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Uluru
in Central Australia
also known
as Ayers Rock in the Red Centre or Outback
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The
Tip of the Iceberg
Uluru
(Ayers Rock) emerges steeply from the desert sand and
smoothes off toward the peak in what seems a rather
unlikely shape for such a large rock. It is an absolutely
breathtaking sight even for the most seasoned of travellers,
taking on a stunning array of red and brown shades from
dawn to dusk and sun to shade. It even transforms from
the more familiar shades of red to grey during infrequent
rain, with a myriad of small waterfalls cascading down
its banded sides.
Uluru
stands an imposing 348 metres above the surrounding
desert and has a circumference of 9.4km. It measures
3.6 km long and 2.4 km wide oriented in an east-west
direction. Rather like an iceberg, there is more of
Uluru under the ground than above it which really brings
home the enormity of it. Formed in Cambrian times, it
was later tilted through uplift and folding so the horizontal
strata now sits at almost 90Ëš which gives it the distinct
vertical banding.
Uluru
is made of feldspar rich sandstone called arkose which
is mainly grey and white. The distinctive rust colour
is caused by a thin coating of iron oxide on the outer
skin. The changing colours of red at sunset are caused
by light refraction as the sun sinks in the sky. The
lower the sun goes it has to travel through more of
the earth's atmosphere which bends the blue light away
leaving the red light to intensify the Rock's red colour.
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Kata
Tjuta (the Olgas)
Approximately
30km to the west of Uluru stand the equally stunning
36 domes forming Kata Tjuta. The highest peak, Mount
Olga, stands even higher than Uluru at over 500 metres.
These two icons of Central Australia and the surrounding
desert now form the Uluru Kata Tjuta National Park which
encompasses 132,566 hectares and is a World Heritage
listed area. It was listed in two stages, originally
for its outstanding universal natural values and later,
for its outstanding universal cultural values. It puts
those cultural values into perspective when you think
that the local Aborigines have been living in the area
for somewhere between 20,000 and 40,000 years and are
intrinsically linked culturally, spiritually and economically
to both Uluru and Kata Tjuta.
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Uluru
- Anangu
The
Local Custodians
The
word Anangu originally meant something along the lines
of ‘person’ or ‘human being’ but since the arrival
of Europeans it has come to mean Aboriginal person or
human being. It is a word that is common in eastern
dialects of the Western Desert Language spoken in the
desert regions of West and Central Australia. The Pitjantjatjara
and Yankunytjatjara people are the traditional custodians
of the land that encompasses Uluru and Kata Tjuta and
like to be referred to as Anangu.
Tjukurpa
- Aboriginal Law and Religion
While
no accurate estimates of how long Anangu have lived
in the area, it's fair to say that we're talking somewhere
around 20,000 - 40,000 years ago; a very, very long
time. The term Tjukurpa is like a guiding light to Anangu
and how they live. It encompasses their law and religion,
the past, present and future, their relationship with
the land, the creation period, and how all these are
all interrelated. Tjukurpa, when used to describe their
origins, sometimes gets referred to as 'Dreaming' or
'Dreamtime', usually by non-Aboriginals. There is no
corresponding word in Anangu language and Dreaming tends
to imply that they are not real or are changeable. This
is certainly not the case for them. While some of the
stories may seem simple, they are in fact complex explanations
of creation and how they fit and act within it.
According
to Tjukurpa, the world was originally a barren and featureless
place until the Ancestor spirits came to the world in
human and other forms and created the features of the
land, plants and animals as we know them now. During
their travels across the land the spirits also created
different relationships between various groups, plants
and animals. When their ancestors work was done they
transformed into hills, animals, plants, stars, etc,
and are as present today as they were in the beginning
and, into the future. The particular sites where these
activities took place are significant sites to Anangu
and there are stories associated with each of them.
If they are very significant sites they are known as
‘sacred sites’, parts of Uluru and Kata Tjuta falling
into that category.
