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Protection category

Discover the definition of National Park and its geographic representation across Norway's protected lands.

Norway's National Parks: IUCN Category II Protected Areas and Landscape Context

Investigate Norway's protected natural areas classified under IUCN Category II, known globally as National Parks. These large, natural or near-natural reserves are managed to safeguard critical ecological processes, characteristic species, and ecosystems. This route delves into how Norway applies this designation, showcasing the country's commitment to conserving these vital landscapes while enabling education, recreation, and compatible visitor activities that respect their natural integrity.

Related tags

nordic countrywestern scandinavianorthern europecoastal countryfjords
Parks in this category

Trace the geographic spread of Norway's National Park landscapes, encompassing diverse terrain from coast to mountains.

National Park Protected Areas in Norway: Browse an Atlas of Country-Specific Parks
Discover a curated list of National Park protected areas throughout Norway, offering detailed geographic overviews of each conservation landscape. This focused view allows for easy comparison of ecological processes, characteristic species, and diverse ecosystems across Norway's distinct regional National Parks.
Watercolor painting of green mountains reflecting in a calm lake under a soft pink and yellow sky
National parkMountain

Jotunheimen National Park

Explore mapped glacial terrain and alpine geography.

Jotunheimen National Park stands as a monument to Norway's alpine grandeur, protecting over 1,151 square kilometers of spectacular mountainous terrain. This protected area is defined by its dramatic glacial features, including sharp peaks exceeding 1,900 meters, U-shaped valleys, and pristine alpine lakes, making it a significant focus for geographic exploration and mapped landscape study. Delve into the core of Norway's mountain heartland, understanding the mapped boundaries and regional geological context that shape this iconic protected landscape.

1,151 km²1980SubpolarModerate access
National parkVestlandMountain

Jostedalsbreen National Park

Mapped terrain and protected area discovery in Vestland, Norway.

Jostedalsbreen National Park represents a unique geographic entity, safeguarding the largest glacier on the European mainland. This national park, situated in Norway's Vestland region, offers profound insights into glacial landscapes and mountain geography. Users can explore the vast ice mass that dominates the terrain, observe the U-shaped valleys carved by its movement, and understand the geological processes shaping this dynamic environment. The park's protected status highlights its importance for understanding glacial science and preserving a critical component of Norway's natural heritage.

1,310 km²1991SubpolarModerate access
Watercolor illustration showing a mountain peak, winding path, green hills, and pink flowers
National parkVestlandMountain

Hardangervidda National Park

Explore Norway's largest national park and its unique tundra ecosystem.

Delve into the geography of Hardangervidda National Park, Norway's largest national park, featuring the expansive Arctic plateau and Europe's largest peneplain. This protected landscape offers a unique mapped environment characterized by treeless moorland, numerous lakes, and important wildlife habitats, including significant wild reindeer populations. Understand its position within the Vestland region and its value as a key protected area for geographic exploration and landscape context.

3,422 km²1981BorealModerate access
National parkSvalbard

Nordvest-Spitsbergen National Park

Explore unique hot springs, glacial terrain, and polar expedition history.

Nordvest-Spitsbergen National Park, a protected national park in Norway's Svalbard archipelago, showcases dramatic Arctic geography. This page details its mapped landscapes, from volcanic terrains and glacial valleys to its famed northernmost hot springs. Discover the park's protected area status, its role in regional geography, and its historical significance for polar exploration, providing a rich context for atlas-based exploration.

9,914 km²1973PolarRemote access
Watercolor painting showing green mountains, a winding river, and a pink flower on a white background
National parkNordlandMountain

Lofotodden National Park

Mapped terrain and protected area details for a dramatic Nordic landscape.

Delve into the protected landscape of Lofotodden National Park, a key protected area within Norway's Nordland county. This national park showcases the dramatic convergence of the Lofotenveggen mountain range with the North Atlantic coast, featuring rugged granite peaks and unique coastal terrain. MoriAtlas offers a structured view of its mapped boundaries and geographic context, facilitating detailed discovery of this significant Arctic natural heritage.

99 km²2018BorealModerate access
Watercolor painting showing stylized mountains with a waterfall, winding path, and flowers
National parkInnlandetMountain

Dovrefjell–Sunndalsfjella National Park

Explore its protected boundaries, mountain terrain, and unique ecological significance.

