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Cronulla sand dunes, Kurnell Peninsula

 

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Cronulla sand dunes, Kurnell Peninsula



 
 
The Cronulla sand dunes are located on the Kurnell Peninsula in the local government area of Sutherland Shire
Sutherland Shire

The Sutherland Shire, is a Local Government Areas of Australia in the Southern Sydney region of Sydney, Australia. Geographically, it is the area to the south of Botany Bay and the Georges River....
, Sydney
Sydney

Sydney is the List of cities in Australia by population in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of approximately 4.34 million . It is the List of Australian capital cities of New South Wales, and was the site of the first British Empire colony in Australia....
  Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. The Cronulla sand dunes are a protected area that became listed on the NSW State Heritage Register on the 26th of September 2003.

History
The sand dune system which is also referred to as the Kurnell sand dune is estimated to be about 15,000 years old. It was formed when the sea reached its present level and began to stabilise, between 9,000 and 6,000 BC.






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Encyclopedia


The Cronulla sand dunes are located on the Kurnell Peninsula in the local government area of Sutherland Shire
Sutherland Shire

The Sutherland Shire, is a Local Government Areas of Australia in the Southern Sydney region of Sydney, Australia. Geographically, it is the area to the south of Botany Bay and the Georges River....
, Sydney
Sydney

Sydney is the List of cities in Australia by population in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of approximately 4.34 million . It is the List of Australian capital cities of New South Wales, and was the site of the first British Empire colony in Australia....
  Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. The Cronulla sand dunes are a protected area that became listed on the NSW State Heritage Register on the 26th of September 2003.

History


The sand dune system which is also referred to as the Kurnell sand dune is estimated to be about 15,000 years old. It was formed when the sea reached its present level and began to stabilise, between 9,000 and 6,000 BC. The Georges, Cooks and Towra Rivers flowed to the south-east beneath the present sand dune system near Wanda and joined the ocean at Bate Bay. This resulted in the isolation of Kurnell, (which was an island) from the mainland. The rivers eventually became blocked with accumulating sand and sediment
Sediment

Sediment is any particulate matter that can be sediment transport by fluid dynamics, and which eventually is deposited.Sediments are most often transported by water transported by wind and glaciers....
 as the sea level rose. As the rivers gradually silted up they were forced into changing their course and were led out to sea via La Perouse
La Perouse, New South Wales

La Perouse is a suburb in South-eastern Sydney Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. La Perouse is located about 14 kilometres south-east of the Sydney central business district, in the City of Randwick....
 rather than continue to maintain an opening in an ever-growing sand barrier near Wanda. This resulted in a tombolo
Tombolo

A tombolo or sometimes ayre is a deposition landform in which an island is attached to the mainland by a narrow piece of land such as a spit or bar ....
 being formed and joined Kurnell with the Cronulla mainland. The deepest part of the ancient river channel now lies 100 meters below the surface at the southern end of the peninsula, near Wanda Beach.

Aboriginal Culture

The sand hills of Kurnell possess historical, cultural, scientific and natural significance as a place of early Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
an contact with the Gweagal Aborigines. The site has significant Aboriginal signs of habitation, from carvings, ceremonial sites, midden
Midden

A midden, also known as a kitchen midden, or a shell heap, is a landfill. The word is of Scandinavian via Middle English derivation, but is used by archaeology worldwide to describe any kind of feature containing waste products relating to day-to-day human life....
s and sites of flaked sharpening stones
Flint (tool)

Chipped stone tools were made by stone age peoples worldwide. Paleolithic tools were relatively simple, repeated small flakes being struck or pressed from a cobble or nucleus until the required shape was achieved....
. The site is of significant interest to the Aboriginal community as many of the other hills and dunes that were inhabited by their ancestor
Ancestor

An ancestor is a parent or the parent of an ancestor .Two individuals have a genetics relationship if one is the ancestor of the other, or if they share a common ancestor....
s have now disappeared. As the dunes move or drift, most of the sites once occupied by the Aboriginal people have been covered and preserved.

