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Western Highway Project Section 2 Beaufort to Ararat Assessment Environment Effects Act 1978
WESTERN HIGHWAY PROJECT SECTION 2 BEAUFORT TO ARARAT ASSESSMENT under ENVIRONMENT EFFECTS ACT 1978 Minister for Planning May 2013 GLOSSARY AH Act Aboriginal Heritage Act 2006 AMP Access Management Policy ASS Acid sulphate soils CEMP Construction Environmental Management Plans CFA Country Fire Authority CHMP Cultural Heritage Management Plan, prepared under Aboriginal Heritage Act 2006 CMA Catchment Management Authority DPCD Victorian Department of Planning and Community Development DPI Victorian Department of Primary Industries DSE Victorian Department of Sustainability and Environment DSEWPC Commonwealth Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Populations and Communities EE Act Environment Effects Act 1978 EES Environment Effects Statement EMF Environmental Management Framework EMS Environmental Management Strategy EPA Environment Protection Authority EP Act Environment Protection Act 1970 EPBC Act Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 ESD ecologically sustainable development EVC Ecological Vegetation Class FFG Act Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 (Vic.) GEWVVP Grassy Eucalypt Woodland of the Victorian Volcanic Plain GDE Groundwater Dependant Ecosystems GSM Golden Sun Moth ha hectares HCS high conservation significance Hha habitat hectares km kilometres LOTs Large Old Trees LPPF Local Planning Policy Framework m metres NES national environmental significance NTGVVP Natural Temperate Grassland of the Victorian Volcanic Plain NVMF Victoria’s Native Vegetation Management Framework P&E Act Planning and -
Mount Cole State Forest FS0048 DSE - Ballarat ISSN 1440-2262
October 2012 Mount Cole State Forest FS0048 DSE - Ballarat ISSN 1440-2262 “Walk through cool fern gullies and alpine plateaus then Walking rest to take in the views across the spreading plains to Langi Ghiran and the Grampians. Experience a night at Mt Cole is a walker’s paradise. Whether you have a day or the charming Beeripmo campground, then descend a week to spend, there is a walk for you. through spectacular tall forests.” 1. Beeripmo Walk Distance 21 km 11 hours 2 day return (moderate) Located one hour drive west of Ballarat, just off the Starting at Richards campground, the most recent walk at Western Highway, Mt Cole State Forest is 25 kilometres Mt Cole is a journey of discovery for the novice and from the township of Beaufort and marks the gateway to experienced hiker. Walkers can experience a variety of the Pyrenees Wine District and the Grampians. different forest environments from lush forests with ferns, falls with a gentle sound of running water, the brilliant History green of the moss covered rocks, weather beaten rocky outcrops and magnificent vistas of the tablelands below The mountain was created 390 million years ago when hot and surrounding mountain ranges. magma pushing up from deep beneath the earth, but failing to break through, crystallised to form granite rock. Over 2. Grevillea Walk millions of years nature sculpted the area, eroding the Distance 1.8 km 45 min one way to Richards (moderate) softer sediment and leaving the hard rock protruding from The Glut picnic area is the starting point for this walk that the plains below. -
Rural Ararat Heritage Study Volume 4
Rural Ararat Heritage Study Volume 4. Ararat Rural City Thematic Environmental History Prepared for Ararat Rural City Council by Dr Robyn Ballinger and Samantha Westbrooke March 2016 History in the Making This report was developed with the support PO Box 75 Maldon VIC 3463 of the Victorian State Government RURAL ARARAT HERITAGE STUDY – VOLUME 4 THEMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY Table of contents 1.0 Introduction 1 1.1 The study area 1 1.2 The heritage significance of Ararat Rural City's landscape 3 2.0 The natural environment 4 2.1 Geomorphology and geology 4 2.1.1 West Victorian Uplands 4 2.1.2 Western Victorian Volcanic Plains 4 2.2 Vegetation 5 2.2.1 Vegetation types of the Western Victorian Uplands 5 2.2.2 Vegetation types of the Western Victoria Volcanic Plains 6 2.3 Climate 6 2.4 Waterways 6 2.5 Appreciating and protecting Victoria’s natural wonders 7 3.0 Peopling Victoria's places and landscapes 8 3.1 Living as Victoria’s original inhabitants 8 3.2 Exploring, surveying and mapping 10 3.3 Adapting to diverse environments 11 3.4 Migrating and making a home 13 3.5 Promoting settlement 14 3.5.1 Squatting 14 3.5.2 Land Sales 19 3.5.3 Settlement under the Land Acts 19 3.5.4 Closer settlement 22 3.5.5 Settlement since the 1960s 24 3.6 Fighting for survival 25 4.0 Connecting Victorians by transport 28 4.1 Establishing pathways 28 4.1.1 The first pathways and tracks 28 4.1.2 Coach routes 29 4.1.3 The gold escort route 29 4.1.4 Chinese tracks 30 4.1.5 Road making 30 4.2 Linking Victorians by rail 32 4.3 Linking Victorians by road in the 20th -
Mount Buangor State Park Management Plan
