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Flinders Ranges



 
 
Flinders Ranges is the largest mountain range
Mountain range

A mountain range is a chain of mountains bordered by highlands or separated from other mountains by mountain pass or valleys. Individual mountains within the same mountain range do not necessarily have the same geology, though they often do; they may be a mix of different orogeny, for example volcanoes, uplifted mountains or Fold mountains...
 in South Australia, which starts approximately 200 km north west of Adelaide. The discontinuous ranges stretch for over 430 km from Port Pirie to Lake Callabonna
Lake Callabonna

Lake Callabonna is a dry salt lake with little to no vegetation in South Australia.The first pastoralists in the area were the Ragless brothers in 1881, who moved there from the northern Flinders Ranges, opening a sheep-run....
. Its most characteristic landmark is Wilpena Pound
Wilpena Pound

Wilpena Pound is a natural amphitheatre of mountains located 429 kilometres north of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia in the heart of the Flinders Ranges National Park....
, a large, sickle
Sickle

A sickle is a hand-held agricultural tool with a curved blade typically used for harvesting cereal crop or cutting grass for hay. The inside of the curve is sharp, so that the user can draw or swing the blade against the base of the crop, catching it in the curve and slicing it at the same time....
-shaped, natural amphitheatre
Amphitheatre

An amphitheatre is an open-air venue for spectator sports, concerts, rallies, or theatrical performances. There are two similar, but distinct types of amphitheatres: Ancient amphitheatres, built by the ancient Rome, were large central performance spaces surrounded by ascending seating, and were commonly used for spectator sports; these comp...
 covering nearly 80 square kilometres, containing the range's highest peak, St Mary Peak
St Mary Peak

St Mary Peak , is situated on the northwestern side of Wilpena Pound, and is the highest peak in the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. It lies within the Flinders Ranges National Park....
 (1170m), and adjoining the Flinders Ranges National Park. The northern ranges host the Arkaroola wilderness sanctuary and the Vulkathunha-Gammon Ranges National Park
Vulkathunha-Gammon Ranges National Park

The Gammon Ranges are part of the northern Flinders Ranges, immediately southwest of and adjacent to Arkaroola. They encompass some of the most rugged and spectacular country in South Australia....
.






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Flinders Ranges is the largest mountain range
Mountain range

A mountain range is a chain of mountains bordered by highlands or separated from other mountains by mountain pass or valleys. Individual mountains within the same mountain range do not necessarily have the same geology, though they often do; they may be a mix of different orogeny, for example volcanoes, uplifted mountains or Fold mountains...
 in South Australia, which starts approximately 200 km north west of Adelaide. The discontinuous ranges stretch for over 430 km from Port Pirie to Lake Callabonna
Lake Callabonna

Lake Callabonna is a dry salt lake with little to no vegetation in South Australia.The first pastoralists in the area were the Ragless brothers in 1881, who moved there from the northern Flinders Ranges, opening a sheep-run....
. Its most characteristic landmark is Wilpena Pound
Wilpena Pound

Wilpena Pound is a natural amphitheatre of mountains located 429 kilometres north of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia in the heart of the Flinders Ranges National Park....
, a large, sickle
Sickle

A sickle is a hand-held agricultural tool with a curved blade typically used for harvesting cereal crop or cutting grass for hay. The inside of the curve is sharp, so that the user can draw or swing the blade against the base of the crop, catching it in the curve and slicing it at the same time....
-shaped, natural amphitheatre
Amphitheatre

An amphitheatre is an open-air venue for spectator sports, concerts, rallies, or theatrical performances. There are two similar, but distinct types of amphitheatres: Ancient amphitheatres, built by the ancient Rome, were large central performance spaces surrounded by ascending seating, and were commonly used for spectator sports; these comp...
 covering nearly 80 square kilometres, containing the range's highest peak, St Mary Peak
St Mary Peak

St Mary Peak , is situated on the northwestern side of Wilpena Pound, and is the highest peak in the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. It lies within the Flinders Ranges National Park....
 (1170m), and adjoining the Flinders Ranges National Park. The northern ranges host the Arkaroola wilderness sanctuary and the Vulkathunha-Gammon Ranges National Park
Vulkathunha-Gammon Ranges National Park

