Everglades
Everglades National Park is located in the southern most part of Florida. It's in the very "bottom" of the state, not including the Keys, and just west of Miami. The Everglades themselves used to span from Lake Okeechobee to the southern tip of the state, but a massive effort at the end of the 19th century and beginning if the 20th century was conducted to drain them (the everglades) and create farm land. As a result, the Everglades National Park was created in 1934 to help preserve this unique area. To find Everglades National Park on a map, go to maps.google.com and search for the location "Everglades National Park, Florida". It should take you to the southern park of Florida.
Sawgrass marsh, which thrives in slow moving water, makes up a large part of the Everglades.
Most of it is flat and often swampy and a part of the Everglades National Park.
No, Yosemite Valley is a part of the Yosemite National Park.
Olympic National Park
Mount Everest is in the Sagarmatha National Park.
There is more than one national park in Alberta:Jasper National ParkBanff National ParkWaterton Lakes National Park (as a part of Waterton Glacier International Peace Park. This park is connected to Glacier National Park in Montana, USA.)Wood Buffalo National Park
No. Kakadu National Park is in the far north of the Northern Territory. Uluru is in the Kata-Tjuta National Park, which is in the southern part of the Northern Territory. The two national parks are located about 1800km apart.
Kakadu National park is in the northern part of the Northern Territory.This should not be confused with Uluru-Kata Tjuta National park, which is in the southern part of the Northern Territory.
No it is not.
Australia's second oldest national park is Witches Fallsin southeast Queensland. Established in 1908, it is now part of the Tamborine National Park.