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21 Record-Breaking Things in Canada's Northwest Territories

A group paddling a large kayak near a waterfall

21 Record-Breaking Things in Canada's Northwest Territories

This article originally appeared on the Spectacular Northwest Territories websiteExternal Link Title.

You know how, when you stare up at the stars, you feel all small and insignificant?

Travelling in the Northwest Territories is the same way. Where else could you drive all day without seeing another car? Or have an whole lake totally to yourself? Or be dwarfed by herds of the largest beasts on the continent?

Yep, the Northwest Territories is the sort of place that puts everything in perspective. A superlative place, a place that's larger than life. Like staring at the stars, it will leave you humbled – and yet somewhow, your life will be enlarged. 

The Greatest Waterfall

With a surface area of four acres and a flow-rate of 3 billion cubic feet per day, Virginia Falls, or Náilicho, could fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool in 2.5 seconds. The centrepiece of Nahanni National Park ReserveExternal Link Title, it's twice the height of Niagara and considered to be the greatest wilderness waterfall on Earth. Everyone should see it at least once in their lifetime.

The Deadliest Passage  

For centuries, the Northwest Passage – the narrow, ice-choked, maze-like watercourse across the top of Canada – taunted mariners. Hundreds were lured to the death here, including the legendary Sir John Franklin. Today, luxury cruise-ship travellers can relive this harrowing history, visiting such famed locales as Parry's Rock in Winter Harbour, the Investigator wrecksite at Mercy Bay, the grim Smoking Hills, and perilous Prince of Wales Strait, as well as the communities of Sachs HarbourExternal Link Title and UlukhaktokExternal Link Title.    

The Largest Lake

Great BearExternal Link Title is the mother of all Northern Lakes. It's the size of Vancouver Island, and slightly wetter. The largest freshwater body entirely within Canada, it covers almost 12,000 square miles, with enough ice-blue water to supply Canada’s current household needs for 500 years. Unsurprisingly, patrolling the depths of this inland sea, you will find...

The Biggest Fish

Yep, that's right. Great Bear is alive with freshwater monsters. Here, the Lake TroutExternal Link Title grow to the size of a 10-year-old child, and are significnatly more ferocious. Dene fishermen have netted leviathans that approach 90 pounds, while in the lake's western reaches, an angler at a fishing lodge caught (and released) a 79-pounder – the world sportfishing record.

The Wildest Lights

Clear crisp nights. Zero light pollution. Optimal geography, right under the "Auroral oval." It's no wonder that the Northwest Territories is the world's leading Aurora-viewingExternal Link Title destination, with a lightshow that ignites the heavens more than 200 nights per year.

The Toughest Weather

If you travel to the uttermost tip of this territory, you’ll experience what may be the harshest weather on Earth. Meteorologists say the icebound Parry Islands, near the top of the Arctic Archipelago, suffer from a combo of clouds, dampness, wind and unrelenting cold that make it the most extreme, least habitable corner of Canada. Even for Inuit, this asteroid-like environment was a no-man's-land: devoid of plant or animal life, there was no reason for humans to come here, and no way to survive if you did. 

The Burliest Beast

The Northwest Territories' signature beast is the mountain-sized wood bisonExternal Link Title, herds of which amble along the highways, blocking traffic and just generally doing whatever they feel like. Bigger and darker than their southern cousins, the plains bison, they can stand six feet tall at the shoulder and tip the scales at over 2000 pounds. This makes them the largest land animal in the Western Hemisphere. Needless to say, keep your distance.   

The Deepest Lake

Not far offshore from the little town of Lutselk’e, the bottom drops out of Great Slave LakeExternal Link Title. Toss a stone from your boat and it’ll plunge through the dark cold water for 2,014 feet – greater than the height of the CN Tower. Not only is Great Slave by far the deepest lake in North America, but its bottom is also the lowest natural point on the continent, dropping a quarter-mile below sea-level. 

The Loneliest Park

Tuktut Nogait National ParkExternal Link Title is so remote that some years, no one goes there. It's perhaps the least-touristed national park in Canada. That’s just fine with the park’s caribou, raptors, wolves and Barrenland grizzlies, which are pretty much indifferent to human presence. But if you’re looking for a place to get away from it all, you can’t get more “away” than this.

The Farthest Road

The Dempster HighwayExternal Link Title is Canada’s northernmost motorway, carrying road-trippers across the Arctic Circle to Inuvik in the Mackenzie River Delta. It's the greatest adventure you can have while sitting down. And in another few years you’ll be able to push even farther: The route is being extended to Tuktoyaktuk, an Arctic Ocean settlement famous for pingos, caribou and Inuvialuit culture.

