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Canada's spectacular World Heritage Sites

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SG̱ang Gwaay

Also known by its English name Ninstints, this village on the North Coast of British Colombia is a key site of the Haida indigenous people.

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Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks

Besides being pristine, wild, diverse, and breathtakingly beautiful, the parks are home to the Burgess Shale formation, one of the world's most important fossil records of soft-bodied marine animals.

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Old Québec

Founded by French explorer Champlain in the early 17th century, Quebec City is the only North American city to have preserved its fortifications as well as other gates, bastions, and defensive works.

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Gros Morne National Park

Located on the west coast of Newfoundland, the park takes its name from the province’s second-highest mountain peak, which means “large mountain standing alone.”

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Glacier Bay

It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site for the spectacular glacier and icefield landscapes as well as for the importance of grizzly bears

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Old Town Lunenburg

The British founded this Nova Scotia town in 1753 to settle Protestants in the area. Today it remains the best surviving example of a British colonial settlement in North America.

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Miguasha National Park

This national park in Quebec was designated a World Heritage Site because of its wealth of fossils, which display a crucial time during the evolution of life on Earth.

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Rideau Canal

It opened in 1832 as a precaution in case of a war with the United States to allow the transit of steam-powered ships

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