Dovrefjell, Sunndalsfjella National Park is a cornerstone of Norwegian protected areas, offering an expansive alpine wilderness with dramatic mountain scenery. This page details the park's geographic context, mapped landscape features, and its importance as a refuge for unique wildlife like wild reindeer and muskox. Users can investigate the park's protected boundaries and understand its role within the regional geography of Innlandet, contributing to a structured atlas of Scandinavia's natural heritage.

1,693 km²2002BorealRemote access
Watercolor illustration of a winding river through green hills with scattered trees
National parkMountain

Saltfjellet–Svartisen National Park

Norway's vast national park with Svartisen glacier and unique flora.

Saltfjellet, Svartisen National Park spans over 2,100 square kilometers of diverse protected wilderness in Northern Norway. Renowned for Svartisen, Scandinavia's second-largest glacier, its landscape transitions from coastal influences to alpine plateaux. The park's calcareous bedrock supports a rich flora, rare in the region, contributing to its distinct geographic identity. Explore the mapped boundaries and natural terrain of this significant protected landscape.

2,192 km²1989BorealII
Green mountains with snow-capped peaks and a calm lake depicted in watercolor style
National parkInnlandetMountain

Rondane National Park

Mapped glacial terrain, iconic peaks, and wild reindeer sanctuary.

As Norway's first national park, Rondane offers a profound exploration of a protected alpine environment. Situated in Innlandet county, its 963 square kilometers showcase a landscape sculpted by glaciers, featuring a striking array of ten peaks exceeding 2,000 meters. This page details Rondane National Park's distinct mapped boundaries, dramatic mountain geography, and its ecological significance as a refuge for wild reindeer, making it a cornerstone of Scandinavian natural heritage.

963 km²1962BorealModerate access
Watercolor illustration of mountains, forest, and a winding water body
National parkVestlandMountain

Folgefonna National Park

Mapped glacial terrain and park boundaries in Vestland.

Folgefonna National Park in Vestland, Norway, stands as a premier protected area defined by its vast ice cap and dramatic glacial geography. This page details the park's mapped boundaries, showcasing its impressive glacial formations, U-shaped valleys, and distinct alpine landscapes. Understand the geographic context and protected status of Folgefonna National Park, a key destination for exploring Norway's glacier heritage through an atlas-driven lens.

545.2 km²2005TemperateAccess unknown
National parkØstfoldMarine

Ytre Hvaler National Park

Explore protected archipelago geography and unique cold water coral reefs.

Discover Ytre Hvaler National Park, a pivotal marine protected area on Norway's Østfold coast. This atlas entry provides detailed insight into its defining skerry landscape, the significant Tisler cold water coral reef, and its role as a protected marine ecosystem. Understand the mapped boundaries and geographic context of this unique Norwegian coastal wilderness, crucial for understanding the region's natural and maritime heritage.

354 km²2009TemperateII
National parkMountain

Sør-Spitsbergen National Park

Explore glacial terrain, tundra ecosystems, and significant seabird colonies.

Delve into Sør-Spitsbergen National Park, a cornerstone of Arctic protected areas within Norway's Svalbard archipelago. This extensive national park showcases raw glacial terrain, expansive ice caps, and sparse tundra valleys, offering a unique geographic context. It is globally recognized for its vast seabird colonies, particularly the dense nesting sites of thick-billed guillemots, and Ramsar-protected wetlands. Understanding Sør-Spitsbergen National Park through its mapped boundaries and landscape features provides critical insight into Arctic conservation and natural processes.

8,504 km²1973SubpolarII
Watercolor illustration showing a mountainous fjord with a lake, pink lotus flowers, green leaves, and rocks
National parkSpitsbergenMarine

Nordre Isfjorden National Park

Discover Spitsbergen's mapped fjord geography and wildlife.

Nordre Isfjorden National Park on Spitsbergen offers a compelling view into a pristine Arctic environment. This protected national park encompasses dramatic coastal cliffs, tundra terrain, and the biologically rich waters of Isfjorden. It is renowned for supporting immense seabird colonies that rely on the nutrient-dense fjord, making it a significant site for understanding high Arctic ecosystems and marine protected areas.

2,954 km²2003PolarModerate access
National parkInnlandetMountain

Femundsmarka National Park

Mapped boundaries and regional geography in Innlandet.