The Gammon Ranges are part of the northern Flinders Ranges, immediately southwest of and adjacent to Arkaroola. They encompass some of the most rugged and spectacular country in South Australia....
. The southern part of the ranges are notable for the Pichi Richi
Pichi Richi Railway

The Pichi Richi Railway is a tourist railway using parts of the former Central Australia Railway.It is headquartered in Quorn, South Australia and runs through the Pichi Richi Pass to Port Augusta, South Australia....
 scenic railway and Mount Remarkable National Park
Mount Remarkable National Park

Mount Remarkable is a national park in South Australia , 238 km north of Adelaide, Australia.Edward John Eyre named Mount Remarkable in June 1840....
.

Several small areas in the Flinders Ranges are protected as National Parks. These include the Flinders Ranges National Park
Flinders Ranges National Park

The Flinders Ranges are South Australia's largest mountain range, and is situated approximately 400 km north of Adelaide, Australia. The discontinuous ranges stretch for over 430 km from Port Pirie to Lake Callabonna....
 near Wilpena Pound and the Mount Remarkable National Park
Mount Remarkable National Park

Mount Remarkable is a national park in South Australia , 238 km north of Adelaide, Australia.Edward John Eyre named Mount Remarkable in June 1840....
 in the southern part of the ranges near Melrose. The Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary is a scenic protected area at the northern end of the ranges. In addition, the Dutchman's Stern Conservation Park, west of Quorn, and the Mount Brown Conservation Park, south of Quorn, are protected areas of the ranges. The Heysen Trail
Heysen Trail

The Heysen Trail is a long distance walking trail in South Australia. It runs from Parachilna Gorge, in the Flinders Ranges via the Adelaide Hills to Cape Jervis on the Fleurieu Peninsula and is approximately 1200 km in length....
  and Mawson Trail
Mawson Trail

The Mawson Trail is a long-distance cycling trail in South Australia starting just east of Adelaide in the Adelaide Hills and extending to the Outback town of Blinman, South Australia in the Flinders Ranges....
  run for several hundred kilometres along the ranges providing scenic long distance routes for walkers, cyclists and horse-riders.

Geology


The Flinders Ranges are largely composed of folded and faulted sediments of the Adelaide Geosyncline
Adelaide Geosyncline

The Adelaide Geosyncline is a major geological province in central South Australia. It stretches from the northernmost parts of the Flinders Ranges, narrowing at the Fleurieu Peninsula and extending into Kangaroo Island, and composes the two major mountain ranges of the State: the Flinders Ranges and the Mount Lofty Ranges....
. This very thick sequence of sediments were deposited in a large basin during the Neoproterozoic
Neoproterozoic

The Neoproterozoic Era is the unit of geologic time scale from 1,000 to 542 +/- 0.3 million years ago. The terminal Era of the formal Proterozoic Eon , it is further subdivided into the Tonian, Cryogenian, and Ediacaran Periods....
 on the passive margin of the ancient continent of Rodinia
Rodinia

In geology, Rodinia is the name of a supercontinent, a continent which contained most or all of Earth's landmass. According to plate tectonic reconstructions, Rodinia existed between 1100 and 750 million years ago, in the Neoproterozoic era ....
. During the Cambrian
Cambrian

The Cambrian is a geologic period that began about Mya at the end of the Proterozoic eon and ended about Ma with the beginning of the Ordovician period ....
, approximately 540 million years ago, the area underwent the Delamerian orogeny
Orogeny

Orogeny refers to natural mountain building, and may be studied as a tectonic structural event, as a geographical event, and a chronological event: orogenic events cause distinctive structural phenomena and related tectonic activity, affect certain regions of rocks and crust, and happen within a specific period of time....
 where the geosynclinal sequence was folded and faulted into a large mountain range. Since this time the area has undergone erosion resulting in the relatively low ranges today.

