Reisa National Park
Reisa National Park | |
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Norwegian: Reisa nasjonalpark | |
IUCN category II (national park) | |
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Location | Nordreisa, Troms, Norway |
Nearest city | Storslett, Kautokeino |
Coordinates | 69°12′N 21°58′E / 69.200°N 21.967°ECoordinates: 69°12′N 21°58′E / 69.200°N 21.967°E |
Area | 803 km2 (310 sq mi) |
Established | 28 November 1986 |
Governing body | Directorate for Nature Management |
Reisa National Park (Norwegian: Reisa nasjonalpark) is a national park in Nordreisa municipality, Troms county, Norway that was established by royal decree on 28 November 1986. The park is full of wildlife. The Rough-legged Buzzard is the most common bird of prey, but hikers may also spot golden eagle, kestrels, and gyrfalcon. Wolverines and lynx live in the park and surrounding mountains. Since the Sámi name for part of the gorge, Njállaávzi, means arctic fox gorge, the arctic fox must have lived here a long time. The largest Norwegian predator, the brown bear, is occasionally seen in the park.[1]
The Reisa river has cut a valley and a canyon (north of Imo) in the mountain plateau, producing the long fertile valley called Reisadalen. Waterfalls cascade into the valleys and gorges. The waterfall Mollisfossen is one of the more spectacular falls at 269 metres (883 ft) in height.[2]
The valley and adjacent mountains have been valuable for hunting, animal trapping, and fishing for centuries. Snares are sometimes still set to catch ptarmigan and willow grouse in the traditional manner. Scots Pine were used for timber and to produce tar. Nearly every farm in the valley earned extra income making tar, and production continued far into the 20th century. The remains of many tar kilns can still be found. The park and surrounding areas provided spring, summer, and autumn grazing for semi-domesticated reindeer. In winter, the reindeer in this region graze in the Kautokeino district in nearby Finnmark county; in summer, they are on the coast in the northwest.[1]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Reisa national park" (PDF). Norwegian Directorate for Nature Management. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
- ↑ Schandy, Tom; Helgesen, Tom (2006). 100 norske naturperler (in Norwegian). Norway: Forlaget Tom & Tom. ISBN 978-82-995682-8-9.