Overview Of the twelve national parks in England and Wales, four are in the North of England, two in the Southwest, one in the North Midlands, two (the most recently designated) in the South and three in Wales. They cover 10.7 per cent of England and 19.9 per cent of Wales. In the United Kingdom the total increases to 22,660 square kilometres (average 1511 km2). •
Lake District (2): England's largest national park has geology providing a dramatic record of nearly 500 million years, with evidence of colliding continents, deep oceans, tropical seas, and kilometre-thick ice sheets. The area has the largest and deepest lakes and highest peaks in England. This landscape is overlaid by thousands of years of human activity and the habitats for wildlife to be found in the park include mires, limestone pavement, upland heath, screes and arctic-alpine communities, lakeshore wetlands, estuary, coastal heath and dunes. •
Dartmoor (4): Dartmoor is the largest and wildest area of open country in the south of England.
Granite, intruded 295 million years ago underlies 65% of the park and is surrounded by sedimentary rocks including limestones, shales and sandstones belonging to the
Carboniferous and
Devonian periods. Almost half of the park is moorland, and within it are four separate
national nature reserves, including the 366 hectare
East Dartmoor Woods & Heath. There are also over forty locations designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest within the national park covering 26,169 hectares. Dartmoor is also home to England's second highest waterfall (
Canonteign Falls) and highest man made waterfall. •
North York Moors (6): Boasting archaeology dating from the end of the
last ice age, the park contains the largest Iron Age hill-fort in the North of England, Roman forts, castles and abbeys, moorland crosses and important early industrial sites. Its ancient and varied geology includes the evidence left behind of ancient oceans, huge river deltas and great ice sheets. The evidence left behind by these events has brought geologists to the area for over a century, including figures such as
William Smith, 'the father of English geology'. The area is also famous for its fossils, from ammonites to dinosaur footprints. •
Yorkshire Dales (7): The park straddles the central Pennines. At the Millstone Grit-capped Three Peaks it rises to over 2,300 ft, contrasting with its deep cut valleys (dales) from which it derives its name. In the south the park boasts limestone (
Karst) scenery, with its crags, pavements and extensive cave systems, whilst in the north valleys with distinctive stepped profiles are separated by extensive moorland plateaux. A different geology shapes the grassy rounded hills with deep ravines in the west known as the Howgill Fells. The park is noted for its glacial and post-glacial landforms including the drumlin fields,
Norber erratics, and the moraines and post-glacial lakes of
Semerwater and
Malham Tarn. The park also boasts waterfalls including Hardraw Force and the Aysgarth Falls. •
Exmoor (8): The majority of Exmoor's rocks were formed during the
Devonian period of geological history between about 410 and 360 million years ago, the most prominent being old and new red sandstones, Devonian slates, shales and limestone. The park rises to 519m at Dunkery Beacon and boasts 55 km of coastline towards which flow a number of rivers, most notably the River Lyn. In contrast the
Exe flows south and east. A number of settlements are found within the park including the much-visited
Lynton and Lynmouth. •
Northumberland (9): With a population of around 2,000 people this is the least populated of all the national parks in England and Wales. Rising to 815m at
The Cheviot, the park contains over 1,100 km of paths for walking, cycling and horse-riding. The park also contains a
Ramsar site (an international site for the protection of wetlands) as well as 31
Sites of Special Scientific Interest, six Special Areas of Conservation and three
national nature reserves. The park's human heritage is no less impressive than its natural diversity, with 259 listed buildings, 432
scheduled monuments and 3,883 Historic Environment Records. •
The Broads (11): Britain's largest nationally protected wetland, the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads is considered to be the eleventh member of the national park family, but in fact was designated through its own
Act of Parliament in 1988 gaining similar status to a national park. The Broads was not established as a national park, but was described at the time as having a 'status equivalent to that of a national park'. It has since adopted the title 'national park' and is a member of the UK national parks family, with the same level of landscape protection and an additional statutory purpose: to protect the interests of navigation. Its rivers, broads (shallow lakes), marshes and fens make this area rich in rare habitats, supporting myriad plants and animals. It is also one of Europe's most popular inland waterways. There are six rivers (Bure, Ant, Thurne, Yare, Chet and Waveney) and 63 broads within the park, comprising over 125 miles (200 km) of navigable waterways. The
How Hill National Nature Reserve is wholly contained within the boundaries of the park, as well as 28
Sites of Special Scientific Interest, most of which fall under the
Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of International Importance. •
New Forest (12): England's smallest national park was designated as a hunting ground by
William the Conqueror almost 1,000 years before it became a national park and has its own section in the
