks @ National Geographic Traveler". www.nationalgeographic.com.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  •   Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • World Heritage Site

Further reading edit

  • "MacDonald, George F." Ninstints – Haida World Heritage Site. Vancouver: UBC Press. 1983

gwaii, haanas, national, park, reserve, haida, heritage, site, gwaii, haanas, national, park, reserve, national, marine, conservation, area, haida, heritage, site, usually, referred, simply, gwaii, haanas, ɑː, located, southernmost, haida, gwaii, formerly, kno. Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve National Marine Conservation Area and Haida Heritage Site usually referred to simply as Gwaii Haanas ˌ ɡ w aɪ ˈ h ɑː n e s is located in southernmost Haida Gwaii formerly known as Queen Charlotte Islands 130 kilometres 81 miles off the mainland of British Columbia Canada Gwaii Haanas protects an archipelago of 138 islands the largest being Moresby Island and the southernmost being Kunghit Island Gwaii Haanas means Islands of Beauty in X aayda kil the language of the Haida people Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage SiteIUCN category II national park 1 Haida Gwaii Map Gwaii Haanas is at the southern endLocation of Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve in CanadaShow map of CanadaLocation of Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve in British ColumbiaShow map of British ColumbiaLocationHaida Gwaii British Columbia CanadaNearest citySandspitCoordinates52 23 21 N 131 28 16 W 52 38917 N 131 47111 W 52 38917 131 47111Area1 470 km2 570 sq mi Established1988Governing bodyGwaii Haanas Archipelago Management BoardWebsiteparks wbr canada wbr ca wbr pn np wbr bc wbr gwaiihaanasThe Haida Heritage Site is within the territory of the Haida people who have lived in Haida Gwaii for at least 14 000 years 2 3 Ḵ aygang nga the Haida canon of oral histories say Haida lived in Gwaii Haanas when the first trees arrived at Xaagyah Gwaay yaay Bolkus Islands as glaciers retreated Pollen samples indicate trees first arrived 14 500 years ago 4 Numerous films have covered Gwaii Haanas including the 2011 short National Parks Project directed by Scott Smith and scored by Sarah Harmer Jim Guthrie and Bry Webb citation needed Contents 1 Establishing Gwaii Haanas 1 1 Cooperatively managed 2 Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve 2 1 Gwaii Haanas Crest 3 World Heritage and National Historic Site Haida Village 3 1 Potential expansion 4 Ecology 4 1 Terrain and climate 4 2 Flora 4 3 Fauna 5 Access 6 See also 7 Affiliations 8 References 9 External links 10 Further readingEstablishing Gwaii Haanas editFrom the 1970s through the early 1980s plans to expand logging to Burnaby Island led to controversy and the first concerted efforts to protect Gwaii Haanas The South Moresby Wilderness Proposal was drawn up in an effort to stem natural resource exploitation To prevent logging the Haida Nation designated the Haida Heritage Site in 1985 encompassing roughly the southern third of the archipelago Importantly the Heritage site included a swath of land and sea both terrestrial and marine areas However logging continued amidst legal and political battles In 1987 logging ended when the governments of Canada and British Columbia signed the South Moresby Memorandum of Understanding This accord led to the South Moresby Agreement a year later which created South Moresby National Park Reserve 5 It was not a full national park it was an area reserved to become a national park because there were outstanding claims to land ownership among federal and tribal governments But the measure safeguarded the area and permitted shared stewardship It would be managed as if it were a national park pending land claims Cooperatively managed edit In 1993 the Government of Canada and the Council of the Haida Nation signed the Gwaii Haanas Agreement which changed the name of the national park reserve to a native name This Agreement expresses respect for both Canadian and Haida designations and interests and includes a mutual commitment to the protection of Gwaii Haanas Because the park reserve and the Haida Heritage Site nearly coincide on land its official name reflected both designations Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site Based on the Agreement Gwaii Haanas is cooperatively managed by the Archipelago Management Board AMB which is made up of an equal number of representatives from the Council of Haida Nation and the Government of Canada The AMB is responsible for all aspects of planning operation and management of Gwaii Haanas 6 Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve editMain article Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve and Haida Heritage Site For the Haida the marine and terrestrial environments are inseparable The boundary between earth and ocean exists only on a map 7 Such is