
Kama Hills Provincial Park is a very small nature reserve about 30 kilometres east of Nipigon. Ontario Parks lists the park at 1 hectare, established in 1985.
The official page marks it as a Tread Lightly nature reserve and says there are no visitor facilities.
Kama Hills is small, but its geological identity is clear. Ontario Parks says unusual red-purple mudstone characterizes the nature reserve, and that the outcropping is significant to geologists.
The mudstone is a member of the Sibley Group, formed in the Proterozoic era 2.5 billion years ago. That makes the park useful for readers researching Ontario geological reserves, Sibley Group rock, and specialist protected sites near Nipigon.
Because the site is only one hectare and has no visitor facilities, the article should be careful with visitor expectations. This is best framed as a protected geological outcrop and official listing, not a recreation destination.
The small size is part of the story: Kama Hills exists to protect a very specific rock exposure, so the page should emphasize conservation, research value, and low-impact conduct.
Nearby Nipigon should supply practical services.
Plan around official research, red-purple mudstone geology, Sibley Group context, Proterozoic rock learning, low-impact observation where access is appropriate, map review, and nearby Nipigon or serviced park facilities.
Confirm access, maps, no-facility expectations, geological sensitivity, small-site protection, parking or roadside constraints, alerts, seasonal conditions, and park rules through the official Ontario Parks source before travelling.
Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.