The original inhabitants on the Kurnell Peninsula were the Gweagal
Gweagal

The Gweagal are a clan of the Tharawal tribe of Indigenous Australians, who are traditional custodians of the southern geographic areas of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia....
 people, a clan of the Tharawal (or Dharawal) tribe
Tribe

A tribe, viewed historically or developmentally, consists of a social group existing before the development of, or outside of, states.Many anthropologists use the term to refer to societies organized largely on the basis of kinship, especially corporate descent groups ....
 who occupied the region for thousands of years. Their tribe spanned the area’s between the Cook's and George's Rivers from the shores of Botany Bay and westwards towards Liverpool
Liverpool, New South Wales

Liverpool is a suburb in South-western Sydney Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Liverpool is located 32 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district, and is the administrative centre of the Local Government Areas in Australia of the City of Liverpool, New South Wales....
. According to a Gweagal elder, Dharawal is similar to a state and Gweagal is similar to a shire within the state, Cunnel (Kurnell) is a family village within the shire. A tribe consisted of approximately 20 to 50 people who lived in their own territory. They had no written language and each tribe had its own dialect. They knew how to light fires long before the arrival of white man
White people

White people is a term which is usually used to refer to Human characterized, at least in part, by the light Human skin color. It often refers narrowly to people claiming ancestry exclusively from Europe....
. Their clothing consisted of a woven hair sash
Sash

A sash is a cloth belt used to hold a robe together, and is usually tied about the waist. The Japanese equivalent of a sash, obi , serves to hold a kimono or yukata together....
 in which they used to carry tools and weapons and sometimes the optional possum-skin coat for the winter season. The Gweagal Aborigines were the northernmost tribe of the Dharawal nation. They fished from canoes or from the shore using barbed spears and fishing lines with hooks in and around Botany Bay
Botany Bay

Botany Bay is a Headlands and bays in Sydney, New South Wales, a few kilometres south of the Sydney central business district. The Cooks River and the Georges River are the two major tributaries that flow into the bay....
 and the Georges River
Georges River

The Georges River is a waterway in the state of New South Wales in Australia. It rises to the south-west of Sydney near the coal mining town of Appin, New South Wales, and then flows north past Campbelltown, New South Wales, roughly parallelling the Main South Railway....
. Waterfowl could be caught in the swamplands (Towra Point), and the variety of soils would have supported a variety of edible and medicinal plants. Birds and their eggs, possums, wallabies and goannas were also a part of their staple diet, in which they made fur coats and ceremonial attire. The abundance of fish and other foodstuffs in these heavily timbered waterways meant that these natives were less nomad
Nomad

Nomadic people, , also known as nomads, are communities of people who move from one place to another, rather than Settler in one location....
ic than those of Outback Australia.
Outback

The Outback refers to remote arid areas of Australia, although the term colloquially can refer to any lands outside of the main urban areas....
 The various middens, rock carvings and paintings in the area confirm this.The Gweagal Aborigines were the guardians of the sacred white clay pits in their territory. Members of the tribe walked hundreds of miles to collect the clay, it was considered sacred amongst the indigenous locals and had many uses. They used it to line the base of their canoes so they could light fires, and also as a white body paint, (as witnessed by Captain James Cook). Colour was added to the clay using berries, which produced a brightly coloured paint that was used in ceremonies. It was also eaten as a medicine, an antacid. Geebungs and other local berries were mixed in the clay and it was eaten as a dietary supplement with zinc. The Gweagal Aborigines made first contact (of a hostile nature) with James Cook and his crew, occupying the area which is now 'Captain Cooks Landing Place Reserve'. Today members of the Tharawal people
Tharawal people

The Tharawal people were the Australian Aborigine inhabitants of southern Sydney and the Illawarra region in 1788, when the first European colonists arrived....
 still live near the Cronulla sand dunes and participate in their traditional Aboriginal art and culture.

European Settlement


The Kurnell Peninsula, also the site of the Cronulla Sand Dune System was the first landing place for Captain James Cook in Australia. On 29 April 1770, HM Bark Endeavour
HM Bark Endeavour

His Majesty's Bark Endeavour was a 10-gun Royal Navy barque commanded by Lieutenant James Cook on his First voyage of James Cook, to Australia and New Zealand in 1769-71....
 landed in Botany Bay
Botany Bay

Botany Bay is a Headlands and bays in Sydney, New South Wales, a few kilometres south of the Sydney central business district. The Cooks River and the Georges River are the two major tributaries that flow into the bay....
 and Cook stepped ashore. Shortly after, James Cook looked down from the sand hills at what is now known as Cronulla Beach. The sand dunes were completely covered in vegetation, so Cook made no mention of any sand dunes during his visit to the Kurnell peninsula. Captain Cook along with his crew stayed in Botany Bay for eight days. During his visit he collected botanical specimens, mapped the area and tried to make contact (unsuccessfully) with the indigenous population. When Cook reported back to England he said that the land was suitable for agriculture, it had sandy soil and the area was lightly wooded.

