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Yangmingshan National Park |
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Yangmingshan National
Park is renowned for its wealth of unusual volcanic features and
topography. Being so accessible and close to Taipei City, the park
attracts a very large number of visitors despite its small size compared
to Taiwan's other national parks. For this very reason it faces greater
and more complex pressures for man-made development. Over the years the
National Park Headquarters has put considerable energy into managing the
park's resources, and has launched an educational and publicity effort
aimed at creating a distinctive "small is beautiful" image for
the park. |
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Taroko National Park |
Taroko National
Park, in the north-eastern part of the island, faces the
Pacific Ocean on the east and covers an area of more
than 92000 hectares in the northern section of the
Central Mountain Range. The Park is 36 kilometers from
north to south and 42 kilometers from east to west. It
is situated at the Nantou. The park has many high
mountains and steep gorges, with many peaks towering
above 3,000 meters in height, and with many natural
watersheds. The spectacular Taroko Gorge and the scenic
beauty of the Liwu River can be viewed conveniently from
the Central Cross Island Highway. The many waterfalls,
diverse forms of plant and animal life, and the
indigenous Atayal people, together create the rich
texture of this unique natural ecosystem. |
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Yushan National Park |
Yushan National
Park is located in the heart of Taiwan, exerting a
balancing influences of all life status on this island.
To lay out and establish a National Park is Human
beings' greatest endeavour: an endeavour to preserve the
earth's most natural as well as the most precious
sources of all life existence and its spirit within an
area. It is not a park of the city, nor is it a
recreation district in its narrower sense. It has a
purpose and also a responsibility, i.e. to preserve
special environments, to save natural ecosystems and to
teach everyone to know the great nature, that deserves
recognition and respect. |
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Shei-Pa National Park |
Shei-pa National
Park ,which also has a lot to offer the nature-loving
hiker. The main aim of this national park, which was
established in 1992 as Taiwan's fifth national park, is
to protect and preserve the environment in this
marvelous mountain area. The park covers an area of
76,850 hectares and is a wonderland of soaring peaks,
spectacular waterfalls, and wild nature. One of the most
remarkable mountains in this park is Tapa Peak. With its
sheer cliffs of over 140 meters and its distinct shape,
this peak, which is regarded as a sacred mountain by the
indigenous Atayal people, is a delight for the eye and a
challenge for the hiker. Usually a hiking trip to Tapa
Peak starts and ends at Guanwa, with overnight stops
both going and coming at 99 Mountain Lodge. Another
famous mountain area that provides some of the most
fascinating trails in Taiwan is the ridge that connects
Tapa Peak with Mt.Shiue to the south, which also called
the "Holy Ridge". |
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Kenting National Park |
Kenting National
Park was the first national park and was officially
opened in 1984. The Park is located at the southern tip
of Taiwan in the area called the Hengchuen Peninsula.
The Park now contains about 20,000 hectares of land and
approximately 16,000 hectares of ocean along the three
coasts. It is well known for its uplifted coral reefs,
oceanic natural resources, natural monsoon forests, and
coastal tropical rainforest. |
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Kinmen National Park |
These five
national parks are mostly involved in ecological
conservation and protection of the natural landscape.
Kinmen National Park is the first national park in
Taiwan set up to maintain and protect historically and
culturally important sites and battlefield monuments, in
addition to conservation of natural resources. Kinmen
borders on mainland China, so the climate is influenced
by both land and ocean. And it is an important way
station for migratory birds in East Asia. Birds are the
richest and most characteristic form of wildlife in
Kinmen National Park. |
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