In 1980, the 89 southernmost of the 140-odd islands, islets and reefs of the Kornati archipelago were declared a
national park,
Nacionalni Park Kornati, protecting the islands and their marine surroundings. The area covered by the national park mostly coincides with the Donji Kornati, which includes the island of
Kornat and the surrounding islets, separated with a channel from the island of
Piškera and the surrounding islets. The national park includes 109 islands, of which 76 are less than 1 hectare in size. Of the total land surface area of Kornati, , or 85%, is stony, and only 5% has been cultivated. The most important places on the Kornati islands are: the shallow channel Mala Proversa, the oval-shaped Taljurič island, Špinuta Bay, Stivina Bay, the fourth largest island Levrnaka, the second largest karst rock-area Tarac, Svršata Vela island, Mana island, Piškera island, Panitula Vela island, the picturesque Lavsa Bay, the resort island Ravni Žakan, Smokvica Vela island, the Opat peninsula, Samograd island, the Purara reserve for marine life, Vrgada and Gangarol islands. The names of the islands Babina Guzica and Kurba Vela, which in Croatian refer to
buttocks and
prostitution, offer an opportunity to explain the many vulgar names officially given to many places in the Kornati archipelago. When Austrian surveyors came to record the archipelago at the end of the 19th century, their local guides mocked them by making up vulgar names for the various locations.
Kornat, the biggest of the islands with a total area of , comprises two-thirds of the park's land area. Although the island is long, it is no wider than . The park is managed from the
town of Murter, on the
island of the same name, which is connected to the mainland by a drawbridge in the
town of Tisno. ==Geology==