Femundsmarka National Park in Innlandet, Norway, offers a profound look into a preserved wetland wilderness characterized by vast marshlands, numerous lakes, and scattered boreal forests. As a designated national park, its ecological significance is tied to the surrounding water systems and the unique landscape stretching towards the Swedish border. This entry provides detailed geographic context, mapping information, and an understanding of its protected area status, inviting exploration of its remote boreal terrain and notable wildlife habitats.

573 km²1971IIMajor water bodies
Watercolor painting showing islands, water, green hills, and pink flowers under a sunset sky
National parkFærder MunicipalityMarine

Færder National Park

Explore mapped landscapes and regional geography.

Færder National Park represents a significant protected landscape in Norway, characterized by its extensive marine environment and scattered archipelago. Situated east of Færder Municipality, the park's geography is defined by a mosaic of granite islands, coastal waters, and the iconic Færder Lighthouse. This entry provides atlas-level insight into the park's mapped boundaries, its role as a protected coastal ecosystem, and its contribution to the broader regional geography of Norway's southern coast.

340 km²2013IIWater-dominated
Watercolor painting depicting green mountains and a pinkish lake
National parkMountain

Fulufjellet National Park

Explore mapped boundaries, rolling terrain, and transboundary conservation.

Fulufjellet National Park offers a detailed look at a protected boreal forest ecosystem in southeastern Norway. This page details the park's gently rolling hills, dominated by Norway spruce and Scots pine, interspersed with lakes and peat bogs. It highlights the park's designation as a national park, its establishment in 2012, and its contiguous protected status with Sweden's Fulufjället National Park, contributing to a significant transboundary conservation area. Users can explore its geographic features and protected landscape context within Scandinavia.

82.5 km²2012BorealII
Watercolor painting showing a curved path through a landscape with green hills and pinkish sky background
National parkAgderMarine

Raet National Park

Explore Norway's southern coast geography and protected marine area.

Raet National Park offers a profound exploration of Norway's post-glacial landscape, anchored by its namesake 12,000-year-old glacial moraine. This unique protected area, predominantly marine, reveals a striking combination of terrestrial moraine features, extensive pebble beaches, and submerged geological formations. Understanding its mapped boundaries within Agder provides critical context for appreciating this significant coastal protected landscape, its marine ecosystems, and its role in the regional geography.

607 km²2016TemperateAccess unknown
National parkInnlandetMountain

Breheimen National Park

Norway's prominent national park featuring active glaciers and alpine geography.

Breheimen National Park represents a significant protected landscape within Norway's Innlandet region, dedicated to conserving its unique glacial formations and dramatic alpine terrain. The park's vast area encompasses active glaciers, soaring peaks, and a notable diversity of natural environments, from lush valleys to barren plateaus. MoriAtlas facilitates a detailed exploration of Breheimen National Park, highlighting its mapped protected boundaries and its integral role in the regional geography and protected areas atlas.

1,671 km²2009AlpineModerate access
Watercolor illustration of snow-capped mountains, green valleys, and a lake under a pastel sky
National parkMountain

Hallingskarvet National Park

Mapping glacial terrain, alpine environments, and wild reindeer habitat.

Hallingskarvet National Park offers a unique window into Norway's geological history and alpine ecology. This protected landscape encompasses the striking Hallingskarvet plateau and the Vargebreen glacier, along with deep valleys carved by ancient ice. Users can explore the park's mapped boundaries, understand its regional geographic setting in Scandinavia, and appreciate its conservation value as a habitat for wild reindeer. The park's terrain provides a concrete example of glacial shaping and high-altitude ecosystems within the Nordic context.

450 km²2006BorealRemote access
National parkInnlandetMountain

Reinheimen National Park

Map of protected boundaries and diverse mountain terrain.

Reinheimen National Park is a cornerstone of Norway's protected areas, encompassing a substantial portion of Western Norway's alpine wilderness. This national park protects a dynamic landscape characterized by dramatic western peaks and gentler eastern plateaus, providing critical habitat for wild reindeer and other wildlife. Its extensive mapped boundaries and varied natural terrain offer a rich subject for geographic discovery and atlas exploration, highlighting the ecological significance of well-preserved mountain ecosystems within Innlandet.

1,969 km²2006BorealRemote access
National parkNordlandMountain

Børgefjell National Park

Mapped protected landscape in Nordland, known for granite peaks and arctic fox.

