Mount Lindesay

Volcanic


Folder: Collections 2

07 Sep 2014

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282 visits

Mount Lindesay

Mt Barney National Park We were driving back to Queensland in 2002 and were diverted through Kyogle onto the Mt Lindesay Highway. Took this photo and much later scanned it and mis-identified it until I had some help from the Park Rangers. "After a few messages to Rangers around the region the Mountain in your photo has been identified as Mt Lindsey (part of the Mt Barney National Park) in the Scenic Rim Southern Qld." 8 June 2012 Sunshine Coast / Burnett Region Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service. Elevation 1,177 m (3,862 ft) Mount Lindesay lies on the Queensland-New South Wales border, approximately 140 km south west of Brisbane, Australia. It is one of a number of peaks in the McPherson Range, and is remarkable for its tiered summit, the eroded remnant of lava flows from the nearby Focal Peak shield volcano. Mount Lindesay is situated within the Mount Barney National Park in Queensland and the Border Ranges National Park in New South Wales. Apart from the northern slopes, the rest of the peak is covered in dense rainforest, and the summit is frequently in cloud and mist. The Mount Lindesay Highway passes to the western side of Mount Lindesay. Wikipedia

27 Jul 2014

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361 visits

At Passage Peak

Whitsunday Passage. Whitsundays 2014 With over 90 islands stretching from Bowen in the north to the Repulse Islands in the south, the Whitsunday group is part of Australia’s largest offshore island chain, known as the Cumberland group. All the islands and their surrounding waters (collectively known as 'the Whitsundays') have international protection as part of the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area. In addition, some islands have been declared national parks by the Queensland Government.

27 Jul 2014

391 visits

Perseverance and Pentecost Islands

We were staying on Hamilton Island and on Sunday did the walk to Passage Peak which overlooks the Whitsunday Passage, named by Captain James Cook in 1770. Portuguese explorers may have been the first Europeans to visit this part of the Australian coast, but for the record it was Captain Cook, then a lieutenant in the Royal Navy, who passed through these islands on his first voyage around the world in the Endeavour. On the night of 1 June 1770 he anchored off what today is Mackay, and two days later sailed through a blue stretch of water dotted with islands. 'Indeed the whole passage is one continued safe harbour,' he noted on the morning of Sunday, 3 June. It was Whitsun, the seventh Sunday after Easter and the feast of Pentecost, so Cook named it the Whitsunday Passage and one of what he called the Cumberland Islands -- Pentecost Island. Quite a challenging walk but very rewarding at Passage Peak. Spectacular views. Many islands in the Whitsunday group, popular for yachts and cruise boats. One of our favourite places for a holiday. Hamilton Island is one and a half hours flying time North of Brisbane in Queensland.

27 Jul 2014

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2 comments

308 visits

Blue Whitsundays

View from the Passage Peak walk to Whitsunday Passage and Whitsunday Island. Spectacular views. Many islands in the Whitsunday group, popular for yachts and cruise boats. One of our favourite places for a holiday. Hamilton Island is one and a half hours flying time North of Brisbane in Queensland. Whitsundays July 2014