A sanctuary is a "place of safety." A wildlife sanctuary is a place where wildlife can live, or pause during migration, and be protected from most human-created disturbances. By definition, a National Park is a tract of land managed by the National Park Service (US Department of the Interior). Many national parks are also wildlife sanctuaries in that they protect wildlife and their habitat. As mandated by the Congressional Act that formed the National Park Service, National parks must also allow for visitors to access the land and the wildlife, but other wildlife sanctuaries do not necessarily imply easy access for people. Other federal, state, local, or private groups can set aside and manage "sanctuaries" also. Marshes are commonly set aside as wildlife sanctuaries because they provide important habitat for numerous species and are not easily accessible by people anyway.
More than anything the difference between a sanctuary and a national park is a question of what agency manages the land and exactly how the land is used: national parks are managed by the National Park Service, and "sanctuaries," a much broader and non-specific term, may be included within parks or other lands (or not) and can be managed by any kind of agency or private institution.
The area of Ironwood Forest National Monument is 522.134 square kilometers.
Ironwood Forest National Monument was created on 2000-06-09.
Treasure of the Petrified Forest was created in 1965.
The Giant Sequoia National Monument comprises 328,315 acres of California's Sequoia National Forest. It was designated a National Monument in April 2000.
In florida
Four Corners national monument; Mesa Verde national park; Ouray, Colorado, Painted Desert, Petrified Forest National Park... those are some of my faves.
Muir Woods National Monument is located in California. It is approximately 12 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco and is part of the Redwood Forest.
Mt. St. Helens is not a national park on its own. It is located in Gifford Pinchot National Forest, in the southwest part of Washington. However, there is a Mt. St. Helens Monument located in the park.
Lots
A forest is an expanse of naturally-growing trees of various species, along with plant and animal life that form an ecosystem. A park is a natural or semi-natural area for people to visit; it may or may not have trees or forests within it, and if entirely man-made, may not have a fully functioning ecosystem.
great pyramids, statue of liberty, Eiffel tower, Amazon rain forest, Yellowstone national park, and Washington DC (Washington monument, Lincoln monument, and the white house.
forest have many trees and mountains have snow