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Edge
Hills Provincial Park
History
Edge Hills was
identified for protection through the Cariboo-Chilcotin Land-Use
Plan, and was designated a class A provincial park in July 1995.
Mining, ranching,
trapping, and guiding have occurred in or near the park for many
years. The primary mine in the area was the Grange Mine, a gold
mine located just outside Edge Hills Provincial Park at the mouth
of Kelly Creek. The mine was in operation until the late 1940's.
Today, there are numerous shafts in the area once used in placer
and hard rock mining. Chinese miners worked the placer and hard
rock claims extensively, and there is evidence of miners’
cabins below Pear Lake.
Cultural
Heritage
The park lies
within the traditional territory of the Shuswap (Secwepemc) People.
The area provided home sites, and was also used for hunting, fishing,
trapping, and gathering. Many villages were abandoned after the
smallpox epidemic in 1862. Today, First Nations people still use
the park for sustenance, spiritual and cultural purposes. These
groups include the Whispering Pines, Canoe Creek, High Bar, and
Pavilion First Nations.
If you find
any archaeological sites, remember that it is illegal to damage
them or remove artifacts.
Conservation
Edge Hills Provincial
Park is noted for its grassland and dry forest/grassland transition
areas. Grassland plant communities are among the rarest ecosystems
in the province, and provide habitat for a large proportion of threatened
and endangered species. The dry climate of grasslands is due to
the rain shadow effect on the leeward side of the Coast Mountains.
Air masses drop most of their moisture before rising over the mountains,
resulting in a much drier climate on the interior side of the mountains.
Grasslands occur at low elevations where temperatures are higher,
and snow fall is minimal, adding to the already dry climate in the
rain shadow.
Edge Hills Provincial
Park incorporates a landscape that stretches over a wide range in
elevation from sagebrush grasslands rising from the riverbanks of
the Fraser to Douglas-fir forests at mid elevations, and moister
spruce and lodgepole pine forests at upper elevations.
Wildlife
The park is
managed jointly with Marble Range
Provincial Park to protect migration corridors of California
bighorn sheep between low elevation winter habitat along the Fraser
River, and higher elevation habitat in the Marble Range. Wildlife
found in the park includes mule deer, moose, and the occasional
black bear. The park protects several rare and endangered species,
including the spotted bat, long-billed curlew, California bighorn
sheep, and flammulated owl. The park also borders the Fraser River,
which supports important salmon stocks.
Every year,
California bighorn sheep migrate between alpine areas in Marble
Range Provincial Park and steep cliffs of the Fraser River canyon
in Edge Hills Provincial Park. The migration is dictated by food
availability. Sheep will winter in the warmth of the canyon, where
tender green shoots begin to grow early in the season. Here, the
sheep also encounter less snow, and have access to steep and rugged
terrain for protection from predators. In early summer, the sheep
migrate to alpine areas in the Marble Range. Over the past 40 to
50 years, many of these routes have been abandoned, with only a
few routes remaining. A three year study was led by the Clinton
and District Outdoor Sportsmen Association in conjunction with Ministry
of Water, Land, and Air Protection, to determine the location of
the migration routes, and to assist in future management.
Return to Edge
Hills Provincial Park.
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