Less than 100 years after Captain Cook's landing, most of the original vegetation
Vegetation

refers to the flora system of a specific region....
 had been cleared and burnt, larger trees had been ring barked or simply cut down. By 1868 the forests of blackbutt and ironbark were cut down for houses and bridge construction whilst the remaining vegetation was cleared for grazing.

Captain Arthur Phillip
Arthur Phillip

Admiral Arthur Phillip Royal Navy was a British naval Admiraland colonial administrator. Phillip was appointed Governors of New South Wales of New South Wales, the first European colony on the Australian continent, and was the founder of the site which is now the city of Sydney....
, arriving with the First Fleet
First Fleet

First Fleet is the name given to the 11 ships which sailed from Great Britain on 13 May 1787 to establish the first European colony in New South Wales....
, stepped ashore on 18 January 1788, after following Cook’s advice. They began to clear land and dig wells, but a week later decided to abandon the site and sail north to Port Jackson (Sydney Harbour).

The first land grant
Land grant

A land grant is a gift of real estate - land or privileges - made by a government or other authority as a reward for services to an individual, especially as rewards for military service....
 was issued in 1815 when a whaler and merchant by the name of James Birnie, was given of land and of saltwater marshes on the Kurnell Peninsula. The grant included Captain Cook’s landing place. He called it ‘Alpha Farm’, and built himself a cottage
Cottage

In modern usage, a cottage is a dwelling, typically in a rural, or semi-rural location . In the United Kingdom, the term cottage tends to denote a rurally- located one and a half storey property, where on the second one has to walk into the eaves in order to look through the windows, which are generally located in dormers ....
 there. In 1801 John Connell, an ironmonger
Ironmonger

Today, the term Ironmonger refers to a retailer of iron goods. This has often been expanded to include consumer goods made of aluminium, brass, or other metals, as well as plastics....
, arrived in Sydney as a free settler. In 1821 Connell was granted at Quibray Bay next to Birnie’s grant.

When James Birnie was declared insane in 1828 John Connell gained possession of his property. John Connell now had full ownership of the Kurnell Peninsular. Connell erected a new house, which he named ‘Alpha House,’ built on the foundations of Birnie’s original cottage.

James Connell and his two grandsons, Elias and John Laycock, were the first land owners to log the peninsula. They began to harvest timber from the estate in 1835. In the 1840s a canal
Canal

Canals are artificial channels for water. There are two types of canals: Aqueduct canals, which are used for the conveyance and delivery of water, and waterways, which are navigable transportation canals used for passage of goods and people, often connected to existing lakes, rivers, or oceans....
 from Woolooware
Woolooware, New South Wales

Woolooware is a suburb in Southern Sydney Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Woolooware is located 24 kilometres south of the Sydney central business district in the Sutherland Shire....
 Bay was built so that logs could be floated into Botany Bay, loaded onto ships and sailed up to Sydney. When John Connell passed away in 1848, he left his estate to his two grandsons. The first Crown land auctions in the area took place in 1856. It was here that John Connell Laycock bought another . This increased the size of the estate to . Thomas Holt purchased Laycock’s entire estate on the peninsula in 1861 for £3275. Holt, originally from Yorkshire
Yorkshire

Yorkshire is a Historic counties of England of northern England and the largest in Great Britain. Because of its great size, over time functions were increasingly undertaken by its subdivisions, which have been subject to History of local government in Yorkshire....
, sailed into Sydney sometime in 1842. He made his fortune during the gold rushes of the early 1850s. Holt moved to Sutherland
Sutherland, New South Wales

Sutherland is a suburb in Southern Sydney Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Sutherland is located 26 kilometres south of the Sydney central business district and is the administrative centre for the Local Government Areas in Australia of the Sutherland Shire....
 and further increased the size of his property to approximately . He erected several mansions, ran his ‘Sutherland Estate’ in the English manner, and travelled into Sydney to manage his business affairs.