Børgefjell National Park offers a rare glimpse into Norway's most secluded and undeveloped mountain wilderness, spanning dramatic granite peaks and expansive marshlands. This protected landscape in Nordland provides a rich subject for atlas-based discovery, highlighting its unique geological formations, vital habitats for species like the arctic fox and wolverine, and extensive network of lakes and rivers. Navigate its geographic context and understand the protected boundaries of this significant natural area.

1,447 km²1963BorealRemote access
National parkFinnmark

Varangerhalvøya National Park

Mapped tundra, wetlands, and Arctic fox conservation.

Varangerhalvøya National Park offers a compelling atlas exploration of Norway's northeasternmost protected landscapes. This national park in Finnmark is distinguished by its subarctic terrain, featuring expansive tundra, diverse wetlands, and a unique ecological position where multiple biomes converge. It is a critical habitat for the Arctic fox and a vital Important Bird Area, providing deep insights into protected area geography and landscape context for those studying regional conservation and natural formations.

1,804.1 km²2006BorealModerate access
National parkSvalbardMarineMountain

Sassen–Bünsow Land National Park

Explore protected boundaries and polar terrain.

Sassen, Bünsow Land National Park, located in the heart of Spitsbergen, Norway, showcases a quintessential Arctic wilderness defined by its expansive glacial features and deeply incised valleys. This protected area, part of the Svalbard archipelago, offers rich geographic context through its mapped terrain, highlighting glacial processes that have shaped the landscape. Discover the unique polar environment and the significance of this national park within the broader Norwegian Arctic atlas.

1,230 km²2003PolarII
National parkMarine

Indre Wijdefjorden National Park

Mapped protected boundaries and unique terrain in Svalbard.

Discover the unique High Arctic steppe and dramatic fjord landscape of Indre Wijdefjorden National Park, a protected area in Svalbard, Norway. This park safeguards a rare ecosystem with endemic plant species, offering exceptional insights into Arctic geography and protected land conservation. Explore its mapped boundaries and distinct terrain, a key destination for atlas-based landscape discovery.

1,127 km²2005PolarRemote access
National parkMountain

Forollhogna National Park

Explore unique terrain and vital wild reindeer habitat in Central Norway.

MoriAtlas provides structured geographic context for Forollhogna National Park, Norway's nineteenth national park. This area is best known for its distinctively gentle, rolling alpine terrain, a contrast to other Norwegian mountain ranges, and as a critical habitat for wild reindeer. Discover the park's unique landscape character, its role as a protected area, and the ongoing cultural traditions tied to its mountain pastures, all visualized within a comprehensive atlas framework.

1,062 km²2001SubpolarII
National park

Van Mijenfjorden National Park

Explore Svalbard's mapped glacial terrain and coastal ecosystems.

Van Mijenfjorden National Park offers a vital look into Svalbard's protected natural heritage, focusing on the prominent Van Mijenfjorden. This national park preserves a quintessential Arctic fjord landscape, characterized by dramatic glacial valleys, treeless tundra, and rugged mountain slopes meeting the Barents Sea. Use this atlas entry to comprehend the park's geographic scope, its mapped protected boundaries, and its representative value as a sub-Arctic conservation area within Norway.

IIMajor water bodies
National park

Øvre Pasvik National Park

Explore ancient forests, wetlands, and transboundary protected landscapes.

Øvre Pasvik National Park is a landmark protected area in Northern Norway, showcasing a remarkably intact Siberian taiga ecosystem characterized by ancient Scots pine forests and extensive wetlands. This national park offers a unique geographic perspective with its notably flat terrain, distinguishing it within the broader Norwegian atlas. As part of the Pasvik, Inari Trilateral Park, it highlights significant transboundary conservation efforts and provides a valuable mapped resource for understanding European boreal landscapes and their unique wildlife habitats.

119 km²1970SubpolarRemote access
Watercolor painting of mountains with green and yellow hues over a water body
National parkNordlandMountain

Møysalen National Park

Mapped boundaries, dramatic terrain, and coastal ecosystems.

Møysalen National Park offers a compelling study in coastal alpine geography, situated within Nordland county, Norway. This protected area is renowned for its dramatic mountain scenery where peaks plunge directly into the sea and deep fjords. The park's 51 square kilometres encompass a unique ecological transition from alpine summits to sea level, featuring jagged peaks, sheltered valleys with birch forests, and coastal wetlands. Explore the mapped landscape of this distinctive Norwegian national park and understand its place in regional geography and protected land networks.

