
Fire-spotting hut on Mount Carleton (IR Walker 1993)

Climbing at peak of Mount Carleton (IR Walker 1993)
'Mount Carleton Provincial Park', established in 1970, is the largest provincial
park in the Province of
New Brunswick,
Canada. Encompassing 174 km² in the remote highlands of north-central
New Brunswick, the park's dominant natural features include the highest peak in the province,
Mount Carleton, and several large freshwater lakes (Nictau Lake, Little Nictau Lake, Bathurst Lake, and the Nepisiguit Lakes). Located at the headwaters of the
Nepisiguit River and the
Tobique River, the lakes offered a convenient portage route between the Nepisiguit and
St. John River watersheds. The Canadian portion of the
International Appalachian Trail passes through the park.
[1]
The mountains in the park are erosional remnants of resistant
igneous rocks that remained after an ancient
Mesozoic peneplain surface was uplifted in the
Cenozoic to form a
plateau, and subsequently dissected via millions of years of erosion by wind, water and glacial ice.
[2][3][4][5]
References
1. The Canadian Encyclopedia, http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0005479
2. Wilson, R. A., M. A. Parkhill, and J. I. Carroll, New Brunswick Appalachian Transect: Bedrock and Quaternary geology of the Mount Carleton - Restigouche River Area, http://www.gnb.ca/0078/minerals/pdf/FieldG_Bdrk_Quatern_Geo_NE_NB-e.pdf
3. Roland, A. E. 1982. Geological Background and Physiography of Nova Scotia. Halifax: The Nova Scotian Institute of Science.
4. Encyclopaedia Britannica, http://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-388796/article-9053304
5. Mount Carleton Provincial Park Retrieved on 2007-08-18
See also
★
List of New Brunswick parks
External links
★
Mount Carleton Provincial Park