Charlottetown Boulder Park

Charlottetown Boulder Park is an outdoor boulder park located in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. The park is located on the northern side of the Honourable George Coles Building, adjacent to Province House.[1]

Charlottetown Boulder Park
TypeBoulder Park
LocationCharlottetown, Prince Edward Island
Coordinates46.2355°N 63.12587°W / 46.2355; -63.12587
Opened1966
FounderDr. Eric Harvie
Operated byConfederation Centre of the Arts
OpenAll year

History

The park was the idea of Dr. Eric Harvie, chairman of the Fathers of Confederation Memorial Citizens Foundation, and includes boulders from each of the Canadian provinces; each boulder includes a plaque that identifies the provinces from which the boulder came, along with the geological name of the rock formation. Harvie intended the park to commemorate the contribution of people from across Canada to the creation of the Confederation Centre of the Arts.[2][3]

Opening

The park opened in a ceremony on September 1, 1966, the 102nd anniversary of the start of the Charlottetown Conference.[2][3] The landscaping for the park was funded by the Bank of Nova Scotia; Graham Scott, manager of the Charlottetown branch, and Dr. Frank MacKinnon, Chair of the Fathers of Confederation Memorial Trust, cut the ribbon.[3]

Boulders

ProvinceBoulder TypePhotoPlaqueLocation
AlbertaDevonian Dolomite
46.235768°N 63.12575°W / 46.235768; -63.12575
British ColumbiaQuartz Diorite
46.235814°N 63.125654°W / 46.235814; -63.125654
ManitobaTyndall Limestone
46.235511°N 63.126098°W / 46.235511; -63.126098
New BrunswickLimestone Containing Archaeozoon acadiense
46.2354°N 63.125661°W / 46.2354; -63.125661
NewfoundlandLower Ordovician Limestone
46.235426°N 63.126028°W / 46.235426; -63.126028
Nova ScotiaNorth Mountain Basalt
46.235686°N 63.12572°W / 46.235686; -63.12572
OntarioBiotite Hornblende Gneiss
46.235606°N 63.125415°W / 46.235606; -63.125415
Prince Edward IslandSandstone
46.235583°N 63.12599°W / 46.235583; -63.12599
QuebecAnorthosite
46.235556°N 63.125732°W / 46.235556; -63.125732
SaskatchewanGranite
46.235337°N 63.125816°W / 46.235337; -63.125816
CanadaJasper Conglomerate
46.235469°N 63.125855°W / 46.235469; -63.125855

Map of boulder locations

Boulders are sited over 1,000 square metres (0.25 acres) site between Church Street and Province House, just south of Grafton Street.

Map showing location of boulders in Charlottetown Boulder Park
1
Alberta
2
British Columbia
3
Manitoba
4
New Brunswick
5
Newfoundland
6
Nova Scotia
7
Ontario
8
Prince Edward Island
9
Quebec
10
Saskatchewan
11
Canada
gollark: You were in the top 20 in your country in maths-related exams, no?
gollark: In general, yes.
gollark: Did you know? The ǂ boson is a type of Boson in the Standard Model. It is prohibited from existing by the laws of physics, but by using a complicated type of particle collider one can still create them using floating point errors. A Floating point accelerator was created by a team of Beniɲ scientists and used to successfully prove the existence of the ǂ boson. The decay exponential of the ǂ boson has base 0.. The ǂ boson has a mass of -65535 ðg, a spin of NaN RPS, no electric charge, and a tactile charge of lemon.
gollark: ¿¿¿
gollark: It's not even hugely minimal though. They have ridiculous special cases to patch over the lack of general solutions.

References

  1. Macdougall, Gary (6 September 2014). "Rocks that Rock". The Guardian (Charlottetown). p. 13.
  2. Bond, Anne (2 September 1966). "Boulder Park And Flagpoles Dedicated At Plaza Ceremony". The Guardian (Charlottetown). pp. 1, 3.
  3. Bond, Anne (2 September 1966). "Dedication ceremony held on Centre plaza". The Evening Patriot (Charlottetown). p. 2.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.