North Cascades National Park is an American
national park in the state of
Washington. At more than 500,000 acres (200,000 ha), North Cascades National Park is the largest of the three
National Park Service units that comprise the
North Cascades National Park Complex. North Cascades National Park consists of a northern and southern section, bisected by the
Skagit River that flows through
Ross Lake National Recreation Area.
Lake Chelan National Recreation Area lies on the southern border of the south unit of the park. In addition to the two
national recreation areas, other protected lands including several
national forests and
wilderness areas, as well as
Canadian provincial parks in
British Columbia, nearly surround the park. North Cascades National Park features the rugged mountain peaks of the
North Cascades Range, the most expansive glacial system in the
contiguous United States, the headwaters of numerous waterways, and vast forests with the highest degree of flora
biodiversity of any American national park.
This picture is a panoramic map of North Cascades National Park, as viewed from the east, created in 1987 by Austrian painter and cartographer Heinrich C. Berann for the National Park Service.Map credit: Heinrich C. Berann