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Passing
Down Stories
So
the past, present and future are all alive and connected
through their ancestor spirits and the stories that
are told about them. These stories are passed down from
one generation to the next through dance, stories, art,
rituals and rites of passage. None is in written form.
Some of the stories belong only to men, some only to
women. Some inherit the right to knowledge through their
birthplace or involvement in ceremonies, or certain
families may hold the knowledge of a particular story.
Around
Uluru and Kata Tjuta there are many stories, some that
can be told and others that remain secret to the relevant
group or members of local Anangu. Around Uluru there
are two excellent walks that tell some of the secrets
of Uluru and the ancestor spirits, the Mala walk and
the Mutitjulu walk.
On
the Mala walk visitors can learn how long ago Mala men
and women came to Uluru from afar. They all camped separately
from one another - young men in one place, older men
in another, senior and married women somewhere else
and the rest of the women and children in the middle.
They had come for a special religious ceremony called
Inma.
Mala
men from the west arrive with a ceremonial pole which
is planted on top of Uluru which signals the beginning
of the Inma. The Mala are in good spirits, doing all
their daily activities in a proper way as they should
be done. Suddenly Luunpa, the kingfisher bird, cries
out a warning to the Mala people telling them that people
in the west have created a terrible dog like creature
called Kurpany, to destroy their ceremony. The warning
is ignored and Kurpany kills two Mala men. The rest
of the men, women and children flee in terror. You can
see many features that relate to the Mala story on the
walk.
On
the Mutitjulu walk you can see many features in and
around Uluru that relate to creation activities connected
with ancestral beings. The most well known of these
is the story of two snakes, Kuniya and Liru.
Kuniya
becomes furious by the lack of respect shown by Liru,
the poisonous snake. In a bid to control the dark forces
taking hold of her, she picks up some sand and lets
it fall to the ground so no harm will come to others.
However, she ends up attacking him in a rage and after
inflicting a wound on Liru as he tries to fend off with
his shield, a second fatal blow is hit. Kuniya has her
honour avenged but in the fury that preceded, all the
surrounding plants have been poisoned.
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Uluru
- European History
Venturing
into the Red Centre
It
wasn't until the early 1870's that the first Europeans
starting venturing into Central Australia, primarily
to find a route to the West Coast. It was in 1872 that
Ernest Giles first came to the area and, while heading
south west from Watarrka (Kings Canyon), sighted Kata
Tjuta and Uluru further in the distance. As he tried
to get closer to Kata Tjuta his attempts were thwarted
by what is now Lake Amadeus, a giant salt pan. He tried
going around the lake but it just kept on going and
he was too far from a known water supply, his horses
were tired and thirsty and so he had to turn back.
As
Giles notes in his writings in 'Australia Twice Traversed',
"I named this eminence Mount Olga and the great salt
feature which obstructed me Lake Amadeus, in honour
of two enlightened royal patrons of science".
Confusion
Reigns
There
is some confusion on the subject of Olga and Amadeus
being in reference to the King and Queen of Spain but
in fact Olga was Russian and became Queen Olga of Württemberg
after marrying a German, Crown Prince Karl (later King)
of Württemberg in 1846. Lake Amadeus was named after
Amadeo I of Spain, an Italian who was the then reigning
King of Spain.
There
are also conflicting reports on what Giles had originally
wanted to name Mount Olga and Lake Amadeus and which
had been apparently changed at the request of Giles
benefactor, German born Ferdinand von Mueller. There
are historical references to both Lake Mueller and Lake
Ferdinand and Mount Mueller and Mount Ferdinand. Certainly
Mueller wanted to repay the compliment of having the
title 'Freiherr' bestowed upon him by the King and Queen
of Wurttemberg when celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary,
becoming Baron Ferdinand von Mueller. It seems that
Amadeo had also decorated him, possibly for the introduction
of the excellent properties of the Blue Gum (Eucalyptus
Globulus) and so in all likelihood Mueller wanted to
repay him as well.