Most of the high ground and ridgetops in the Flinders are sequences of quartzite
Quartzite

Quartzite is a hard metamorphic rock which was originally sandstone. Sandstone is converted into quartzite through heating and pressure usually related to tectonics compression within orogeny....
s that outcrop along strike. The high walls of Wilpena Pound
Wilpena Pound

Wilpena Pound is a natural amphitheatre of mountains located 429 kilometres north of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia in the heart of the Flinders Ranges National Park....
 are formed by the outcropping beds of the eponymous Pound Quartzite in a synclinal structure. The same formation forms many of the other high parts of the Flinders, including the high plateau of the Gammon Ranges and the Heysen Range. Cuesta
Cuesta

In structural geology and geomorphology, a cuesta is a ridge formed by gently tilted sedimentary rock strata in a homoclinal structure. Cuestas have a steep slope, where the rock layers are exposed on their edges, called an escarpment or, if more steep, a cliff....
 forms are also very common in the Flinders.

The Ranges are particularly renowned for the Ediacara Hills
Ediacara Hills

Ediacara Hills are a range of low hills in the northern part of the Flinders Ranges of South Australia, around 650 km north of Adelaide. The area has many old copper and silver mining from mining activity in the late 19th century....
, north-west of Leigh Creek. This was the site of discovery in 1946 of some of the oldest fossil evidence of animal life. Since then similar fossils have been found in many other parts of the ranges, though their locations are a closely-kept secret due to the risk of sites being desecrated. In 2004 a new geological period, the Ediacaran
Ediacaran

The Ediacaran Period is the last geological period of the Neoproterozoic Era and of the Proterozoic Eon, immediately preceding the Cambrian Period, the first period of the Paleozoic Era and of the Phanerozoic Eon....
 Period was formed to mark the appearance of Ediacara biota.

Flora and fauna

The flora
Flora

In botany, flora has two meanings. The first meaning, flora of an area or of time period, refers to all plant life occurring in an area or time period, especially the naturally occurring or indigenous plant life....
 of the Flinders Ranges is comprised largely of species adapted to a semi-arid environment such as sugar gum, cypress-pine
Callitris

Callitris is a genus of coniferous trees in the Cupressaceae . There are 15 species in the genus, of which 13 are native to Australia and the other two native to New Caledonia....
, mallee
Mallee

Mallee may refer to:* Mallee , the habit of woody plants that grow with multiple stems from underground lignotubers* Mallee , a biogeographic region in southern Western Australia...
, and black oak
Black oak

Eastern Black oak , or more commonly known as simply Black Oak is an oak in the List of Quercus species#Section Lobatae group of oaks. It is native to Eastern United States North America from southern Ontario south to northern Florida and southern Maine west to northeastern Texas....
. Moister areas near Wilpena Pound support grevillea
Grevillea

Grevillea is a diverse genus of about 360 species of evergreen flowering plants in the protea family Proteaceae, native to Australia, New Guinea, New Caledonia, and Sulawesi....
s, Guinea flower
Hibbertia

Hibbertia, or Guinea flower, is a genus of perennial shrubs, trailing shrubs and climbers of the family Dilleniaceae. The five-petalled flowers of all species are varying shades of yellow, with the exception of Hibbertia stellaris, Hibbertia miniata and Hibbertia selkii , a recently named species from the Stirling Ranges, whi...
s, lilies and fern
Fern

A fern is any one of a group of about 20,000 species of plants classified in the phylum or division Pteridophyta, also known as Filicophyta....
s. Reed
Phragmites

Phragmites australis, the common reed, is a large perennial plant Poaceae found in wetlands throughout temperate and tropical regions of the world....
s and sedge
Cyperaceae

The family Cyperaceae, or the sedges, is a taxon of monocotyledon flowering plants that superficially resemble Poaceae or Juncaceae. The family is large, with some 4,000 species described in about 70 genera....
s grow near permanent water sources such as spring
Spring (hydrosphere)

A spring is a point where groundwater flows out from the ground, and is thus where the aquifer surface meets the ground surface.Dependent upon the constancy of the water source , a spring may be ephemeral or Perennial stream ....
s and waterhole
Waterhole

A waterhole, can refer to:* In Australia, a waterhole is a permanent source of water, particularly in the desert. It is usually a deep hole in rock that has filled with rainwater or is fed by the Great Artesian Basin, water beneath the ground in Central Australia....
s.