not the case with the park reserve While the heritage site includes both land and sea the national park reserve overlaps with only the terrestrial portion of the site The Gwaii Haanas Agreement provided for native federal negotiations on managing the marine portion of the site which eventually bore fruit in 2010 when an enveloping protected area was created Like the national park reserve it surrounds the marine reserve is reserved for future designation to full park system status pending sea claim settlements Meantime the Gwaii Haanas NMCAR will balance protecting marine ecosystems while also allowing ecolgocially sustainable use This includes traditional harvesting recreational and commercial fishing 8 The appearance of Haida Heritage Site in both the names of the national park reserve and the marine reserve is a duplication of name but not of reference As part of the national park reserve name it refers to the terrestrial portion of the site As part of the marine reserve name it refers to the marine portion of the site Still there are areas of the heritage site both land and sea which are outside both federal reserves These are all in the northernmost parts of the site Gwaii Haanas National Marine Conservation Area Reserve which covers 3 400 square kilometres is a primary feeding habitat 9 of the humpback whale North Pacific population protected by Canada s Species at Risk Act SARA 9 10 11 With the NMCAR established nearly 5 000 square kilometres of Gwaii Haanas are protected This is one of the only places in the world where a representative area is protected from mountain top to ocean depth Gwaii Haanas Crest edit nbsp Source 12 The AMB s crest crafted by local Haida artist Giitsxaa represents the unique joint management relationship The AMB chose the sea otter and the sea urchin because of the creatures significance in the history and tradition of the protected area and because of their ecological significance 8 Populations of sea urchin a kelp grazing species were once kept in check by sea otters ensuring an abundance of kelp and species that depend upon kelp communities With the extirpation of sea otters during the Maritime Fur Trade the natural balance between species in the community was disturbed 13 As a result the sea urchin population has increased dramatically over time and the health of kelp forests is threatened The loss of the sea otter is a powerful reminder of the vulnerability of individual species and entire ecosystems 8 World Heritage and National Historic Site Haida Village editSG ang Gwaay Llnaagay nbsp A former Haida village at the siteUNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeCulturalCriteriaiiiDesignated1981 5th session Reference no 157RegionEurope and North AmericaNational Historic Site of CanadaOfficial nameNan Sdins National Historic Site of CanadaDesignated1981Main article Ninstints nbsp Detail of Haida totem pole from Tanu Haida Gwaii Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology University of Cambridge Ninstints Nan Sdins or SG ang Gwaay Llnaagay on Anthony Island located in the southernmost part of Gwaii Haanas just west of Kunghit Island was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a National Historic site of Canada in 1981 The remains of a Haida village on the eastern side of the island SG ang Gwaay Llnaagay represent an outstanding example of a traditional Northwest Coast First Nations village site complete with standing totem poles and the remains of cedar longhouses 8 Haida people have a continuing presence at SG ang Gwaay and four other village sites between May and September as part of the Haida Gwaii Watchmen Program Between two and four Watchmen live at each site serving as guardians to protect the natural and cultural heritage of these sites 8 Other historical villages within the boundaries of Gwaii Haanas included Cumshewa Clew Tanu and Dji gua Potential expansion edit In 2004 Parks Canada on behalf of the Government of Canada added the entirety of Gwaii Haanas to its tentative list of potential future World Heritage Sites pending approval by UNESCO 14 Ecology editTerrain and climate edit The landscapes of Gwaii Haanas vary from deep fjords to rugged mountains salmon spawning streams to sub alpine tundra Close to 90 of Gwaii Haanas is forested 9 is alpine and sub alpine tundra The remaining 1 is made up of lakes and wetlands 15 As water drains from the highest mountains including the rugged San Christoval Range with peaks over 1 100 metres 3 609 feet it helps fill over 40 freshwater lakes 5 In turn this water drains through more than 100 salmon spawning streams 16 The reserve includes the Hotspring Island with a hot spring A small off the grid community located in Rose Harbour Kunghit Island is thriving on the only private piece of land in the Southern Gwaii Haanas area The community s economy is mostly based on small scale ecotourism where it is possible to find accommodation