51 km²2003BorealModerate access
National parkTelemarkMarine

Jomfruland National Park

Norway's unique marine-focused national park landscape.

Jomfruland National Park is a significant protected landscape in Telemark, Norway, renowned for its coastal island geography and a landscape predominantly composed of marine waters. Covering 117 square kilometers, this national park emphasizes the conservation of both terrestrial island habitats and the surrounding Skagerrak coastal ecosystem. Explore the park's mapped boundaries and discover its regional geographic context, offering a unique perspective on Norway's protected areas and maritime natural heritage through MoriAtlas.

117 km²2016IIWater-dominated
National parkSvalbardMarine

Forlandet National Park

Explore mapped geography and protected ecosystem boundaries in Svalbard.

Forlandet National Park stands as a crucial element in the Arctic atlas, safeguarding the island of Prins Karls Forland and its surrounding marine territories. As the world's most northerly national park, it showcases a unique High Arctic landscape defined by stark coastal cliffs and vital waters supporting specialized wildlife. This protected area is recognized for harboring the most extreme northern populations of seals and common guillemots, making it a significant site for understanding polar ecosystems and conservation efforts within the Svalbard region.

4,647 km²1973PolarII
National parkKarasjok Municipality

Anárjohka National Park

Explore Norway's Finnmarksvidda plateau geography.

Anárjohka National Park, a protected area in Norway's Finnmark region, offers a compelling atlas-level view of subarctic wilderness. The park's landscape is defined by its location on the Finnmarksvidda plateau, featuring rolling birch woodlands, open pine barrens, and extensive wetlands, all mapped within its protected boundaries. This park provides a crucial point of discovery for understanding regional geography, natural terrain, and the interconnectedness of protected lands across northern Europe.

1,409 km²1976SubpolarII
National parkTromsMountain

Øvre Dividal National Park

Mapped boundaries and unique ecological terrain of a pristine wilderness.

Øvre Dividal National Park stands as a premier example of Arctic alpine wilderness, meticulously preserved as a national park in Norway's Troms region. This entry facilitates a detailed exploration of its mapped protected boundaries and the distinct elevational ecological zones, from boreal forests to high-altitude tundra. Gain geographic context for this vital landscape, which supports diverse habitats and contributes to Scandinavia's largest contiguous wilderness areas.

750 km²1971SubpolarModerate access
Watercolor illustration showing a mountain landscape with a winding path through green hills and forests
National parkNordlandMountain

Lomsdal–Visten National Park

Explore the protected geography of northern Norway's unique terrain.

Delve into the protected world of Lomsdal, Visten National Park, a key national park within Norway's Nordland county. This area is celebrated for its extraordinary geological formations, including significant karst features like caves, subterranean rivers, and natural arches, set against a backdrop of dramatic fjords and rugged mountain landscapes. The park’s diverse ecosystems, from valley woodlands to alpine environments, offer rich context for understanding regional geography and the mapped distribution of protected natural areas in Scandinavia. Discover the unique characteristics that define this significant conservation landscape.

1,102 km²2009IIMinor water
Watercolor illustration of a waterfall cascading between green, rocky hills under a yellow and pink sky
National parkTroms

Reisa National Park

Subarctic terrain and geographic context in Troms, Norway.

MoriAtlas offers detailed geographic context for Reisa National Park, a protected landscape in Norway's Troms county. Explore the park's identity as a significant subarctic river valley, carved by the Reisa River into a dramatic canyon system. This page provides insights into its mapped natural features, regional landscape setting, and its importance within the broader atlas of protected areas. Understand the park's protected boundaries and terrain for structured geographic discovery.

803 km²1986SubpolarModerate access
National parkFinnmarkMarineMountain

Seiland National Park

Mapped boundaries of protected terrain in Finnmark

Seiland National Park offers a distinct glimpse into Arctic island geography, renowned for protecting Scandinavia's northernmost glaciers. This protected area in Finnmark features a dramatic landscape shaped by glaciated mountains, deep coastal fjords, and alpine terrain, making it a key destination for understanding Nordic natural environments. MoriAtlas facilitates exploration of its mapped boundaries and the unique combination of glacial and marine ecosystems present.