Since the eradication of dingo
Dingo

|- style = "text-align:center"|style="background: pink;" |Breed standards |- style = "text-align:center"||}The Dingo also known as Warrigal, Maliki, Mirigung, Decker Dog, Boololomo, Repeti, or Australian Native Dog, is a feral dog which mostly lives independently from humans....
s and the establishment of permanent waterholes for stock, the numbers of red kangaroo
Red Kangaroo

The Red Kangaroo is the largest of all kangaroos, the largest mammal native to Australia, and the largest surviving marsupial. It is found across mainland Australia, avoiding only the more fertile areas in the south, the east coast, and the northern rainforests....
s, western grey kangaroo
Western Grey Kangaroo

The Western Grey Kangaroo is a large and very common macropod, found across almost the entire southern part of Australia, from just south of Shark Bay to coastal South Australia, western Victoria, Australia, and the entire Murray-Darling Basin in New South Wales and Queensland....
s and euro
Wallaroo

A wallaroo is any of three closely related species of moderately large macropod, intermediate in size between the kangaroos and the wallaby. The name "wallaroo" is a portmanteau of wallaby and kangaroo....
s in the Flinders Ranges have increased. The yellow-footed rock-wallaby
Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby

The Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby is a member of the macropodidae family .The Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby is grey-brown with a yellow striped tail, white underside, yellow forearms and yellow feet....
, which neared extinction after the arrival of Europeans due to hunting and predation by fox
Red Fox

The Red Fox is a mammal of the order Carnivora. In the British Isles, where there are no longer any other native wild canids, it is referred to simply as "the fox"....
es, has now stabilized. Other endemic marsupials include dunnart
Dunnart

Dunnarts are furry narrow-footed marsupials the size of a mouse. They are mainly insectivore. A male dunnart's Y chromosome has only 4 genes, making it the smallest known mammalian Y chromosome....
s, planigale
Planigale

The genus Planigale are small carnivorous marsupials found in Australia and New Guinea. It is the only genus in the Planigalini tribe of the subfamily Sminthopsinae....
s and echidna
Echidna

Echidnas , also known as spiny anteaters, are four Extant taxon mammal species belonging to the Tachyglossidae Family of the monotremes....
s. Insectivorous bat
Bat

Bats are mammals in the order Chiroptera. The forelimbs of all bats are developed as wings, making them the only mammals naturally capable of sustained flight ....
s make up significant proportion of mammals in the area. There are a large number of bird species including parrot
Parrot

File:Ara ararauna -eating -Wilhelma Zoo-8-2rc.jpgParrots, also known as psittacines , are birds of the roughly 372 species in 86 genus that make up the order Psittaciformes, found in most warm and tropical regions....
s, galah
Galah

The Galah, Eolophus roseicapilla, is also known as the Rose-breasted Cockatoo, Galah Cockatoo, Roseate Cockatoo or Pink and Grey....
s, emu
Emu

The Emu , Dromaius novaehollandiae, is the largest bird native to Australia and the only Extant taxon member of the genus Dromaius. It is also the second-largest extant bird in the world by height, after its ratite relative, the ostrich....
s, the wedge-tailed eagle
Wedge-tailed Eagle

The Wedge-tailed Eagle or Eaglehawk is the largest Bird of prey in Australia and is the most common of all the world's large eagles. It has long, fairly broad wings, fully feathered legs, and an unmistakable wedge-shaped tail....
 and small numbers of water birds. Reptiles include goanna
Goanna

Goanna is the name used to refer to any number of Australian monitor lizards of the genus Varanus, as well as to certain species from Southeast Asia....
s, snake
Snake

Snakes are elongate legless carnivore reptiles of the suborder Serpentes that can be distinguished from legless lizards by their lack of eyelids and external ears....
s, dragon lizards
Bearded Dragon

A Bearded Dragon in captivity may be one of several species of agamid lizards in the genus Pogona found in zoos and private collections. Pogona describes seven species found across Australia, some of which are bred and sold as pets....
, skink
Skink

