Parks and Protected Lands

Includes the 392 authorized National Park Service units in the United States of America. The data does not include affiliated areas and unauthorized park units. Park units over 100,000 acres (~40,000 hectares) appear as areas, park units under 100,000 acres as points, and linear parks, including rivers, trails, and seashores, as lines. There are a few exceptions to this rule.
Many parks are comprised of scattered, non-contiguous land parcels. Not all of these are shown, especially in urban areas and the northeastern US. Dots generally indicate the center of the largest parcel or the parcel where the visitor center is located.
(below) Units in the southern United States include Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the Appalachian National Scenic Trail, Stones River National Battlefield, Andrew Johnson National Historic Park, the Obed Wild and Scenic River, and Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area.
Although National Preserves adjacent to National Parks are generally counted as separate units, they are typically administered jointly with their respective parks. This data reflects this administrative reality. For example, Denali National Park and Preserve appears as a single merged unit.
Park shapes were generalized with the Visvalingam-Whyatt algorithm using the on-line tools at Mapshaper.org. The park units are customized to fit 1:10,000,000-scale Natural Earth base data. Park boundaries extending over water areas are not shown.
Park abbreviations follow those used in the National Park System Map and Guide.
Data created by Tom Patterson, January 27, 2010. Although Tom Patterson is a National Park Service employee, this data was produced privately and is not an official product nor is it endorsed by the Park Service.
NOTE: Natural Earth places Parks and Protected Lands in the “cultural” category because, unlike rivers, mountains, and other “physical” features, parks are not fixed reference features. Instead they change regularly as new features are designated by governments and can include both natural wonders and sites of cultural (historic) significance.
Issues
- Please contribute nationally-significant parks for your country. Currently this theme only includes parks in the United States of America.
- Does not yet include protected lands in other systems like National Forests or large state-level (adm1) units.
Resources
- NPS Data Store for current Administrative Boundaries of National Park System Units, November 24, 2009
- National Park System Map and Guide, January 2010
Version History
1.1.0 on 2010.3.1 (Monday, March 1st, 2010)
NOTE: Theme was not included in the initial 1.0 release.