The Dr. Henry N. Payne Community Museum (c. 1941) in Cow Head, Newfoundland and Labrador is on the Canadian Register of Historic Places.[6]
Cow Head is home to one of the longest sandy beaches in Newfoundland as well as a large area of sand dunes. It also has panoramic views of the Long Range Mountains of Gros Morne. An interesting geologic feature found at Cow Head is a section of the former continental margin of Laurentia which dipped into the Iapetus ocean.[7]
There is a walking trail leading to a lighthouse constructed in 1909 on the summer side or "head" of Cow Head.
Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Cow Head had a population of 398 living in 184 of its 225 total private dwellings, a change of -7% from its 2016 population of 428. With a land area of 17.27 km2 (6.67 sq mi), it had a population density of 23.0/km2 (59.7/sq mi) in 2021.[2]
Arts and culture
Cow Head is the home to the Gros Morne Theatre Festival.[8]
A new theatre named in honour of nurse, Myra Bennett, is currently under construction and aiming for completion in 2021.
Geology
The Cow Head Group is made up of a series of continental slope strata that contain numerous boulders made of carbonate. These have yielded numerous trilobite fossils and have led to the identification of new species, including Catillicephala cifelli, named after paleontologist Rich Cifelli.[9]