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Geological · Municipality of Jasper, Alberta, Canada

Quadrantid Meteor Shower — Jasper National Park

One of the year's most intense meteor showers, viewed from Jasper's world-class dark skies amid a frozen Alberta winter.

When
Jan — Dec, peak Jan
Best viewing
A night vigil in sub-zero temperatures under some of Canada's darkest skies, watching meteors streak overhead during a brief but intense peak window each January.
Category
Geological
Status
In season

About this spectacle

In the first days of January, Jasper National Park's famously dark skies become a stage for the Quadrantid meteor shower — one of the year's strongest but briefest annual displays. Away from city light pollution, visitors lying in the snow under a vast Alberta sky may witness dozens of shooting stars per hour radiating from the northeast. The cold is biting and the air crystalline, giving meteors a startling sharpness as they streak silently overhead. The park's remote valleys and frozen lakes offer wide, unobstructed horizons in multiple directions. Warm layers, a sleeping pad for lying flat, and patience are essential — the Quadrantids peak sharply for only a few hours, demanding precise timing. The reward is an immersive, humbling experience: the silence of a winter wilderness punctuated by brief, brilliant flashes of light from beyond the solar system.

When to go

Jan — Dec, peak Jan

Getting there

Nearest airport: YEG. Nearest city: Edmonton.

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