Jasper National Park is the largest of Canada's Rocky Mountain Parks and part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Jasper joins Banff National Park to the south via the Icefields Parkway. This parkway offers unparalleled beauty as you travel alongside a chain of massive icefields straddling the Continental Divide. The Columbia Icefield borders the parkway in the southern end of the park.

Large numbers of elk, bighorn sheep, mule deer and other large animals, as well as their predators make Jasper National Park one of the great protected ecosystems remaining in the Rocky Mountains. This vast wilderness is one of the few remaining places in southern Canada that is home to a full range of carnivores, including grizzly bears, mountain lions, wolves and wolverines.

Park Highlights

  • The highest mountain in Alberta (Mt. Columbia, 3747 metres);
  • The hydrographic apex of North America (the Columbia Icefield) where water flows to three different oceans from one point;
  • The longest underground drainage system known in Canada (the Maligne Valley karst);
  • The only sand-dune ecosystem anywhere in the Four Mountain Parks (Jasper Lake dunes);
  • The northern limit in Alberta of Douglas-fir trees (Brûlé Lake);
  • The last fully protected range in the Rocky Mountains for caribou (Maligne herd);
  • The most accessible glacier in North America (the Athabasca).

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