Domesday Book, in 1086. Originally the term 'forest' referred to the designation as a hunting ground subject to forest law, not to a collection of trees The rest is heather- and bracken-covered heath, open pasture, marsh, villages and coastline, and the park contains the largest remaining lowland heath in Europe as well as three quarters of Europe's 120 lowland valley mires. 38,000 hectares of the park is covered by the historic '
Perambulation' in which commoners’ rights apply and their animals can roam freely. The park also contains a wealth of human history with 214
scheduled monuments. •
South Downs (13): The most recently designated national park in the United Kingdom is a line of hills that run from Winchester in the west to Eastbourne in the east. The underlying geology of the eastern half, from the
River Arun to
Eastbourne, is mainly hills made of
chalk. To the west of the Arun, the area is wider and includes not only chalk hills but also part of the Weald made of sandstones and clay. Most of the rocks that make up the South Downs were formed 120 million years ago, uplifted by earth movements and pushed up into a huge dome about 125 miles long and 50 miles wide which was then worn away to form the North Downs, South Downs and the plain of the Weald. Amongst the key habitats overlaying this geology are chalk grassland, lowland heath and floodplain grazing marsh. The park rises to 280 metres at Blackdown in Sussex. The park has the highest population of any national park in the UK which at 107,929 is bigger than the next two largest combined (Lake District: 42,000 and Peak District: 38,000). The park has a wealth of cultural heritage from evidence in
Boxgrove of the earliest humans, through to contemporary arts, such as Edward James’ collection of surrealist art at
West Dean College. The park contains 600
scheduled monuments, over 5,000 listed buildings, two registered battlefields and 165
conservation areas. Fossil shell fragments on the summit of Snowdon date from over 500 million years ago and the ancient ‘Harlech Dome’ of which Snowdon and
Cadair Idris form the northern and southern extents respectively, was created in the Cambrian Period before the volcanoes erupted. The more recent Ice Age glaciers were at their peak 18,000 years ago in Snowdonia and formed the distinctive U-shaped valleys including
Llanberis and
Nant Gwynant in the north and
Tal-y-llyn Lake in the south. •
Pembrokeshire Coast (5): The only UK national park recognised primarily for its coastline, it covers almost all the Pembrokeshire Coast, every offshore island, the
Daugleddau estuary and large areas of the
Preseli Hills and the
Gwaun Valley. It is an ecologically rich area recognised as of international importance for a wide range of high quality habitats and rare species. The park contains thirteen
Special Areas of Conservation, five
Special Protection Areas, one of three UK
marine nature reserves and seven
national nature reserves as well as sixty
Sites of Special Scientific Interest. The park also contains a wealth of human history and culture, including the UK's smallest city,
St Davids and Iron Age forts. Within the park there are also a total of sixty
geological conservation sites ranging from small roadside quarries and isolated crags on hilltops to many kilometres of coastline. •
Brecon Beacons (10): now officially named Bannau Brycheiniog National Park, the last of the original ten national parks to have been designated in the 1950s, the park straddles the divide between rural mid Wales and industrial South Wales. It is formed from sedimentary rocks from the mid
Ordovician through to the late
Carboniferous though it is the
Devonian Old Red Sandstone which is the rock most identified with the park, since it forms the larger part of the different mountain massifs including South Wales' highest point
Pen y Fan at 886m. Like many other upland national parks in the UK, it is glacial activity during the
Quaternary ice ages which is responsible for many of the well-known landforms. The west of the park is also designated as
Fforest Fawr Geopark in recognition of its geological interest, and includes
Waterfall Country. A number of former
tramroads and the
Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal running down the
Usk valley dating from the
Industrial Revolution now serve as recreational facilities.
National parks in Scotland •
Loch Lomond and The Trossachs: The park, the fourth largest in the
United Kingdom, includes 21
Munros (including
Ben Lomond,
Ben Lui,
Beinn Challuim,
Ben More and two peaks called
Ben Vorlich) and 20
Corbetts. There are two
forest parks (
Queen Elizabeth Forest Park and
Argyll Forest Park), and two
national nature reserves. •
Cairngorms: The largest national park in the United Kingdom, the heart of it is the eponymous mountain range, the
Cairngorms, but these mountains form only one part of it, alongside other hill ranges such as the
Angus Glens and the
Monadhliath, and lower areas like
Strathspey and upper
Deeside. Three major rivers rise in the park: the
Spey, the
Dee, and the
Don.
Proposed national parks in Northern Ireland There are currently no national parks in
Northern Ireland though there have been controversial moves to establish one in the
Mourne Mountains. If established, it would stretch from
Carlingford Lough to
Newcastle and
Slieve Croob. Other areas were also considered as feasible or "likely" national parks between 2011 and 2012, including the
Causeway Coast, the
Antrim Glens, the
Sperrins and
Fermanagh Lakelands.
Alex Attwood, Northern Ireland
Minister of the Environment hoped to create two national parks in 2012 consultations. ==Development and land use planning in national parks==