In 1868, Holt’s land was still mostly uncleared virgin bushland. After Holt had cleared most of the timber, he began to plant grass seeds imported from Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
. The Sutherland Estate
Estate (house)

An estate comprises the houses and outbuildings and supporting farmland and woods that surround the gardens and grounds of a very large property, such as a country house or mansion....
 was divided into eleven portions. It was then divided into 60 smaller paddocks using Brushwood fencing. The fence posts used to divide these lots can still be found in Towra Point
Towra Point Nature Reserve

Towra Point Nature Reserve is a nature reserve of in southern Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is located on the southern shores of Botany Bay at Kurnell, New South Wales, within the Sutherland Shire....
, which is also part of the Kurnell Peninsula.

Holt attempted grazing, first with sheep
Sheep

#REDIRECT Domestic sheep...
 which had to be destroyed when they became infected with footrot, and then with cattle
Cattle

Cattle, colloquially referred to as cows, are domestication ungulates, a member of the subfamily Bovinae of the family Bovidae. They are raised as livestock for meat , dairy products , leather and as draft animals ....
. The land on his estate was not suited for intensive grazing
Grazing

Grazing generally describes a type of predation in which a herbivore feeds on plants , or more broadly on a multicellular autotrophs . Grazing differs from true predation because the organism being eaten is not death, and it differs from parasitism as the two organisms do not symbiosis, nor is the grazer necessarily so limited in what it can...
, so after most of the trees were felled, herds of cattle then removed the stabilizing grass cover and exposed the sand dunes underneath. Large expanses of sand had been exposed along the coastline. The dune system that covers an area of , measuring 40 meters above and 90 meters below sea level, became unstable and began to move north at a rate of 8 meters a year. Land clearing and cattle grazing resulted in a degraded landscape, but created the distinctive Cronulla sand dunes of today. Between 1920 and 1930 the sand hills were acknowledged to be a deserted and desecrated landscape
Landscape

Landscape comprises the visible features of an area of land, including physical elements such as landforms, living elements of flora and fauna, abstract elements such as lighting and weather conditions, and human elements, for instance human activity or the built environment....
, and their economic value was minimal. However, by the 1920s Cronulla had become notable for its beaches with over five kilometres of sand stretched along the coastline. The bare sand dunes became synonymous with Cronulla. Between the 1920s and the 1950s the large expanses of sand became a popular playground for generations of children for activities such as sandboarding
Sandboarding

Sandboarding is a recreational activity similar to snowboarding that takes place on sand dunes rather than snow-covered hills. For some, it involves riding across or down a dune while standing with both feet strapped to a board, while others use a board with no bindings....
.

In more recent times, the site has been used as a backdrop for several Australian movies, such as the epic 40,000 Horsemen (1941),
Forty Thousand Horsemen

Forty Thousand Horsemen is a 1940 Australian war film directed by Charles Chauvel. The film tells the story of the Australian Light Horse cavalry which operated in the desert at the Sinai and Palestine Campaign during World War I....
 The Rats of Tobruk
The Rats of Tobruk

The Rats of Tobruk was the name given to the soldiers of the garrison who held the Libyan port of Tobruk against the Deutsches Afrikakorps, during the Siege of Tobruk in World War II....
 and more recently Mad Max 3.

In January 1965 the bodies of two 15-year-old girls were found in the sand hills just off Wanda Beach. They had been bashed, stabbed and sexually assaulted. The murderer has not yet been identified and the case remains one of Australia’s most notorious, unsolved crimes, known as the 'Wanda Beach Murders
Wanda Beach Murders

The Wanda Beach Murders refers to the case of the unsolved murders of Marianne Schmidt and Christine Sharrock at Sydney's Wanda Beach on 11 January 1965....
'.