It
seems that Mount Ferdinand was in fact the name of a
mount in South Australia that got changed to Mount Warrabillinna
in 1917 during the First World War as part of a campaign
to change German place names back to indigenous or British
origin (Nomenclature Act of 1917).
The
First European to Climb Uluru
In
1873 William Gosse, a surveyor appointed by the South
Australian government, was assigned to the Northern
Territory in a bid to map a route from the newly opened
Overland Telegraph Station at Alice Springs all the
way west to Perth. Departing from the Finke River they
headed west following in some of the tracks of Giles
and another famous explorer Colonel Peter Warburton.
They came to Lake Amadeus and managed to cross the swamps
at its eastern end. From the top of a sand ridge he
saw a flat topped mesa tableland he named Mount Connor
(Atila) after a South Australian politician. Also from
this lookout he spotted another rock formation in the
distance which he set off to.
Quoting
Gosse from 'The explorers of Australia and their life-work'
by Ernest Favenc, "When I got clear of the sand hills,
and was only two miles distant, and the hill, for the
first time coming fairly in view, what was my astonishment
to find it was one immense rock rising abruptly from
the plain; the holes I had noticed were caused by the
water in some places causing immense caves." And so
William Gosse named the rock Ayers Rock after the then
Chief Secretary of South Australia, Sir Henry Ayers.
He became the first European to climb the rock which
he did with one of his Afghan camel drivers Khamran.
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Ernest
Giles on his later expedition had a lovely way of describing
the differing beauty of Uluru and Kata Tjuta. "Mount
Olga is the more wonderful and grotesque; Mount Ayers
the more ancient and sublime".
Opening
Up the Interior
It
was the opening of the overland telegraph line in the
early 1870’s that prompted settlement of what is now
Alice Springs. It grew as a direct result of the influx
of pastoralists, miners and church missions that sprung
up in the region such as the Lutheran Mission at Hermannsburg.
Large
parts of the Northern Territory were taken up by pastoralists
under pastoral leases issued by the South Australian
Government which administered the Northern Territory
from 1870 until 1911. By the 1880’s it was estimated
that virtually the whole of Central Australia was under
lease or lease application. Many of the runs taken up
were immense in size, most running in the thousands
of square kilometers. Generally it was sheep that were
initially adopted but they were later replaced by cattle
as the main produce.
For
Aboriginal people this was a story of invasion and dispossession
of their lands and water holes. This led to an uneasy
relationship between them and the pastoralists that
often ended in violence and the killing of cattle. Strangely
enough, it was Aboriginals that became an important
part of the pastoral industry as labourers and farm
hands until equal wages were introduced in the late
1960s and a little later, aerial mustering. This led
to a large drop in numbers from that point.
Boom
and Bust on the Land
Pastoralism
was originally one of the great industries of the Northern
Territory and still plays a part today, although much
reduced. The story of pastoralism in the Territory has
generally been one of boom and bust due to the holdings
being too small and unsustainable (bizarre that a couple
of thousand square kilometers might be unsustainable),
long periods of drought, the great depression, wars,
the harsh environment, etc. Many of the runs have been
consolidated into even bigger holdings to make them
sustainable and large tracts have simply been abandoned.
As part of the 1976 Land Rights Act, large parcels of
land have been returned to the Aborigines with more
to come as pastoral leases expire.
Today
many of the cattle stations in Central Australia have
been in the family for many years and it is not uncommon
to find 3 - 4 generations living and working on the
same station. Some like Kings Creek Station and Curtin
Springs were originally started as cattle stations (plus
live camel exports in the case of Kings Creek) but the
boom in tourism and their proximity to Kings Canyon
and Uluru provided the opportunity to diversify into
tourism to supplement income, which now plays a major
part in their operations.
