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The proud beaver is a fitting symbol of ... A beaver dam flooding such a massive territory that it can be seen from ... 190 km northeast of Fort McMurray within Wood Buffalo National Park. ...
Situated in northern Alberta's Wood Buffalo National Park, which straddles the Alberta-Northwest Territories border, the dam stretches more than eight football fields long, Thie said Friday.
The dam, located on the southern edge of Wood Buffalo National Park in Northern Alberta, central Canada, was spotted by experts monitoring the size and spread of beaver dams in North America.
Nine or so football fields. That's how long the world's largest known beaver dam is. It's so big, in fact, that it was first found in 2007 with the help of Google Earth. In other words, it can be ...
Located in Wood Buffalo National Park in Alberta, Canada, the world’s largest beaver dam is at least 2790 feet long. It likely contains thousands of trees and appears to have required the ...
Since the largest beaver dam on Earth was discovered in Wood Buffalo National Park via satellite imagery in 2007, only one person has trekked into the Canadian wild to see it. Photo via Parks Canada.
The dam was spotted by experts monitoring the size and spread of the beaver dams in North America. It is located on the southern edge of Wood Buffalo National Park in Northern Alberta, Canada.
The world’s largest beaver dam stretches a half-mile long and sits in swampland in a remote area of the Wood Buffalo National Park in Alberta, Canada. No human had ever visited the site ...
The largest beaver dam on record is in Wood Buffalo National Park in Canada, stretching the length of seven football fields. The dam is so big, it can be seen from space.
Wood Buffalo is Canada’s largest national park. Covering more territory than Switzerland, it sprawls across northeastern Alberta and juts into the southern part of the Northwest Territories ...
An Ottawa scientist has identified what he believes to be the world's largest beaver dam in Wood Buffalo National Park in northern Alberta. Ecologist Jean Thie, who is executive director of the ...