Sand mining

In 1933 the Sutherland Shire Council asked the Government to set aside the between Cronulla Golf Club and Kurnell as a reserve. In April 1937, Haymarket Land and Building Co. offered Sutherland Shire Council of land near the entrance to Kurnell for 8 pounds per acre. Most of the councillors wanted to declare the site a National Park. They wanted it to be titled "the Birthplace of Australian History and Gateway to Captain Cook's Landing Place." The dunes at Towra Point were to be included in this park. The Council was evenly split, but Joe Monro, the Council's President [now referred to as the Mayor], argued that because the site "was nothing but sand it was completely useless". He decided to vote against the purchase. The sandhills were doomed from that point. The Government couldn't see any reason to establish another National Reserve so near to Captain Cook's Landing Place Reserve.

In the 1930s the Holt family began its sand mining
Sand mining

Sand mining is a practice that is becoming an ecological problem as the demand for sand increases in industry and construction. Sand is mining from beach and inland dunes and dredging from ocean beds and river beds....
 operations to supply the expanding Sydney
Sydney

Sydney is the List of cities in Australia by population in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of approximately 4.34 million . It is the List of Australian capital cities of New South Wales, and was the site of the first British Empire colony in Australia....
 building market and continued until 1990 with an estimate of over 70 million tonnes of sand being removed. The sand has been valued for many decades by the Sydney building industry, mainly because of its high crushed shell content and lack of organic matter. The site has now been reduced to a few remnant dunes and deep water-filled pits which are now being filled with demolition waste from Sydney's building sites. Removal of the sand has significantly weakened the peninsula's capacity to resist storms. Ocean waves pounding against the reduced Kurnell dune system have threatened to break through into Botany Bay, especially during the storms of May and June 1974 and August, 1998.

Caltex oil refinery

In 1951 Caltex Oil Company approached Sutherland Shire Council for the first time with a proposal to build an oil refinery at Kurnell. It required a large block of land of approximately in size. At first the Council rejected this proposal. The matter sparked a number of protests from environmental groups and those concerned that the refinery would mar Captain Cook's Landing Place Reserve. Not long after the proposal, Sutherland Shire Council withdrew its objection, and what became known as the Australian Oil Refinery Company, a subsidiary of Caltex, began operating in 1954. Whilst the refinery was being built, the Council also built Captain Cook Drive to allow access to the refinery.

Further development


Industrialisation of the Kurnell Peninsula continues to be an ongoing problem amongst community groups and environmentalists. Plans for further development at the site has been cause for continual public protest between developers, locals and environmental groups. A proposal to build a chemical plant by the German pharmaceutical company, Bayer in 1986 resulted in public protests, environmental objections and a Commission of Inquiry. The plan never went ahead on the grounds of both environmental and economic issues. In 2004 a major industrial development at the Kurnell site just north of Wanda Beach has been given the go-ahead by the Land and Environment Court. This has prompted fears that the State Government will now approve the construction of hundreds of homes on the site. The court upheld an appeal by Australand, allowing it to build on one-third of the 62-hectare site, "subject to conditions such as safeguarding the environment."

Sutherland Shire Council had objected to the proposal, citing issues such as the impact on the threatened green and golden bell frog. The Council also put forth their concerns about the ecosystem, the two key areas in question were the sandhills and the freshwater wetland area. The court's commissioners rejected Sutherland Shire's case, ruling in favour of the Austaland development. The court also accepted that the Wanda sand hills had to be revegetated to stop the sand from filling up ponds and swallowing up the vegetation in the area. The council has spent $650,000 on the case and wants the area set aside for tourism, environmental conservation and heritage.

Sandminers, aware that their resources are dwindling, are looking to further profit from the stripped land by building residential housing or recreational resorts or industrial complexes. In 2000 a proposal by Australand for 250 houses on the same site was called in by the then Minister for Planning, Andrew Refshauge. The Opposition said the Land Court's decision could encourage the Government to allow for the construction of a large housing development on the site.