The
spectacular growth in Alice Springs from approximately
950 in 1939 to over 25,000 today can be directly attributed
to the rise in tourism and associated industries. To
give an idea of just how fast tourism has grown in Central
Australia, the Severins of Curtin Springs Station reputedly
only saw 6 people in their first year living on the
station in 1956. Today they host up to 40 tour coaches
a day that stop for food and refreshments. Always good
to be in the right place at the right time.
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Uluru
- Geology
The
World's Largest Monolith?
It's
quite amazing that there could be such differing views
on the geology of the world's most famous rock, Uluru
(Ayers Rock). For years it has been known as "the world’s
largest monolith" and still is in some quarters. It
certainly adds to the drama of such an awe inspiring
icon with a grand description.
First
up, if Uluru was a monolith then it certainly isn’t
the largest on the planet. That distinction goes to
another Australian, Mount Augustus in Western Australia
which is approximately 2.5 times larger in mass and
rises to 858 meters above the surrounding land. So there
goes the largest monolith theory.
Secondly,
there is considerable weight behind the theory that
Uluru is not actually a monolith, i.e. a single rock,
but is actually part of a huge predominantly underground
rock formation that also includes Kata Tjuta (the Olgas)
35km to the west and Atila (Mount Connor), a mesa tableland,
approximately 100km to the east of Uluru.
The
truncated theory goes that more than 600 million years
ago large parts of Central Australia were below sea
level in what is called the Amadeus Basin. Rivers from
nearby mountains dumped large quantities of sedimentary
rocks into the Amadeus Basin which then started to rise
out of the sea about 500 million years ago. With little
or no vegetation to protect the mountains from erosion,
great rivers would have formed carrying tonnes of sediment
which would quickly build to form alluvial fans. Layer
upon layer would have build up and which would eventually
form Uluru from a section of one of the alluvial fans.
The sea eventually invaded the area again depositing
more sand and mud burying the alluvial fans. Over this
whole protracted period the profound pressures and squeezing
together transformed the deposited sand, gravel and
mud, etc into solid rock.
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Between
400 - 300 million years ago the area was subjected to
another bout of mountain building and landmasses colliding
causing more uplift, folding and faulting, breaking
up the alluvial fan and the various layers above and
below. The future Uluru was a part of one of these alluvial
fan sections which has been tilted on its side at almost
90° so all the sedimentary layers are on their side.
After
millions and millions of years of continued weathering,
Uluru, Kata Tjuta and Atila survived the erosion as
they were made of harder rock than that which surrounded
them. More recently, about 70 - 60 million years ago,
the climate was much wetter which then washed sand and
other elements back into the low lying land which smoothed
out the landscape leaving only Uluru, Kata Tjuta and
Atila protruding out of the desert.
So,
quite possibly Uluru, Kata Tjuta and Atila are all part
of one giant mostly underground rock formation, stretching
some 130km. However, as all three rock formations have
slightly different composition and we know Uluru extends
further below ground than above, then to your average
person Uluru is a bloody big rock, monolith or not,
and truly fantastic.
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Uluru
- Tourism
From
Small Beginnings
The
first tourists travelled to Uluru in 1936 but it wasn't
until the 1950s that tourism really started to take
off once a track to Uluru was completed in 1948. From
the 1960's there was a steady increase in visitor numbers
but from 1984 on, the rate of increase was much greater
with a doubling of numbers over 5 years in the late
80s to over 200,000 visitors. Today, there are nearly
400,000 visitors to the Uluru Kata Tjuta National Park,
making it the most popular arid land National Park in
Australia.
Uluru
and Kata Tjuta were taken out of the Aboriginal Reserve
and established as a national park in 1958. After years
of Aboriginal Land Rights activity, it was in 1983 that
Aboriginal title to Uluru was acknowledged by the then
Prime Minister, Bob Hawke. By 1985 the traditional owners
were granted ownership of the National Park under an
agreement to lease it back to the Federal Government
on a 99 year lease. Today many Anangu work within the
Park as well as having a majority on the Park Board
of Management. In 2005 the first indigenous Park Manager
was appointed which nicely corresponded with 20 year
celebrations of ownership for Anangu. The Park became
listed as a World Heritage natural property in 1987
and re-listed again in 1994 as a significant cultural
landscape.
