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| Guanacaste National Park | |
|---|---|
Rincón de la Vieja Volcano, in the park | |
![]() Guanacaste National Park area. | |
| Location | Costa Rica |
| Coordinates | 10°57′17″N85°30′58″W / 10.9547°N 85.5162°W /10.9547; -85.5162 |
| Area | 340 km2 (84,000 acres) |
| Established | 9 July 1991 |
| Governing body | National System of Conservation Areas (SINAC) |
Location in Costa Rica | |
Guanacaste National Park, in SpanishParque Nacional Guanacaste is anational park in northernCosta Rica. The park is part of theArea de Conservación Guanacaste World Heritage Site, and stretches from the slopes of theOrosí and Cacaovolcanoes west to theInteramerican Highway where it is adjacent to theSanta Rosa National Park.[1] It was created in 1989, partially due to the campaigning and fund-raising of Dr.Daniel Janzen to allow a corridor between the dry forest and rain forest areas which many species migrate between seasonally. The park covers an area of approximately 340 square kilometers, and includes 140 species ofmammals, over 300birds, 100amphibians andreptiles, and over 10,000 species ofinsects that have been identified. It was this high density of bio-diversity that encouraged the Costa Rican government to protect this area. The Guanacaste National Park weaves the neighboringSanta Rosa National Park with the high altitude forests of the two volcanoes, Orosi and Cacao, and the rainforest of the Caribbean in the country's north.[2]
TheTempisque River flows through the park's lowland areas. There are dry forests at lower elevations and cloud forests at higher elevations. There are several trails running through the park that offer up good hiking. The trail leading to the Orosi Volcano has pre-Columbian petroglyphs near the plain at El Pedregal.[citation needed]
The nearest city isLa Cruz to the northwest, and the park contains several facilities notably the headquarters of theGuanacaste Conservation Area, as well as stations at Pitilla in the northeastern corner of the park, Cacao on the southwestern slope of the eponymous volcano, and Maritza which is situated near both volcanoes.
In 1989 the park was first established by Executive Decree 19124-MIRENEM/89, to become part of Area de Conservación Guanacaste along with the already existing Santa Rosa andRincón de la Vieja National Parks. As a whole these formally became part of National System of Conservation Units (SINAC) in 1994 and then later in 1999 aWorld Heritage Site. In 1995 theJunquillal Bay Wildlife Refuge was added to the group of sites.
In 1989, 12,000 tonnes oforange waste was dumped on barren soil in agreement with park authorities. 15 years later, the area had grown into a variety of plants.[3][4]
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