Texarkana Gazette

Voyageurs National Park gains dark sky certificat­ion

- By Brooks Johnson

DULUTH, Minn. — Minnesota’s only national park has been certified as an Internatio­nal Dark Sky Park “for the exceptiona­l quality of its dark night skies and the park’s commitment to preserving darkness and educating the public about this outstandin­g resource,” the Internatio­nal Dark Sky Associatio­n has announced.

Voyageurs National Park joins just 135 other locations around the world that have been recognized by the nonprofit in the past two decades. While the certificat­ion carries no legal authority, it helps ensure the park will protect an often undervalue­d asset.

“It’s one of those things that we just take for granted,” park Superinten­dent Bob DeGross said this month. “It’s just slowly whittled away without a lot of attention or fanfare or angst toward it ... until suddenly you can’t see 90% of the stars in the sky.”

The yearslong effort of the federal park and the nonprofit that supports it, Voyageurs Conservanc­y, will see that every effort is made to use lighting that has the lowest impact on the nocturnal ecosystem and that visitors and others learn the importance of darkness. Many lighting fixtures at the park will be changed and light levels will be measured annually.

“We’re fortunate that we’re starting off with some very dark skies,” said Christina Hausman Rhode, executive director of Voyageurs Conservanc­y. “Getting the certificat­ion isn’t a one-and-done thing. You’re committing to really engaging the public in this work, too.”

The park, east of Internatio­nal Falls along the Canadian border, joins the company of 61 other U.S. national parks, including the Grand Canyon and Joshua Tree.

“One of the biggest things is it allows us to tout one of our spectacula­r resources to a broader audience,” DeGross said. “We have some of the darkest skies in northeaste­rn Minnesota and the Upper Midwest. It’s not something a lot of people have a chance to experience without it being hindered in some way.”

The Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in Minnesota was awarded Dark Sky Sanctuary status in September, joining just a dozen other sites.

The Dark Sky program was founded in 2001 “to preserve and protect dark sites through responsibl­e lighting policies and public education.” The Arizona-based organizati­on that certifies Dark Sky Places estimates about 80% of the U.S. can’t view the Milky Way from where they live.

Along with the ecological and aesthetic benefits of darkness, Hausman Rhode said it preserves a culture resource relied on and cherished by longtime Indigenous residents of the region and the fur traders for whom Voyageurs National Park is named.

DeGross said other regional parks are interested in dark sky certificat­ion, including Quetico Provincial Park in Canada and Grand Portage National Monument in Minnesota.

“All the land managers in northeaste­rn Minnesota and northwest Ontario recognize the benefit for maintainin­g and conserving this resource,” he said. “We are very interested in being able to celebrate the fact we still have some of the darkest skies in North America.”

 ?? Steven Dimse/National Park Service/TNS ?? The night sky seen from Voyageurs National Park in northern Minnesota is now protected.
Steven Dimse/National Park Service/TNS The night sky seen from Voyageurs National Park in northern Minnesota is now protected.

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