There
were motels and an airstrip built at the base of Uluru
in the late 50s but with tourism on the increase and
the adjacent areas suffering adverse environmental impact,
they were closed down in 1984. This coincided with the
opening of Yulara Resort about 20km north of Uluru on
the Park boundary.
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The
Cultural Centre within the Park was established in 1995
and is great place to visit first upon arrival at the
Park. Armed with a little knowledge of Anangu culture
and the wider environment will make exploring around
the park that much more interesting and enjoyable. You
can learn about Tjukurpa (Aboriginal law, religion and
knowledge), Anangu art, their way of life, foods they
eat, wildlife, etc. There are excellent displays, photo
collages, sound panels outlining oral history, videos,
artefacts, etc. Explanations are in Pitjantjatjara,
English, Italian, German, French and Japanese.
To
Climb or Not to Climb
Local
Anangu ask that people don't climb Uluru, a request
that is slowly getting more traction (excuse the pun)
with signs at the base of the Rock and the more culturally
aware tour operators informing their customers of Anangu
sentiments. This is due to a couple of reasons. One
is that the path crosses over an important Tjukurpa
site but almost more importantly Anangu, as custodians,
feel a sense of responsibility for visitor safety. In
the end, the choice belongs with the individual to make
up their own mind.
It's
actually quite a long and initially very steep walk
up that takes about 3 hours to complete. For those deciding
to climb, they should take plenty of water and have
good walking footwear on. Unless you want first hand
experience of life inside a commercial potato peeler,
then don't do what some tourists do, climb with leather
soled shoes. There have been a steady number of fatalities
due to climbing Uluru, some from slipping down the edges
(yow!) but most are from heart attacks that often happen
a day or 2 after the victims have actually climbed the
Rock. Also be aware of the heat as that rock gets mighty
hot in summer and Park Management do close the climb
outside certain temperature ranges.
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Uluru
- Climate
The
Arid Continent
With
much of Australia lying between 20° and 30° south, combined
with such a large land mass, it isn't surprising that
the country has its fair share of deserts. In fact Australia
is the driest continent on earth with approximately
70% of its area termed arid or semi arid. The most arid
parts of Australia are the western and central parts
of the continent and other than a few coastal patches
to the north, east and south, the rest of Australia
is termed semi-arid.
While
Central Australia is a dry place, it certainly does
rain. Alice Springs gets about 275 mm of rain a year
falling mainly between October and March. The average
rainfall decreases as you move south with the Lake Eyre
basin receiving about 100 - 140 mm per year. Alice Springs,
sitting at the base of the MacDonnell Ranges, actually
has higher average rainfall and slightly lower average
temperatures than the rest of Central Australia due
to the higher altitude.
Most
rain in Central Australia is the result of summer monsoon
activity that brings large volumes of rain to northern
Australia as well as tropical cyclones that originate
off the north-west coast. In both instances it is the
frequency and degree that the monsoon troughs or cyclones
penetrate south and inland that determine the amount
of rain that falls. Luckily it is the predominantly
flat terrain that allows these events to happen with
the frequency that they do as there are no mountain
ranges to block the moisture from the north and north-west.
Feast
and Famine
Like
most desert regions, rainfall and temperatures can vary
greatly. It is not uncommon for an average year's rainfall
to occur in a single month and sometimes, in a single
day. From 1973 - 1976 was a particularly wet period
where parts of Central Australia received double their
average rainfall over the 4 year period. Lake Eyre filled
up, which is very rare, as well as widespread flooding
throughout the interior. Between 1999 and 2001 was another
very wet period with some locations getting nearly 3
times their normal rainfall. Conversely, there are times
of sustained dry periods such as the "Federation Drought"
that occurred between 1895 and 1903 that led many pastoralists
to abandon their stations.