Skinks are the most diverse group of lizards. They comprise the family Scincidae which shares the superfamily or infraorder Scincomorpha with several other lizard families, including Lacertidae ....
s and gecko
Gecko

Geckos are small to average sized lizards belonging to the family Gekkonidae which are found in warm climates throughout the world. Geckos are unique among lizards in their vocalizations, making chirping sounds in social interactions with other geckos....
s. The streambank froglet
Crinia

Crinia is a genus of frog, native to Australia, and part of the family Myobatrachidae. It consists of small frogs, which are distributed throughout most of Australia, excluding the central arid regions....
 is an endemic amphibian
Amphibian

Amphibians , such as frogs, toads, salamanders, newts and caecilians, are cold-blooded animals that metamorphose from a juvenile, water-breathing form to an adult, air-breathing form....
.

Human history


The first humans to inhabit the Flinders Ranges were the Adnyamathanha
Adnyamathanha

The Adnyamathanha or Adynyamathanha are aboriginal people Indigenous Australians from the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. Their traditional language is Adnyamathanha language....
 people (meaning ‘hill people’ or ‘rock people’) whose descendants still reside in the area. Cave paintings, rock engravings and other artifacts indicate that the Adnyamathana people have lived in the Flinders Ranges for tens of thousands of years.

The first European explorers to the region were an exploration party from Matthew Flinders
Matthew Flinders

Captain Matthew Flinders, Royal Navy was one of the most successful navigators and cartography of his age. In a career that spanned just over twenty years, he sailed with Captain William Bligh, circumnavigated Australia and encouraged the use of that name for the continent....
 seagoing visit to upper, Spencer Gulf
Spencer Gulf

The Spencer Gulf is the westernmost of two large inlets on the southern coast of Australia, in the state of South Australia, facing the Great Australian Bight....
 aboard The Investigator. They climbed Mount Brown in March 1802 . In the winter of 1839 Edward John Eyre
Edward John Eyre

Edward John Eyre was an England land explorer of the Australian continent, colonial administrator, and a controversial Governor of Jamaica.South Australia's Lake Eyre, Eyre Peninsula, Eyre Creek, South Australia, Eyre Highway , and the Eyre Hotel in Whyalla are named in his honour, as are the villages of Eyreton and West Eyreton in Canterb...
, together with a group of five men, two drays and ten horses, further explored
Eyre's 1839 expeditions

Edward John Eyre's two expeditions of 1839 to the interior of South Australia were his first expeditions as an explorer, if one discounts the two earlier trips he made down the Murray River to Adelaide, herding cattle and then sheep....
 the region. They set out from Adelaide on 1 May 1839. The party set up a depot near Mt. Arden, and from there explored the surrounding region and upper Spencer Gulf, before heading eastward to the Murray River
Murray River

The Murray River, or River Murray and sometimes informally referred to as the "Mighty Murray", is Australia's largest river. At in length, the Murray rises in the Australian Alps, draining the western side of Australia's highest mountains and, for most of its length, meanders across Australia's inland plains, forming the border between...
 and returning to Adelaide.

There are records of squatters in the Quorn
Quorn, South Australia

Quorn is a township and railhead in the Flinders Ranges in the north of South Australia, 39 km northeast of Port Augusta, South Australia. At the 2001 Census in Australia, Quorn had a population of 988....
 district as early as 1845 , and the first pastoral leases were granted in 1851. William Pinkerton is credited as being the first European to find a route through the Flinders Ranges via Pichi Richi Pass. In 1853 he drove 7,000 sheep along the eastern plains of the range to where Quorn would be built 25 years later (Pinkerton Creek runs through the Quorn township).

In 1851 Wilpena, Arkaba and Aroona were established as sheep stations, and within a few years other runs were marked out through the hills and along the adjoining eastern and western slopes.

In 1852 Kanyaka Station
Kanyaka Station

Kanyaka Station was a cattle and sheep station in the Flinders Ranges of South Australia approximately 40 km north of Quorn, South Australia....
 was established by Hugh Proby.

