Isle Royale National Park, An Unofficial Page
Isle Royale National Park
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The Park Superintendent of Isle Royale is considering several changes to concessionaire policies,
follow this link for more details. |
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An unFramed version of this site is available. | |
Your use of these pages constitutes your agreement to the following conditions and terms of usage. | |
This site was last modified Tuesday, 02-Jun-1998 13:50:14 MDT. Here's a description of what's new since you last visited. |
Addresses
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Isle Royale National Park Headquarters
800 E Lakeshore Dr Houghton, MI 49931 906-482-0984 Fax (906) 482-8753
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The Royale Line
Box 24 Copper Harbor, MI 49918-0024 906-289-4437 Fax (906) 289-4952 102050.3420@compuserve.com |
Isle Royale Natural History Association
800 E Lakeshore Dr Houghton, MI 49931 800-678-6925 irnha@portup.com |
Isle Royale National Park Concessions
Mammoth Cave, KY 42259-0027 502-773-2191 (off season: Oct 15 - May 15) 906-337-4993 (In Season: May 15 - Oct 15) |
The Mountaineers
300 3rd West, Seattle, WA 98119 800-553-4453 |
Isle Royale Seaplane Service
PO Box 371, Houghton MI 49931 906-482-8850 (May 15 - Sep 15) |
Website Curator
isleroyale@yahoo.com |
Grand Portage-Isle Royale Transportation Line, Inc.
1507 N 1st St Superior, WI 54880 715-392-2100 Stuart@Grand-Isle-Royale.com |
Books
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Isle Royale National Park: Foot Trails and Water Routes, 2nd Edition |
Isle Royale: A Photographic History |
Northwoods Wildlife : A Watcher's Guide to Habitats/Knapsack Edition |
Flora & Fauna
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The isolation of the Island has allowed the plants and animals of Isle Royale to develop different communities of species than in nearby Ontario or Minnesota. Although many of the original species of animals, such as the woodland caribou, were eliminated during European copper mining attempts, many interesting and unique relationships between plants and animals still exist today. While the best known study has centered on the relationship between Moose and Wolves, the flora and fauna of the island have served as research tools for topics ranging from ancient climate changes to the long term effects of pesticide use.
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Plants and Animals of Isle Royale
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Amphibians | Birds | Fishes |
Plants | Mammals | Reptiles |
Frequently Asked Questions
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Q: Could you please send me an application for a permit, or send me all the brochures you have on the park?
A: This web site is not affiliated with the National Park Service, but if you'd like to get lots of truly helpful information from the Rangers, write, e-mail, or call the Park Headquarters at the appropriate entry listed in Addresses. |
Q: Why is this Isle Royale web site listed under Minnesota:National Parks in the Yahoo Directory?
A: Because Yahoo does not fact check site listings, nor do they respond to repeated, polite, requests to alter their listings from web content authors. Consider it an indication of the veracity of any information you might get from their other services. |
Q: How do I get my car across to the Island, and what roads have the best views?
A: You can't take your car to the Island, because there are no regularly scheduled car ferries across Lake Superior, and the park is a roadless wilderness. If you'd like to see the area from your car, take a circle tour around Lake Superior- the Canadian side of the lake has dozens of parks, all well worth a week's visit by automobile. |
Q: Can I take my pet to Isle Royale?
A: No. Visitors are forbidden to take pets with them, even if they remain shipboard during the time they are within the park boundaries because of the diseases household pets carry and transmit to wildlife. One explanation of the recent wolf population plunge holds that cubs were killed disease caused by parvoviruses carried by domestic dogs. |
Q: How much does it cost to enter the Park?