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Alice
Springs average monthly rainfall in mm
Without
wanting to state the obvious, summers are very hot in
Central Australia. The average maximum temperature is
over 35° in December, January and February but it is
quite common for temperatures to go over 40°, but unlikely
to exceed 45°. Cloudless days and dry air cause large
ranges in temperature between night and day, often as
much as 20°. Below average summer daytime temperatures
are usually associated with rain activity.
What
many visitors to Central Australia often don't realise
is that temperatures in winter, particularly overnight,
can be very cold with morning frosts quite common. The
lowest recorded minimum was -7.5° which happened in
1976 and the lowest maximum 7° in the same year. Over
June and July average daytime highs do go up to around
20° but with the shorter daylight hours, don't stay
there for very long. If the wind blows from the south-east
there can be quite a severe wind chill factor. There
have even been instances of snow in a few areas with
snow falling on Uluru (Ayers Rock) in July 1997.
When
travelling into Central Australia it is worth remembering
that like most desert regions, they are subject to quite
dramatic variances from the norm so it is best to be
well prepared, particularly in winter with plenty of
warm clothing.
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monthly and minimum temperatures in Celsius |
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Uluru
- Surrounding Desert, Flora and Fauna
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More
than Meets the Eye
Contrary
to what many people assume, Central Australia is anything
but a flat monotonous desert. Alice Springs is located
at the base of the MacDonnell Ranges which stretch for
over 400km in an east-west direction in parallel ridges
with flat valleys between. They were formed through
massive earth movements some 300 million years ago,
breaking up what was then a sea bed as fossil remains
testify. Being so old and weathered, generally they
extend up only around 300 metres from the valley floor
but are a sensational sight and more importantly, facilitate
a number of permanent water holes and provide sanctuary
to a large number of plant and animal species.
Just
south of the West MacDonnell Ranges are the Gardener
and James Ranges and a little further south-east is
the George Gill Range which is home to the infamous
Kings Canyon at Watarrka National Park, the site where
the cult movie 'Priscilla Queen of the Desert' was shot.
Another 120km or so further south-east lie Uluru (Ayers
Rock) and Kata Tjuta (The Olgas) which rise approximately
350 and 500 metres respectively from the desert floor.
The greater area around these two icons is a sandy plain
with low lying sand dunes.
Even
though the region of Central Australia only receives
between 100 - 300 mm of rain per annum, there is still
a rich and diverse range of plants and animals. A large
part of this diversity can be attributed to these mountain
ranges and rock formations. They can assist this diversity
in a number of ways, namely; they can influence and
often increase local rainfall, provide permanent or
semi-permanent water holes, moderate temperatures compared
to sand environments and provide shelter and refuge
in caves, overhangs and crevices.
Adapting
to the Environment
However,
many species have had to adapt to the unpredictability
of weather in Australian deserts, with periods of long
dry spells punctuated with short blasts of rain.
Plants
have adapted to the low and unreliable rainfall in two
main ways -drought tolerance and drought avoidance.
To help plants tolerate the desert many plants have
features that aid water storage and minimise water loss.
Many plants have small and / or very few leaves which
are often hard with a waxy or hairy surface. The leaves
often point downward so as to reduce the exposure to
the sun. Others have succulent leaves or underground
tubers for water storage while others have very deep
root systems that enable them to tap into underground
water supplies.
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Other
plants avoid drought by essentially remaining dormant
throughout dry periods. For annuals and biennials they
remain dormant as seeds until a major rainfall and then
spring to life, and reproduce over a relatively short
space of time. For perennials, they can lie dormant
over long periods and then spring to life again when
a decent rain comes. Many grasses display this trait
while trees of this nature show more deciduous tendencies,
sprouting new shoots and leaves after good rain.
