Their natural heritage and local history
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Ravines are one of the wonders of Toronto. Cutting deep through the city, they are islands of natural heritage. While the city carries on above them and inevitably has its impact, the ravines still offer surprising ecological diversity. And they have much to tell about Toronto's history. Jason Ramsay-Brown has had a lifelong fascination with ravines, and he has spent years exploring them and discovering their little-known history. For the past 15 years he has explored more than 100 of these ravines, and hundreds of kilometres of trails weaving in and out of them. In this book he shares his knowledge so that Torontonians and visitors alike can better appreciate their ravine heritage. Among the 30 ravines across the city featured in this book are: Gates Gully in the Scarborough Bluffs area, a crossroads of natural heritage and local historyGlendon Forest, with a beautiful old-growth forest area at risk because of the impact of visitation on highly environmentally sensitive areasTaylor Creek Park in the East York area, an example of the city's sewershed and the value of wetlandsPassmore Forest and L'Amoreaux Park North and its 600-year-old Alexandra aboriginal site where 800 Huron-Wendat people livedRouge Park on the city's eastern edge, and the story of a proposed urban national park With extensive visuals illustrating the text, this is a book which will inform and surprise every Torontonian, and which will allow visitors an easy path to discover the riches of the city's ravines and forests.
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