316 km²2006SubpolarII
National parkMountain

Stabbursdalen National Park

Explore Finnmark's unique geography and protected terrain.

Stabbursdalen National Park preserves a remarkable ecological boundary, featuring the planet's northernmost Scots pine woodland within a dramatic Arctic landscape. This protected area offers a deep dive into rugged mountain terrain, river valley formations, and vital wetland habitats. As a key component of Norway's protected lands, it provides essential context for understanding regional geography and the limits of forest ecosystems on the mapped landscape.

747 km²1970IIMinor water
National parkTrøndelagMountain

Blåfjella–Skjækerfjella National Park

Mapped natural terrain and protected area boundaries in Trøndelag.

Blåfjella, Skjækerfjella National Park stands as a paramount example of Norway's commitment to preserving vast, untouched natural areas. This protected landscape in Trøndelag features expansive mountain plains, glacial valleys, and important wetland habitats, making it a significant area for understanding regional geography and biodiversity. As one of the country's largest national parks, it offers unique insights into the ecological history of spruce migration and serves as a vital sanctuary for large predators. MoriAtlas provides structured map data and geographic context to explore the protected boundaries and diverse terrain of this remarkable wilderness.

1,924 km²2004IIMinor water
National parkSenja

Ånderdalen National Park

Norway's protected area within the Senja region.

Delve into the detailed protected landscape of Ånderdalen National Park, a national park located on Norway's Senja island. This entry offers a focused atlas exploration of its unique geographic features, including its celebrated ancient coastal pine forest, dramatic glacial valleys carved from granite, and its significance as a representative example of the northern Norwegian coastal mountain terrain. Understand the mapped boundaries and the natural context of this vital conservation area.

134 km²1970IIMinor water
Watercolor illustration of purple mountain peaks, green coniferous forest, and pink wildflowers
National parkNordlandMountain

Junkerdal National Park

Explore mapped boundaries and unique geographic context.

Delve into Junkerdal National Park, a significant protected area within Nordland county, Norway. This national park is celebrated for its rich arctic-alpine flora, including rare plant species that thrive at their southernmost European range. The varied landscape, shaped by glacial activity, features dramatic mountain valleys and alpine plateaus, offering a distinct geographic profile. Understand its protected status and mapped terrain, providing a critical point of discovery for regional landscape context.

682 km²2004IIMinor water
Watercolor illustration of mountains and a lake with green and pink hues
National parkNordlandMarineMountain

Sjunkhatten National Park

Mapped landscape context and regional geography details.

Explore the structured geographic data and protected landscape context for Sjunkhatten National Park, a significant national park in Nordland, Norway. This page provides detailed insights into its mapped boundaries and regional setting, offering an atlas-driven view of its natural terrain. Understand how this protected area contributes to the broader geography of Norway through factual, map-oriented discovery.

417.5 km²2010BorealModerate access
Watercolor illustration of green mountains, a winding path, and a pastel sky
National parkNordlandMountain

Rago National Park

Explore the mapped terrain and unique landscape context of this significant protected area.

Rago National Park is a protected national park in Nordland, Norway, recognized for its challenging mountainous terrain and its crucial role as part of a vast transboundary protected area complex spanning into Sweden. The park's landscape features alpine lakes and glaciers, offering a stark representation of northern Scandinavian mountain wilderness. Understanding Rago National Park provides insight into regional conservation efforts and the geographic significance of large-scale protected lands in Europe.

171 km²1971SubpolarModerate access
National parkInnlandetMountain

Dovre National Park

Norway's protected mountain plateau landscape and wildlife corridor.

Dovre National Park is a significant protected area in Innlandet, Norway, characterized by its expansive alpine plateau terrain and role as a vital ecological corridor for wild reindeer. This national park offers users an atlas-level view of its mapped natural boundaries, focusing on the unique subarctic mountain landscape and its conservation importance. Understand Dovre National Park's geographic identity and its contribution to a contiguous network of protected lands.

289 km²2003SubpolarRemote access
Watercolor illustration showing a winding path through green hills with pink mountain peaks in the background
National parkTromsMountain

Rohkunborri National Park

Explore its mapped terrain, canyon, and alpine ecosystems.