meals guides and sea kayaking Rose Harbour property was until the 1940s an important whaling station off the North Coast of British Columbia 17 Flora edit The west coast of Gwaii Haanas can receive over 4 000 millimetres 157 5 inches of rain annually Extreme exposure to wind and rain makes the forests on the west coast boggy and stunted and are dominated by western red cedar and hemlock Forests of the leeward or eastern side of Gwaii Haanas are classic coastal temperate rainforests dominant overstorey species include large western hemlock Sitka spruce and western red cedar trees 18 Fauna edit Distinct island flora and fauna have evolved over thousands of years Species here often differ from those found on the mainland Many common continental species are not found on the islands or have evolved into unique subspecies such as the black bear which is larger than its mainland cousin Other species have been introduced relatively recently such as the Sitka deer ermine raccoon squirrel and beaver Introduced species now exist in large numbers much to the detriment of native plants and animals 7 An estimated 750 000 seabirds nest along the shoreline of Gwaii Haanas from May through August 5 Many are burrow nesters such as the rhinoceros auklet ancient murrelet and tufted puffin Bald eagles are a common sight and nest along the coastline Because the islands are situated along the Pacific flyway dozens of species of migrating birds stop here in spring and fall 7 Access editGwaii Haanas came first in a survey of US and Canadian National Parks in National Geographic Traveler magazine recognized for its pristine environment and sustainable management practices 19 Gwaii Haanas is a remote location accessible by sea kayak boat or chartered floatplane only An orientation is provided to all visitors before they enter Gwaii Haanas See also edit nbsp Geography portal nbsp Canada portalList of National Parks of Canada National Parks of CanadaAffiliations editThe museum is affiliated with CMA CHIN and Virtual Museum of Canada References edit Protected Planet Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve Of Canada And Haida Heritage Site Protected Planet Retrieved 2020 10 13 Fedje Daryl W 2005 Human History from the Time of the Loon to the Time of the Iron People Vancouver BC UBC Press p 151 ISBN 978 0 7748 0921 4 Earliest sign of human habitation in Canada may have been found cbc ca Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 30 October 2018 Ts ahl Arrives PDF Haida Laas Council of the Haida Nation 3 April 2017 Retrieved 30 October 2018 a b c AMB Public Planning Program Newsletter No 1 September 1993 Parks Canada Website Archived 2007 02 19 at the Wayback Machine a b c Parks Canada Website Archived 2005 05 30 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e AMB Gwaii Haanas Visitor Guide April 2008 a b Order Amending Schedule 1 to the Species at Risk Act vol 148 Canada The Gazette April 19 2014 retrieved April 23 2014 Chung Emily April 22 2014 Humpback whale losing threatened status amid Northern Gateway concerns CBC Humpback whale s critical habitat off the coast of British Columbia overlaps with tankers shipping route between Canada and its eastern trade partners In 2005 the humpback whale North Pacific population was listed as threatened under Canada s Species at Risk Act SARA In April 19 2014 the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada COSEWIC recommended an amendment to SARA to downgrade the status of the humpback whale off the coast of British Columbia from threatened to species of special concern The Gwaii Haanas Crest 1 April 2017 Archived from the original on 9 April 2017 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Hsu Rodney Implication of Sea Otter Population on Kelp Forest Communities Archived from the original on 2009 03 17 Retrieved 2008 05 28 Gwaii Haanas UNESCO World Heritage Centre Norm Sloan ed 2007 Gwaii Haanas State of the park report AMB Gwaii Haanas Queen Charlotte B C Norm Sloan ed 2007 Gwaii Haanas State of the park report AMB Gwaii Haanas Queen Charlotte B C p 8 Gwaii Haanas Guest House and Kayaks INDEX Archived from the original on 1999 11 04 P M Bartier D W Burles B Johnson P Lee C L K Robinson N A Sloan I J Walker Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site Technical Compendium to the 2007 State of the Park Report Archipelago Management Board September 2007 Destination Scorecard National Parks National Geographic Traveler www nationalgeographic com External links editOfficial website nbsp nbsp Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve travel guide from Wikivoyage World Heritage SiteFurther reading edit MacDonald George F Ninstints Haida World Heritage Site Vancouver UBC Press 1983 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site amp oldid 1154129799, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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