During the late 1870's the push to open agriculture land for wheat growing north of the Goyder's Line
Goyder's Line

Goyder's Line is a boundary line across South Australia corresponding to a rainfall boundary believed to indicate the edge of the area suitable for agriculture....
 had met with unusual success, with good rainfall and crops in the Flinders Ranges. This, along with the copper mining lobby (copper was mined in the Hawker-Flinders Ranges area in the late 1850's and transported overland by bullock dray), induced the government to build a narrow gauge railway line north of Port Augusta through Pichi Richi Pass, Quorn, Hawker
Hawker, South Australia

Hawker is a town in the Flinders Ranges area of South Australia, 365 km north of Adelaide. The town population is about 300, with another 200 people in the surrounding district....
 and along the west of the ranges, eventually to Marree
Marree, South Australia

Marree is a small town located in the north of South Australia. It lies North of Adelaide at the junction of the Oodnadatta Track and the Birdsville Track, above sea level....
. (It was intended to service the agricultural and pastoral industries in the region). The rainfall returned to a normal pattern for the region, causing many of the agricultural farms to collapse. Remnants of abdandoned homes can still be seen dotted around the arid landscape. Wilpena station, due to its unusual geography, is now the only location north of Goyder's Line to be able to sustain any crops - although it has now been left to the wild and is only a tourist location.

Mining exploration continued in the region, but coal-mining at Leigh Creek
Leigh Creek, South Australia

Leigh Creek is a coal-mining town in the north of South Australia. On the edge of the desert, to the west of the northern Flinders Ranges, the current town is 13 km further south than the original town—it was moved in 1982 to allow the expansion of the mine....
 and barytes at Oraparinna were the only long-term successes. Pastoral industries flourished, and the rail line became of major importance in opening up and servicing sheep and cattle stations along the route to Alice Springs
Alice Springs, Northern Territory

Alice Springs is the second largest town in the Northern Territory of Australia. Popularly known as "the Alice" or simply "Alice",Alice Springs is situated in geographic centre of Australia....
.

Hawker townsite was surveyed at a bend in the railway line where the train line left the main road to Blinman
Blinman, South Australia

Blinman is a town deep in the Flinders Ranges, in the mid north of South Australia. It is very small but has the claim of being the highest surveyed town in South Australia....
, and named in 1880 after South Australian politician and pastoralist, George Charles Hawker
George Charles Hawker

George Charles Hawker was an Australian settler and South Australian politician....
.

Quorn was surveyed by Godfrey Walsh and proclaimed a town on 16 May 1878. The township covered an area of 1.72 km˛ and was laid out in squares in a manner similar to the state's capital city, Adelaide. Governor Jervois reputedly bestowed the name 'Quorn' because his private secretary at the time had come from the Parish of Quorndon
Quorn, Leicestershire

Quorn is a village in Leicestershire, England. Its name was shortened from Quorndon in 1889, to avoid postal difficulties owing to its similarity to the name of another village, Quarndon, Derbyshire, a few miles away....
.

External links



See also

  • Wilpena Pound
    Wilpena Pound

    Wilpena Pound is a natural amphitheatre of mountains located 429 kilometres north of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia in the heart of the Flinders Ranges National Park....
  • Protected areas of South Australia
    Protected areas of South Australia

    South Australia contains 324 separate Protected Areas with a total land area of 216,310 km? . 18 of these are National parks, totalling 43,374 km? ....
  • Ediacara
    Ediacara

    Ediacara can refer to several things:* The Ediacara Hills are a small outlier of the Flinders Ranges in South Australia.* The Ediacaran geological time period, named after the range....
  • Arkaroola
  • Gammon Ranges
  • Mawson Plateau
    Mawson Plateau

    The Mawson Plateau is part of the northern Flinders Ranges, located on the Mt. Freeling pastoral lease in South Australia, 140 km east of Lyndhurst, South Australia and adjacent to the northeastern boundary of Arkaroola....
  • Mount Chambers
  • Edeowie glass
    Edeowie glass

    Edeowie glass is a slag-like, opaque natural glass found as vesicular or in sheet-like masses in a semi-continuous swath, about 55 km long and 10 km wide along the western side of the Flinders Ranges near Parachilna, South Australia....