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Swiss National Park

Coordinates: 46°40′N 10°12′E / 46.667°N 10.200°E / 46.667; 10.200
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Swiss National Parks
Parc Naziunal Svizzer
Nearest cityZernez
Coordinates46°40′N 10°12′E / 46.667°N 10.200°E / 46.667; 10.200
Area172.3 km2 (66.5 sq mi)
Established1 August 1914

The Swiss National Park (Template:Lang-rm; Template:Lang-de; Template:Lang-it; Template:Lang-fr) is located in the Western Rhaetian Alps, in eastern Switzerland. It is within the canton of Graubünden, between Zernez, S-chanf, Scuol, and the Fuorn Pass in the Engadin valley on the border with Italy.

It is part of the worldwide UNESCO Biosphere Reserve.[2]

Description

It was founded on 1 August 1914, the national holiday of Switzerland. It was one of the earliest national parks in Europe and has an area of 174.2 km2, the largest protected area of the country.

As of 2022, this is the only National Park in Switzerland. There are plans to create more.[3][4] An Adula National Park was planned in the Adula Alps, but in November 2016 the inhabitants voted against it.[5][6]

In the national park, it is forbidden to leave marked paths; light a fire; disturb animals or plants, take home anything found in the park, or to sleep anywhere apart from the Chamanna Cluozza, the mountain hut in the park. Dogs are not allowed, even on a leash. Due to these strict rules, the Swiss National Park is the only park in the Alps which has been categorized by the IUCN as a strict nature reserve, the highest protection level.

A visitor centre is located in Zernez. The road through the park leads over the Fuorn Pass (or Ofenpass) to South Tyrol in Italy.

In addition to the Swiss National Park, Switzerland also has sixteen regional nature parks.[7]

Notable peaks

See also

References

  1. ^ "Schweizerischer Nationalpark". Protected Planet. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  2. ^ Parc Suisse Biosphere Reserve
  3. ^ Pioneer nature park marks centenary
  4. ^ "The Swiss parks". www.parks.swiss. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  5. ^ Franca Siegfried, "Poor communication torpedoes a second national park", Horizons, 05/09/2019, accessed 2 October 2023
  6. ^ Annina Helena Michel, André Bruggmann, "Conflicting Discourses: Understanding the Rejection of a Swiss National Park Project Using Data Analysis Triangulation" in Mountain Research and Development 39(1) (June 2019), R24-R36
  7. ^ Overview of the Swiss parks, Federal Office for the Environment (page visited on 27 July 2016).