Visit Terra Nova National Park, Newfoundland & Labrador
Terra Nova National Park was established in 1957 to protect the Atlantic uplands and boreal forest of eastern Newfoundland. It's home to salmon, moose, bears, lynx and bald eagles.

Eagle in flight by Matt Maran
Terra Nova National Park
Newfoundland & Labrador, Canada
Terra Nova National Park was established in 1957 to protect the Atlantic uplands and boreal forest of eastern Newfoundland.
Covering 400 square kilometres, the park includes spruce forests, rolling hills, bogs, streams and glacial features, fringed by a rugged coastline broken with sheltered inlets.
Wildlife of Terra Nova National Park
The area has supported an impressive array of marine and terrestrial life for thousands of years: salmon, moose, bears, lynx and bald eagles are just some of the wildlife you may see.
For millennia the Beothuk found refuge here and the brief incursion of European settlers is marked by a scattering of now-abandoned ruins along the coast.
Other places within Newfoundland & Labrador
More in Terra Nova National Park, Newfoundland & Labrador
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