Rohkunborri National Park offers a profound encounter with northern Norway's wild geography. As a designated national park in Troms county, it features the iconic Sørdalen canyon, a dominant geological feature that shapes its diverse terrain. The park's landscape encompasses a rich ecological gradient, from boreal forests to alpine tundra, supporting a variety of wildlife. This protected area is crucial for understanding Scandinavian mountain ecosystems and transboundary conservation efforts, providing rich content for atlas-based exploration of its mapped boundaries and natural context.

571 km²2011IIMinor water
National park

Láhko National Park

Mapped boundaries and terrain of a key Finnmark national park.

Láhko National Park is a significant protected area within Norway's Finnmark region, representing a vast expanse of sub-Arctic wilderness and characteristic tundra ecosystems. This park serves as a crucial element in the atlas of northern European protected lands, offering insights into the geographic features and ecological integrity of high-latitude environments. Explore Láhko National Park through MoriAtlas to understand its landscape context, mapped terrain, and its role in preserving Nordic wilderness.

II
National parkTrøndelagMountain

Lierne National Park

Explore mapped boundaries, alpine terrain, and Scandinavian wilderness.

Lierne National Park is a prime example of Norway's protected mountain and wetland landscapes, situated in the Trøndelag region. This national park offers a detailed study of terrain shaped by glacial activity, featuring high peaks and expansive peat bogs. Its role in preserving habitats for large carnivores and the Arctic fox adds ecological depth to its geographic profile, providing valuable context for atlas-based discovery of protected areas.

333 km²2004BorealRemote access
National parkInnlandetMountain

Langsua National Park

Discover mapped boundaries and regional geographic context.

Langsua National Park, a designation expanded in 2011, is a prominent protected area in Norway's Innlandet county. This national park encompasses 537.1 square kilometers of diverse mountainous terrain, characterized by extensive mountain forests and inland wilderness habitats. Its creation consolidates fragmented nature reserves into a significant contiguous protected landscape, offering valuable insight into Norway's conservation strategies and the geographic context of its eastern mountain regions.

537.1 km²2011BorealAccess unknown
Watercolor illustration of mountain peaks in various colors including pink, yellow, and green
National parkTrøndelagMountain

Skarvan and Roltdalen National Park

Explore extensive peatlands, alpine terrain, and regional geography.

The Skarvan and Roltdalen National Park detail page offers an atlas-driven exploration of this protected landscape in Norway's Trøndelag region. Discover its vast peatland systems, the intact Roltdalen valley, and its alpine environments. This page provides detailed geographic context and mapped features, highlighting the park's significance within the regional natural heritage.

441.5 km²2004BorealII
Watercolor painting of a small island with pine trees surrounded by a reflective lake and mountain backdrop
National parkInnlandet

Gutulia National Park

Explore Norway's unique subarctic forest geography and park boundaries.

Gutulia National Park stands as a key protected area within Norway's Innlandet region, distinguished by its role in preserving the country's southernmost mountain birch forest ecosystem. Covering approximately 23 square kilometers, this national park provides critical insights into subarctic forest ecology at the southern extent of its natural range. MoriAtlas enables detailed exploration of its mapped terrain and geographic context, offering a valuable resource for understanding this significant protected landscape.

23 km²1968II
Country pattern

Defining their conservation purpose and geographic spread across the country's diverse landscapes.

Norway's National Parks: Understanding IUCN Category II Protected Areas
National Parks, defined as IUCN Category II protected areas, are established to safeguard large-scale ecological processes and characteristic species while also supporting education and compatible recreation. In Norway, these designated landscapes, from Jotunheimen to Lofotodden, reflect this mandate across its alpine, coastal, and arctic territories, providing vital conservation and discovery opportunities.

Matching parks

47

These parks and protected areas currently define how National Park appears across Norway.

Category focus

A large natural or near-natural protected area managed to safeguard ecological processes, characteristic species, and ecosystems while also supporting education, recreation, and compatible visitor use.

Representative parks

Jotunheimen National ParkJostedalsbreen National ParkHardangervidda National ParkLofotodden National ParkNordvest-Spitsbergen National ParkDovrefjell–Sunndalsfjella National ParkRondane National ParkSaltfjellet–Svartisen National ParkFolgefonna National ParkNordre Isfjorden National Park
Management profile

Ecosystem protection

National Park
IUCN Category II is one of the most widely recognized protected-area categories in the world because it brings together strong ecosystem protection and public-facing values. A National Park is meant to conserve large-scale ecological processes and representative species and ecosystems, but it is also expected to support compatible spiritual, scientific, educational, recreational, and visitor opportunities. This makes Category II especially important for countries that want protected areas to function both as core conservation landscapes and as places where people can meaningfully experience nature without undermining long-term ecological goals.