For
desert animals there are a number of responses to the
high heat and lack of water. One of the easiest ways
for animals to avoid the heat of the day is to be nocturnal
and hunt at night. Almost all mammals in the desert
are nocturnal and about half of reptiles, although most
birds are not. Many animals have burrows underground
which moderates the temperature and means the burrows
are cooler during the day and warmer at night.
Many
species also hibernate to get around extreme climatic
conditions which lowers metabolic rate, conserving water,
energy and lowering temperature. Some desert frogs lead
a bizarre existence, burrowing underground on sandy
watercourses and claypans when it's dry and can live
like that for months or years in an inactive state.
When the rains come, they spring to life burrowing to
the surface to feed and mate and then burrow underground
again when it dries out.
All
Those Critters
Insects
are by some margin the largest group of animals in the
desert in terms of number and biomass. There is barely
a square metre in the desert that doesn’t have ants
roaming around. There is prolific reptile and lizard
fauna in Central Australia including a large variety
of snakes, geckos, goannas, skinks and dragons. It is
also home to Australia's largest lizard, the Perentie,
which can grow up to 2.5 metres in length. There are
approximately 150 species of birds and of course, kangaroos
and wallabies. Surprisingly, there is also a reasonable
variety of freshwater fish, molluscs and crustaceans
that occur in streams, waterholes and springs.
So
if thinking about visiting outback Central Australia,
expect a lot more than a barren and monotonous landscape.
It changes regularly, has a host of interesting wildlife
and will amaze at the sheer magnitude and timelessness
of it.
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About
us - 'Australia 4 Wheel Drive Rentals'
incorporating www.australia4tours.com group of websites
As one
of the Northern Territory's leading small group safari, sightseeing,
charter, tour and selfdrive specialists "Australia 4
Wheel Drive Rentals a Darwin Travel Agent License Number NT
094. Incorporating www.australia4tours.com, www.kakaduayersrocktours.com
and www.australia4wheeldriverentals.com. We seek out tours
from only experienced tour companies to some of Australia's
most famous landmarks including Uluru (Ayers Rock)
and Kakadu National Park.
From
the tropical Top End to the spiritual heart of the Red Centre,
from Aboriginal Culture to abundant wildlife - then onto Adelaide
and Cairns we have sourced an excellent range of tours for
your next vacation in Australia. Our experienced staff have
collectively over 30 years in the travel industry will help
you discover the best of these unique and special tours offers.
Australia
4 Wheel Drive Rentals
Australia Business Number 54 561 356 425
Australian
NT Licensed Travel Agent No. 094
Tel: International 0061 (0)8 89 453 338 Fax International
0061 (0)8 89 455 507
Mobile: International +61 400 278958
Email:
info@australia4tours.com
341 McMillans Road, Anula, Darwin 0812, Northern Territory,
Australia
Postal address for correspondence: P.O.Box 3410, Darwin, Northern
Territory, Australia 0801
Australia
4 Wheel Drive Rentals 2002. All rights reserved.
MISSION
STATEMENT
As one of the Northern Territory's leading small group safari
specialists "Australia 4 Wheel Drive Rentals"
(incorporating www.australia4tours.com), we seek out tours
to some of Australia's most famous landmarks including Uluru
(Ayers Rock) and Kakadu National Park. From the sunny tropical
Top End in it's dry and spectacular wet season's to the spiritual
heart of the sandy Red Centre, from Aboriginal Culture to
abundant wildlife and incredable flora - then onto Melbourne,
Perth, Adelaide, Brisbane, Sydney and Cairns we have sourced
an excellent range of tours for your next vacation in Australia.
Our
experienced staff will help you discover the best of these
unique and special tours offers across Australia with camping
safaris to one day sight seeing coach trips, ecotourisim adventure
camping safaris in Kakadu National Park and Uluru (Ayers Rock)
from Alice Springs and Ayers Rock Resort (Uluru) in Northern
Territory including learning about Aboriginal culture.
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