Geology and Geomorphology

The geology
Geology

Geology is the science and study of the solid and liquid matter that constitute the Earth. The field of geology encompasses the study of the composition, structural geology, physical properties, dynamics, and History of the Earth of Earth materials, and the processes by which they are formed, moved, and changed....
 and geomorphology
Geomorphology

Geomorphology is the scientific study of landforms and the processes that shape them. Geomorphologists seek to understand why landscapes look the way they do: to understand landform history and dynamics, and predict future changes through a combination of field observation, physical experiment, and numerical mathematical model....
 of the area is characterised by an island of outcropping bedrock on the eastern headland and joined to other bedrock outcrops on its western end by a sand spit which forms the main part of the headland. The Peninsula still has quite a view overlapping transgressive barrier dunes and it is believed that they have shifted north from Bate Bay
Bate Bay

Bate Bay is a Headlands and bays in Southern Sydney Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The bay is south of the Kurnell, New South Wales peninsula and its foreshore makes up the beaches of Cronulla, New South Wales....
. Older stable parabolic
Parabola

In mathematics, the parabola is a conic section, the intersection of a right circular conical surface and a plane parallel to a generating straight line of that surface....
 dunes occur on a series of north to south oriented ridges and while most of the vegetation has been cleared, some dry sclerophyll
Sclerophyll

Sclerophyll is a type of vegetation that has hard leaf and short internodes . The word comes from the Greek sclero and phyllon . Sclerophyllous plants occur in all parts of the world but are most typical of Australia....
 woodland remains.

Fitness training

Amateur and professional athletes on a daily basis push themselves to exhaustion in unforgiving soft-sand conditioning sessions at the Cronulla sandhills. This is to either keep fit, stay in shape or prepare for amateur and, or professional sporting events, events like Rugby league
Rugby league

Rugby league football is a competitive Full-contact sport team sport played with a spheroid-shaped ball by two teams of thirteen on a rectangular grass field....
, Rugby union
Rugby union

Rugby union is a competitive outdoor contact sport, played with an oval ball, by two teams of 15 players. It is one of the two main codes of rugby football, the other being rugby league....
, Cricket
Cricket

Cricket is a Bat-and-ball games team sport that originated in southern England. The earliest definite reference is dated 1598, and it is now played in more than 100 countries....
, Soccer and boxing
Boxing

Boxing is a combat sport where two participants, generally of similar human weight, fight each other with their fists. Boxing is supervised by a referee and is typically engaged in during a series of one to three-minute intervals called rounds....
.

At one stage professional cricketers Glenn McGrath
Glenn McGrath

Glenn Donald McGrath Order of Australia , nicknamed "Pigeon" is a former Australia national cricket team player. He is one of the most highly regarded fast-medium pace bowler in History of cricket, and a leading contributor to Australia's domination of world cricket since the mid-1990s to early 21st century....
, Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke (cricketer)

Michael John Clarke is an Australian cricketer and vice captain of the national team. Nicknamed 'Pup', 'Nemo' or 'Clarkey', he is a right-handed batsman, highly-regarded fielder and occasional left-arm orthodox spin bowler....
, Ricky Ponting
Ricky Ponting

Ricky Thomas Ponting is a professional cricketer who is the current Australian national cricket captains of the Australia national cricket team in One Day International, Twenty20 International and Test cricket....
, Brett Lee
Brett Lee

Brett Lee is an Australian cricketer.After breaking into the Australian Test team, Lee was recognised as one of the fastest bowlers in world cricket....
 and Brad Haddin trained at the sand dunes on daily basis in preparation for international test cricket. Anthony Mundine
Anthony Mundine

Anthony Mundine is an Indigenous Australian boxer. He is a former two-time World Boxing Association Super Middleweight champion and a former rugby league player....
 held a one-hour workout in the sandhills to prepare for his bout with WBA
World Boxing Association

The World Boxing Association is a boxing organization that sanctions official matches, and awards the WBA world championship title, at the professional level....
 super-middleweight champion Mikkel Kessler
Mikkel Kessler

Mikkel Kessler is a Denmark professional boxing. In his professional career he has a record of 41-1 and 31 knockouts. Mikkel Kessler is the current WBA supermiddleweight champion of the world....
.

Amateur and professional Rugby league teams, especially those of the NRL also use the sandhills.

At inclines of 45 degrees or more, these sandhills rise upwards and all but collapse downwards in hour-long sprint sessions. According to the conditioning coach of the Australian Cricket team Jock Campbell, these sandhills, along with gym programs is the best way to train athletes for endurance work. "Working in the sandhills is hard aerobic interval training, and good specific leg training without the shock on knees and ankles.

See also

  • Tourism in Sydney
    Tourism in Sydney

    Tourism in Sydney, Australia forms an important part of the city's economy. The city received 7.6 million domestic visitors and 2.7 million international visitors in year ending March 2008....