The Mightiest River

With a watershed encompassing one-fifth of Canada, the Mackenzie is the country’s most significant river, spanning close to 2,500 miles from source to sea. In front of Norman Wells, the "Big Mac" is almost 2.5 miles wide; meanwhile, at a canyon near Fort Good Hope called The Ramparts, it chokes to just under half a mile across. Culturally, the river is a superhighway linking together the ancient Dene homeland. For paddlers, it's an epic pilgrimage – the greatest way to get right to the heart of the Northwest Territories. 

The Longest Trail

At 220 miles, the Canol Trail is the most extensive wild hiking path in North America. Backpackers often require three weeks or more to complete the route, and must be totally self-sufficient: You'll encounter no communities or services of any kind, and often, no other hikers. What you will find? A million nameless peaks, glorious alpine valleys, and critters that have never laid eyes on a human being.  

The Biggest Park

Wood Buffalo National Park is the largest protected area in Canada and the second-biggest park on Earth. Dwarfing many sovereign countries, it guards a great swath of the boreal plains, home to the last remnants of the great bison herds that once roamed across the continent. Indeed, almost everything here is superlative – the world's biggest beaver dam, the largest freshwater Delta, and this creature...

The Rarest Bird

This is perhaps the most endangered bird species in all of North America – but in the marshlands near Fort Smith, the elusive whooping crane has begun to rebound. Once numbering fewer than two-dozen, the world’s whooping crane population is now approaching 500, thanks in part to the protection of its summer habitat in the North. Lucky visitors may get a glimpse of the birds. They're easy to recognize: At five feet tall, they're the tallest bird on the continent. 

The Coldest Highway

For two months each winter, the North Slave is traversed by the planet’s longest ice road – a 375-mile frozen highway rolling across lakes and tundra clear to the Nunavut border. Though designed for mining transport trucks, this private road also carries hunters, photographers and adventurers. If you tackle it, you'll need guts, gas, and Arctic-grade cold weather gear.

The Northermost River

The Thomsen, gliding crystal-clear through the treeless Eden of Aulavik National Park, is considered the farthest-north navigable river on the planet. Each summer, canoeists ride its flow of snowmelt to the Arctic Ocean, gawking at muskoxen and fishing for char, whitefish and the world’s northernmost Trout. You can do this voyage independently, or go with a tour company. Either way, you'll be the uttermost paddlers on the planet. 

The Most Remote Place

Welcome to Canada's Empty Quarter – the vast unpopulated zone between the eastern shores of Great Slave and the coast of Hudson Bay. This sweeping swath of the Barrenlands has the lowest population density of anywhere outside of Antarctica – no roads, no homes, no Starbucks. You will find a few fishing lodges here, and legendary rivers like the Thelon, plus tens of thousands of caribou, wolves, muskoxen, grizzlies and other critters. It's a heckuva place to go if you want to get away from it all. 

The Richest Ground

The Northwest Territories was once home to an array of hard-rock gold mines, some of the first oil wells in Canada, and a uranium mine that fuelled the Manhattan Project. Now the territory produces something even richer. Canada’s first diamonds were discovered here in the 1990s. Thanks to these deposits, the country is now the world’s third-largest diamond producer.

The Strangest Bear

Call it what you want – nanulak, grolar bear, pizzly, p-grizzle. It's a part-grizzly bear, part polar bear, and fully weird. The product of intermating between polar bear mamas and male brown bears that are spreading north due to climate change, just two of the hybrids have been confirmed to exist, both right here in the Northwest Territories. However, it's widely assumed that more of them are roaming the tundra up around Sachs Harbour and Ulukhaktok. Head out on the land with a local guide and you might just spy the rarest beast on Earth.  

The Earliest Game

Fun fact: The Northwest Territories is the birthplace of hockey. While wintering here in the 1820s, Sir John Franklin’s men played a hockey-like sport on a frozen pond near Great Slave Lake –  the earliest documented instance of what is, of course, the greatest game on Earth. 

The Oldest Rock

Cropping up from a mid-river island north of Wekweeti, right at the cusp of the Barrenlands, is a mound of stone from the Earth’s beginnings. At more than 4 billion years old, the Acasta Gneiss is the most ancient exposed rock ever found. It is literally the oldest thing on Planet Earth.     

Ready to set your own records in the Northwest Territories? Visit the Specacular Northwest Territories website to plan your trip.