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Presqu'ile -- French for "almost
an island" -- is a boomerang-shaped spit of sand and
limestone that juts sharply into Lake Ontario. The land formation
is a tombolo, created as wind and waves piled sand and gravel
from the lake bottom between a limestone island and the mainland.
The action of the water and wind reinforces the peninsula
with sand and causes the beach to grow by as much as 2 metres
each year! Richly varied, the park's natural landscape features
sand dunes, sand and pebbled beaches, limestone outcroppings,
forests, reedy marshes and coastal wet meadows called pannes
which are of international significance.
The park is a haven for migratory birds. About 126 species
of birds nest here, and at least 321 species have been sighted
enroute to destinations such as South America, the Arctic,
Europe and Asia. Each autumn, the park is a gathering point
for monarch butterflies as they begin their migratory trek
to Mexico.
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