Auyuittuq National Park
Canada · Americas

關於Auyuittuq National Park
Auyuittuq National Park is a national park in Nunavut. In the Inuktitut language, its name means "the land that never melts". If despite that warning, you're still interested in visiting, you'll experience many terrains of Arctic wilderness, such as fjords, glaciers, and ice fields.
Auyuittuq National Park旅遊指南
城市概覽
Auyuittuq covers 19,707 km2 (7,609 sq mi), so it's about the size of Bhutan or New Jersey. It lies almost entirely within the Arctic Circle. Auyuittuq was established in 1976 as a national park reserve, and was upgraded to a national park in 2000. The park sits partially within the Penny Highlands and includes the 6,000-km² Penny Ice Cap. The Penny Ice Cap, made of ice sitting on Precambrian granite, creates a series of glaciers, among them the Coronation Glacier. The land reflects the geological history of the area, with deep valleys between the peaks, which include Mount Asgard with an 800-m (2,600-ft) face, and Mount Thor with a 1,250-m face. Along the coast are deep, narrow fjords. In Akshayuk Pass, the winds can reach 175 km/h (109 mph).
Landscape
The park's landscape has been entirely glacier-formed. It includes scenic fjords, glaciated mountains, rushing rivers, huge glaciers, and the Penny Ice Cap. The Penny Ice Cap is believed by many to be the birthplace of the last ice age.
Flora and fauna Little vegetation can be found in Auyuittuq Park, although the plants found there range from flowers such as mountain avens, campion, Papaver, and saxifrage to shrubs like dwarf birch, Arctic willow, and heather. Many of the plants in Auyuittuq Park grow in clumps to create their own warmer "microclimate" to survive the harsh Arctic conditions. Because of the exceptionally low vegetation supply, wildlife is very scarce. Species that live in Auyuittuq Park include the North American brown lemming, the northern collared lemming, red foxes, snowy owls, peregrine falcons, ermines, rough-legged hawks, gyrfalcons, beluga whales, snow geese, polar bears, wolves, narwhals, Canada geese, Arctic foxes, Arctic hares, and some barren-ground caribou.
Climate The dates below are approximate and will vary from year to year. Ice, wind, tide and weather conditions may also affect your access plans.
March-early May The fiords are frozen, so you can to travel from Pangnirtun
如何抵達
There is no intercity road network in Nunavut. The park is accessible by boat from 1 Pangnirtung in the south and 2 Qikiqtarjuaq in the north. Canadian North flies from 3 Iqaluit to these communities.
By boat A boat ride to and from the park can be arranged with a local outfitter. Contact the park office in Pangnirtung (☏ +1 867 4732500) for a list of operators who provide transportation and/or guiding services.
Peter Kilabuk, Box 365, Pangnirtung X0A 0R0, ☏ +1 867 473-4060. The 28-kilometre (17 mi) boat ride from Pangnirtung north to Auyuittuq National Park is about 45 min long and tide-dependent; a day trip from Pangnirtung to Qekerten Territorial Park and the old Whaling Station is 50 km (31 mi) the other way and takes 6-8 hours. Other day trips are run for fishing or for visits to the Cumberland Sound. Kilabuk is a former Park Warden of Auyuittuq National Park, served a term as Speaker of the Nunavut legislature (2006) and is a member of the Canadian Rangers. Airport transportation is available if requested prior to arrival. $80-100. (updated Jun 2011) Billy Arnaquq, Box 96, Qikiqtarjuaq X0A 0B0, ☏ +1 867 927-8518. Nunavut Experience Outfitting is the only outfitter offering boat rides out of Qikiqtarjuaq, which are 3-5 hours long depending on sea conditions. $180. (updated Jun 2011)
必看景點
1 Mount Thor (the largest uninterrupted cliff face in the world, and a popular destination for rock climbers: the world's highest vertical drop 1,250 m (4,100 ft), 105° face). 2 Mount Asgard(shown in the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me) with an 800 m (2,600 ft) face. 3 Penny Ice Cap Glaciers and tundra The Arctic Circle passes through the park and is marked by an inukshuk that has been in many tourists' photographs. 4 Schwarzenback Falls (Qulitasaniakvik)
體驗活動
The most common backpacking route in the park is known as 1 Akshayuk Pass, and follows the Weasel and Owl rivers via Summit Lake. In 2008, heavy rain and warm weather caused 2 Summit Lake to burst through its banks, flooding the Weasel River and washing away the Windy Lake bridge (see photo below). As a result, the hiking routes in the pass were limited to either side of the Weasel River.
購物
Inuit carvings and prints in Pangnirtung.
美食
No eateries at the park; you must bring your own food.
飲品與夜生活
Some of the cleanest water in the world fresh from the glaciers. However, the north side of the pass is a bird nesting area and as such, water must be purified no matter how clean it looks.
住宿
Camping There are emergency shelters every 15 km or so, but they're not for sleeping; a tent is required.
城市概覽改寫自 Wikipedia,旅遊指南來自Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。照片來自 Wikimedia Commons.