A: As of 1998, entrance fees are: $4 US per day per individual or $50 per individual per season and $150 US per boat per year. |
History
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One Billion Years Ago
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Subsequent volcanic activity eventually filled the cracks between the ridges with mineral deposits containing metals such as copper, while the tops of the cracks were capped with sediments which eventually turned into rock. As the earth's climate has changed in the more recent past, successive waves of glaciers have moved down from the north, scouring away the soft sedimentary rocks and compressing the remaining hard volcanic rock with the weight of their ice. |
Ten Thousand Years Ago
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The Great Lakes basin filled with cool water, and the warm hardwood forests now associated with the Ohio River Valley gave way to the boreal forests seen today, forcing the people, plants, and animals that had colonized the tundra to adapt again. As woodland peoples converted from hunting and gathering to fishing and farming, they began to rely on water transportation and began to make visits to Isle Royale to collect copper for use in tools, decoration, and for trade with cultures living to the south. The fortunes of the First Nations living near Lake Superior have been hard to reconstruct, but their way of life has thought to have remained unchanged until European contact came from French explorers from the south and French traders from the east. |
Three Hundred Years Ago
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As the world fur market collapsed in the early 1800's, John Jacob Astor and his American Fur Company began to try other ways of making money from their holdings in the area. Several geological surveys were dispatched to catalog the mineral wealth of Isle Royale, along with a few ill-fated fishing operations. After the subjugation of the Ojibway/Chippewa/Anishinabeg, and the survey of Douglass Houghton, a mining boom enveloped the entire Upper Peninsula of Michigan which eventually found its way to Isle Royale. Three periods of mining operations spanned the 1800's, with none of the 18 separate ventures taking significant quantities of ore, outside of the Siskowit Mining Company which took 95 tons of refined copper ore in a six year period starting in 1849. Although Isle Royale is often touted as an "Island Wilderness" by concerns promoting tourism and nostalgia, it was actually nearly completely cleared and settled by European Immigrants, resulting in the elimination of over half of the island's original plant and animal species (such as Woodland Caribou). The parts of the Island not settled by miners were inhabited by a growing number of people attracted to the thick banks of fish inhabiting the coves and bays surrounding the island. For the next century, several families made a seasonal living by Commercial Fishing until the last of the fishing families were forced out of business by Federal and State Governments at the end of the 1980's. |
One Hundred Years Ago
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Herbert Hoover signed legislation calling for the creation of a National Park at the start of the Great Depression, and FDR created the Civilian Conservation Corps, with camps established at what is now called Daisy Farm, Windigo, and Siskiwit Bay. The projects had varying degrees of success, ranging from failed moose transplantation, to fire fighting (thought to have been started by CCC workers), to construction of Park Headquarters on Mott Island. Dedication ceremonies were postponed repeatedly due to delays in land purchases, disputed fishing rights, and World War II. The park was finally formally dedicated 15 years after the original legislation calling for its creation on August 27, 1946. |
Internet Resources
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World Wide Web Sites
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This list of WWW sites is limited to non-commercial pages regarding Isle Royale. If you're looking for a more detailed list, try using the Internet Search feature. If you'd like your site added to the list, try Feedback. |
NBS Cooperative Studies in Isle Royale National Park
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Usenet Newsgroups
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Mailing Lists
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Meteorology
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The abundance of water vapor over Lake Superior promotes heavy snow in the winter, rain squalls in summer, and dense fog in spring and fall. The immense thermal capacity of the lake moderates temperatures, cooling warm air masses in the summer and warming cold air masses in the winter before ice covers the lake. The relatively deep waters outside of the Isle Royale Archipelago rarely warm past 45 degrees F at the surface during the summer, with the surface of relatively shallow bays, coves, and harbors rarely exceeding 50 degrees F. Subsurface temperatures remain below 40 degrees F year-round. |
Historic Weather Conditions
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Forecasts & Current Conditions
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Marine Forecasts & Current Conditions
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Recreation
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Activities
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Hiking | Boating | Camping |
Paddling
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Fishing |
Diving
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Transportation
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Ferry & Water Taxi Service
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Consult the National Park Service brochure, "Isle Royale, an Island Wilderness: Getting There, 1998". Travel times are for an average trip in calm seas, from the departure point to Rock Harbor, except for The Wenonah, which travels to Windigo only. Fees quoted are for adults during the most expensive part of the season. Additional fees are charged for transportation of SCUBA gear, excess baggage, and watercraft. Travelers departing from Grand Portage, MN, will need to make arrangements for nearby cash on the barrel parking. |
Transportation Service | (One Way) | |||||
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Vessel | Length | Operator | Departure Point | Departure Time | Transit Time | Cost |
Ranger III | 165 ft. | National Park Service | Houghton, MI | 9 AM EDT | 6.5 hr. | 47.00 |
Isle Royale Queen III | 81 ft. | Isle Royale Line | Copper Harbor, MI | 8 AM EDT | 4.5 hr. | 40.00 |
Seaplane Service | Isle Royale Seaplane Service | Houghton, MI | Variable | Variable | 149.00 | |
MV Sandy | National Park Concessions, Inc. | Rock Harbor, IRNP | Varies Daily | Varies Daily | Varies Daily | |
Voyageur II | 63 ft. | GPIR, Inc. | Grand Portage, MN | 930 AM CDT | 6.25 hr. | 44.00 |
Wenonah | 65 ft. | GPIR, Inc. | Grand Portage, MN | 930 AM CDT | 3 hr. | 31.00 |
Private Watercraft
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Lake Superior's unpredictable weather and unusually cold water temperature create persistent dense fog, and violent squalls, while large weather systems moving across the lake can generate heavy swells and choppy reflection waves. As a result, persons travelling in their own ships need to be prepared for emergencies even on seemingly calm days. |
Index | Frames | No Frames | |||
Park Information | Recreation | Hiking | Camping | Boating | |
Fishing | Diving | Paddling | |||
Transportation | Meteorology | History | |||
Flora&Fauna | Birds | Fishes | Plants | ||
Mammals | Reptiles | ||||
Site Information | Welcome | What's New | Site Map | Site Search | |
Copyright | Conditions of Use | Frequently Asked Questions | Feedback | ||
Other Information | Internet Search | Visitor Register | Internet Resources | ||
Books | Addresses | Photo Gallery | |||