I can better answer the question if I knew what "something" is! But I can tell you that Okefenokee is a National Wildlife Refuge, not a National Park. That means it is managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, not the National Park Service, and that its priority mission is fish and wildlife conservation rather than public recreation. Okefenokee is the largest National Wildlife Refuge east of the Mississippi River.
Everglades National Park and the Okefenokee Swamp.
William bradband
Georgia has the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge and Panola Mountain State Park.
soil, temperature, sunlight, water effect the saguaro national park.
When something becomes a national park, it mans that it cannot be tampered with, so Arches National Park will not be destroyed.
You can get one through the National Park web site or at an entrance to a National Park. You will need to show something that shows your age or that you are a military vet.
The Galapagos Marine Reserve: Galapagos, Ecuador; is one of the biggest marine sanctuaries in the world. The Trinity River National Wildlife Refuge: Texas, USA, protects miles of bottom-land ecosystem and animal habitat. Alaska National Maritime Wildlife Refuge: Alaska, USA, protects millions of acres of habitat and native wildlife. It is spread out along most of the 47,300 miles of Alaska's coastline. Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge: Florida, USA, protects 92% of the Okefenokee swamp and the animals and habitat associated with it.
You can get one through the National Park web site or at an entrance to a National Park. You will need to show something that shows your age or that you are a military vet.
You can get one through the National Park web site or at an entrance to a National Park. You will need to show something that shows your age or that you are a military vet.
Probably the national Park or something in Japan.
The "park" was created by executive order in December 1974 as a National Recreation Area and subsequently renamed to Cuyahoga Valley National Park (From Cuyahoga Valley National recreation Area) the new name took effect in 2000.
through erosion and mass wasting