Name
|
Image
|
Date
|
Location
|
County
|
Ownership
|
Description
|
East Inlet Natural Area
|
|
1972
|
45°12′41″N 71°06′38″W / 45.211385°N 71.110497°W / 45.211385; -71.110497 (East Inlet Natural Area)
|
Coos
|
Private
|
Contains a black spruce-tamarack bog and a virgin, balsam fir-red spruce forest.
|
Floating Island
|
|
1972
|
|
Coos
|
Federal
|
A floating heath bog in Umbagog National Wildlife Refuge.
|
Franconia Notch
|
|
1971
|
Franconia 44°10′15″N 71°41′17″W / 44.1707°N 71.6881°W / 44.1707; -71.6881
|
Grafton
|
State
|
An old stream valley, ground to a U-shape by glacial movement.
|
Heath Pond Bog
|
|
1972
|
43°45′34″N 71°06′59″W / 43.759423°N 71.116465°W / 43.759423; -71.116465 (Heath Pond Bog)
|
Carroll
|
State
|
A classic example of bog succession from open water to sphagnum-heath-black spruce bog.
|
Madison Boulder
|
|
1970
|
43°56′00″N 71°09′46″W / 43.93329°N 71.162671°W / 43.93329; -71.162671 (Madison Boulder Natural Area)
|
Carroll
|
State
|
The largest known glacial erratic in North America.
|
Mount Monadnock
|
|
1987
|
42°51′39″N 72°06′29″W / 42.860833°N 72.108056°W / 42.860833; -72.108056 (Mount Monadnock)
|
Cheshire
|
Mixed- state, municipal, private
|
A prominent, isolated, relict mountain. Type locality of a monadnock.
|
Nancy Brook Virgin Spruce Forest and Scenic Area
|
|
1987
|
|
Carroll, Grafton
|
Federal
|
May be the largest virgin forest tract in the northeastern United States. A part of White Mountain National Forest.
|
Pondicherry Wildlife Refuge
|
|
1972
|
44°22′40″N 71°31′33″W / 44.377846°N 71.525937°W / 44.377846; -71.525937 (Pondicherry Wildlife Refuge)
|
Coos
|
State
|
Two shallow, warm water ponds, surrounded by marsh, bog and forest that support a great variety of birds.
|
Rhododendron Natural Area
|
|
1982
|
Fitzwilliam 42°46′49″N 72°11′20″W / 42.7804°N 72.1889°W / 42.7804; -72.1889
|
Cheshire
|
State
|
The largest, thriving stand of rhododendron in central and southern New England.
|
Spruce Hole Bog
|
|
1972
|
43°07′34″N 70°58′04″W / 43.126111°N 70.967778°W / 43.126111; -70.967778 (Spruce Hole Bog)
|
Strafford
|
Municipal
|
The last known kettle hole bog in southern New Hampshire.
|
White Lake Pitch Pine
|
|
1980
|
43°50′09″N 71°12′32″W / 43.8359°N 71.2089°W / 43.8359; -71.2089 (White Lake Pitch Pine)
|
Carroll
|
State
|
A mature, undisturbed pitch pine and bear-oak forest.
|