Cape Scott, Cape Scott Provincial Park

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Cape Scott, Cape Scott Provincial Park

by | Mar 5, 2026

Cape Scott is a headland approximately 500 feet (150 m) high at the extreme north-western point of Vancouver Island in Cape Scott Provincial Park, about 256 miles (412 km) south-south-east of Prince Rupert and 41 miles (66 km) west of Port Hardy, British Columbia. The promontory was discovered and named in 1786 by James C. Strange, who led a fur trading expedition to the western coast of Vancouver Island using two vessels: Captain Cook, under the command of Henry Lawrie, and Experiment, captained by John Guise. Strange named the north-west tip of Vancouver Island Cape Scott in honor of David Scott, a Mumbai merchant who had financed the venture. The geology of Vancouver Island is characterized principally by rocks of the Wrangellia terrane, which extends south through Vancouver Island and north through Haida Gwaii into Southeast Alaska. Wrangellia was accreted to the Coast and Intermontane formations on the continent, possibly during the Early Jurassic through the mid-Cretaceous period. Cape Scott comprises volcanic rocks of the Bonanza Group that include basaltic lavas, breccias, lapilli, and tuffs; intrusions of the Island Plutonic Suite; and limestone.

The Tlatlasikwala, Nakumgilisala and Yutlinuk peoples shared the Cape Scott area before Euro-American settlement. The Yutlinuk of the Scott Islands died out in the early 1800s. The Nakumgilisala and Tlatlasikwala amalgamated in the mid-1850s and moved to Hope Island, where they remained until 1954. That year, numbering only 32, they joined with the Koskimo people and moved to Quatsino Sound. Today they are known collectively as the Nahwitti. They have six reserves, three of which are within the boundaries of Cape Scott Provincial Park. From 1897 to 1907, the first white settlement attempt was made at Cape Scott. The settlers were Danes, mostly from Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska and North Dakota, hoping to establish an ethnic community around Hansen Lagoon and Fisherman Bay. The colony struggled to survive by fishing and trapping mink, river otter and beaver for their pelts. By 1907 the settlers had acknowledged the failure, and the colony was abandoned. In 1913 another wave of settlers arrived from Washington State, the prairie provinces, eastern Canada and Europe to occupy land available for pre-emption. Many established themselves in homes vacated by the Danes near Hansen Lagoon. The population of the second settlement peaked at over 1,000, then began a slow decline as the new residents encountered the same hardships the Danes had experienced. Conscription in 1917 for service in the first world war brought an end to the community.

Requirements of national security during the second world war led to the construction of a small radar station at Cape Scott in 1942, which remained in operation until 1945. A string of five islands, known as the Scott Islands, extends westward from Cape Scott. Cox Island, the easternmost and largest of the group, is five miles (8 km) from the cape, while the outermost, Triangle Island, lies 29 miles (47 km) offshore. The first lighthouse was built on the summit of Triangle Island, but this was a poor location because fog, mist or low clouds obscured the light for more than 240 days a year. In the 1950s the increase in ocean-going vessels along the north-west coast, due mostly to the completion of an aluminum smelter at Kitimat, prompted the construction of three manned light stations at Cape Scott and Chatham Point in 1959, and at Bonilla Island in 1960. The headland is now part of Cape Scott Provincial Park, first established in 1973. Lanz and Cox Islands Provincial Park, which includes a marine reserve, is offshore and to the north-west of Cape Scott. The park is known for its remoteness, old-growth forest and sandy beaches. The terrain is rugged and the area is notorious for heavy rain and violent storms. Read more here and here. Explore more of Cape Scott and Cape Scott Provincial Park here:

About the background graphic

This ‘warming stripe’ graphic is a visual representation of the change in global temperature from 1850 (top) to 2022 (bottom). Each stripe represents the average global temperature for one year. The average temperature from 1971-2000 is set as the boundary between blue and red. The color scale goes from -0.7°C to +0.7°C. The data are from the UK Met Office HadCRUT4.6 dataset. 

Credit: Professor Ed Hawkins (University of Reading). Click here for more information about the #warmingstripes.

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