Definition

A National Park is a large natural or near-natural protected area established to protect large-scale ecological processes, along with the complement of species and ecosystems characteristic of the area, while also providing a foundation for environmentally and culturally compatible spiritual, scientific, educational, recreational, and visitor opportunities. The category is used for places where conservation remains primary, but where public engagement is an accepted and often important secondary function. The defining balance is not unrestricted access, but carefully managed access compatible with ecosystem protection.

Key characteristics

Category II areas are typically large enough to sustain important ecological functions and to protect more than a single feature or species. They often contain broad habitat mosaics, major watersheds, mountain systems, forests, savannas, coastal landscapes, wetlands, marine systems, or other extensive environments where ecological processes operate across scale. Unlike stricter categories, National Parks usually include a visitor dimension, which may involve trails, viewpoints, interpretation, education, and controlled recreation. However, the category is not meant for heavily urbanized tourism landscapes or places managed mainly as leisure destinations. Its defining character lies in ecosystem-scale conservation, representative natural values, and public use that is shaped around ecological limits rather than the other way around.

Management focus

Management in National Parks generally combines ecosystem protection, visitor planning, interpretation, and long-term stewardship. Managers may use zoning, visitor infrastructure, transport controls, habitat restoration, species protection measures, fire or water management, invasive species control, and education programmes to reconcile conservation with public access. Active management may be required where landscapes have been altered or where visitor pressure is high, but the overriding test is whether actions support the park's ecological purpose. Well-managed Category II areas often balance access and restraint, allowing people to learn from and enjoy the protected area while keeping large-scale ecological processes, characteristic species, and natural systems at the center of decision-making.

Protection purpose

The purpose of Category II is to conserve large natural or near-natural areas in a way that secures ecosystem processes and biodiversity over the long term, while also providing people with opportunities for learning, inspiration, recreation, and connection to nature that remain compatible with conservation.

Management objective

Typical objectives include protecting functioning ecosystems at scale, conserving native species and ecological processes, maintaining scenic and natural values, supporting research and environmental education, providing well-managed visitor access and recreation, restoring degraded areas where necessary, and preventing incompatible development or extractive uses that would undermine the park's long-term ecological integrity.

Global context
Wider background behind National Park
This reference block covers the broader history and global examples that define National Park as an IUCN management category, rather than the country-specific park pattern shown elsewhere on the page.

Category history

The National Park idea has deep roots in nineteenth- and twentieth-century conservation, when governments began setting aside large landscapes for protection from settlement, resource extraction, and landscape transformation. Over time, the concept evolved from scenic reservation toward broader ecosystem conservation. Within the IUCN management category system, Category II became the principal international framework for protected areas that are large, ecosystem-focused, and publicly legible as major conservation landscapes. Although national park names and legal traditions differ widely from country to country, the category helps distinguish those areas managed primarily for ecosystem protection and compatible visitation from both stricter reserves and more human-shaped protected landscapes.

Global examples

Representative examples often include world-famous large protected areas such as Yellowstone National Park in the United States, Serengeti National Park in Tanzania, Torres del Paine National Park in Chile, and many other nationally designated parks whose management priority is ecosystem protection combined with compatible public use. Not every site named 'national park' is automatically IUCN Category II, but the category is widely associated with large, iconic protected areas where conservation and carefully managed visitation are both central.

Understanding Norway's diverse park geography, protected landscapes, and conservation efforts

Common Questions About National Parks, Protected Areas, and Geography in Norway
Explore frequently asked questions covering the national parks and protected areas mapped across Norway's varied geographic regions, including its famous fjords, alpine wilderness, and coastal landscapes. These common inquiries provide essential context for understanding Norway's conservation efforts, park distribution, and the unique natural heritage preserved within its extensive network of protected lands.
MoriAtlas Explorer

Continue Exploring Norway's National Park Protected Areas and Landscapes

Deepen your understanding of Norway's protected areas by continuing your exploration of its National Parks. This focused route offers detailed insight into how Category II management principles are applied across the nation's geography, showcasing distinct protected landscapes and their ecological significance for broader atlas discovery. Investigate the characteristics and mapped context of these vital natural reserves.

Global natural geography