Primeval Forest National Park

A patch of old-growth blackland coppice and karst with an area of 7.5 acres, it is considered a time capsule of the old evergreen tropical hardwood forests of the Bahamas.

From the 18th century into the 1970s, the logging industry led to the mass culling of hardwood forests that used to cover the islands and could be as tall as 50 ft.

In the 1990s, then president of the Bahamas National Trust Pericles Maillis came across a remaining undisturbed patch of ancient forest, and led an initiative to protect the area.

[1][2] The park can be viewed from wooden boardwalks, steps, and bridges.

The main attraction of the park is arguably the limestone caverns and sinkholes.