Here comes a new UNESCO site in my collection, the Landscape of Grand-Pré in Canada, classified as World Heritage in 2012.
The card was sent by Jason.
Situated in the southern Minas Basin of Nova Scotia, the Grand Pré marshland
and archaeological sites constitute a cultural landscape bearing testimony to
the development of agricultural farmland using dykes and the aboiteau
wooden sluice system, started by the Acadians in the 17th century and
further developed and maintained by the Planters and present-day inhabitants.
Over 1,300 ha, the cultural landscape encompasses a large expanse of polder
farmland and archaeological elements of the towns of Grand Pré and Hortonville,
which were built by the Acadians and their successors. The landscape is an
exceptional example of the adaptation of the first European settlers to the
conditions of the North American Atlantic coast. The site – marked by one of the
most extreme tidal ranges in the world, averaging 11.6 m – is also inscribed as
a memorial to Acadian way of life and deportation, which started in 1755, known
as the Grand Dérangement. - in: http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1404
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