MOUNT BUANGOR STATE PARK MANAGEMENT PLAN National Parks Service DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENT VICTORIA DECEMBER 1996 This Management Plan for Mount Buangor State Park is approved for implementation. Its purpose is to direct management of the Park until the Plan is reviewed. A Draft Management Plan was published in May 1996. A total of 23 submissions were received. Copies of the Plan can be obtained from: NRE Ballarat Office Department of Natural Resources and Environment Cnr Mair and Doveton Streets BALLARAT VIC 3350 Outdoors Information Centre Department of Natural Resources and Environment 240 Victoria Parade EAST MELBOURNE VIC 3002. For further information on this Plan, please contact: Chief Ranger - Central Park Management Area Department of Natural Resources and Environment Cnr Mair and Doveton Streets BALLARAT VIC 3350 Phone (053) 336 782 or Ranger in Charge Mount Buangor State Park 6 Laurence Street BEAUFORT VIC 3373 Phone (053) 492 404 ã Crown (State of Victoria) 1996 A Victorian Government Publication. This publication is copyright. No part may be reproduced by any process except in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1986. Published in December 1996 by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment 240 Victoria Parade, East Melbourne, Victoria 3002. National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Victoria. National Parks Service. Mount Buangor State Park Management Plan. Bibliography. ISBN 0 7306 6608 5. 1. National parks and reserves - Victoria - Management. 2. Mount Buangor State Park (Vic.). I. Victoria. Dept. of Natural Resources and Environment. II. Title. 333.783099457 Cover: View from Wallaby Caves Road (Photograph G Niewand). -
WHP-Beaufort-To-Ararat-Section-2-Technical-Appendix-K-Pt-2-Standard-Assessment
P Exhibit C Please Note: Information of a culturally sensitive nature has been removed from this version of the Standard Assessment APPENDIX 1: ABORIGINAL CULTURAL HERITAGE REPORT – STANDARD ASSESSMENT 1 | Page WESTERN HIGHWAY DUPLICATION CULTURAL HERITAGE MANAGEMENT PLAN: FIERY CREEK TO ARARAT: STANDARD ASSESSMENT REPORT CULTURAL HERITAGE MANAGEMENT PLAN NUMBER: 11812 Activity Size: Large Assessment: Desktop and Standard Assessment Sponsor: VicRoads ABN: 61 760 960 480 Cultural Heritage Advisor: Dr Shaun Canning Australian Cultural Heritage Management Author(s): Claire St George, Vicki Vaskos, Jakub Czastka, Bradley Ward, Fiona Schultz and Laura Donati Report Date: 30 March 2012 2 | Page ABBREVIATIONS Below is a list of abbreviations used throughout this report: Term Meaning AAV Aboriginal Affairs Victoria, Department of Planning and Community Development ACHM Australian Cultural Heritage Management (Victoria) Pty Ltd ADR Alternative Dispute Resolution AHA 2006 Victorian Aboriginal Heritage Act 2006 AHR 2007 Victorian Aboriginal Heritage Regulations 2007 APD Authorised Project Delegate APM Activity Project Manager ASTT Australian Small Tool Tradition BGLCAC Barengi Gadjin Land Council Aboriginal Corporation BP Before Present CHA Cultural Heritage Assessment CHM Cultural Heritage Management CHMP Cultural Heritage Management Plan HV Heritage Victoria In Situ In archaeology, in situ refers to an artefact or an item of material culture that has not been moved from its original place of use, construction or deposition LGA Local Government Area Martang Martang Pty Ltd NOI Notice of Intent (to prepare a Management Plan) RAP Registered Aboriginal Party VAHR Victorian Aboriginal Heritage Register VCAT Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal VicRoads Roads Corporation WAC Wathaurung Aboriginal Corporation trading as Wadawurrung / The Wathaurung 3 | Page EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This Cultural Heritage Management Plan (CHMP) has been prepared as a mandatory CHMP for VicRoads (the Sponsor ABN: 61 760 960 480). -
Pyrenees Shire Town and Rural District Names and Boundaries
PYRENEES SHIRE TOWN AND RURAL DISTRICT NAMES AND BOUNDARIES NORTHERN GRAMPIANS M A A NAVARRE R R Y A B R S T O A A R T W BARKLY O E L U L REDBANK G H S U N R ST WAT A A TLE Y R S NA CR EEK IA NATTE UD D YALLOCK R L A A V S F O T C N L r R A MOONAMBE A e T v R E i N D R RD S A N RATHSCAR R U S D C E D B H D M O W O O A W LANDSB A O N R ROU R N B GH I S TA L O A A WE E S H T B U C S G S WAREEK a U c H H o v A T B H E SHAY W A S A Y WARRENMANG C R M O FLA V T A O H AVOCA PERCYDALE CENTRAL PY RE NE ES S HW GOLDFIELDS E Y U R N D R R BUNG BONG OWLANDS K A CR k E Y Y W e S e E r H H I GLENLOFTY A C E W R O C K L N IC TR A PA EN M GL E ra P e V m L im O et E W B U R G LICUR S LIL H t ELMHURST e L B E PY Y REN EES AMPHITHEATRE RD R iv e r BURNBANK GLENLOGIE T O LB A LEXTON T ON MOUNT LONARCH XT LE EVANSFORD D R CHUTE HEPBURN H BU W ANGOR N Y O T X E RAGLAN L GLENBRAE WAUBRA WATERLOO I L G A W N ARARAT MIDDLE ES K T ER A N L Horse K MAIN L CREE A Lagoon LEAD K B T R LEGEND U FO U ERCILDOUNE A A BE N CHUTE TOWN AND RURAL G DISTRICT BOUNDARIES O R BEAUFORT (defined as localities in Govt. -
6. Co-Habitation
6. Co-habitation Historical records relating to the alluvial gold mining period, predominantly from the 1850s, implicitly convey a degree of co-habitation between Aboriginal and non-Indigenous people. In his reminiscences, DJ Ross provides a representative example of influential early bush life on a squatting station (the first wave of dispossessors): ‘Born on a sheep station my earliest recollections are in connection with blackfellows, bushrangers and shearers’. All across Victoria’s gold mining districts Aboriginal men, women and children came into contact with non-Indigenous men and a few women and children. The degree of close contact between the races was variable, and differed in nature from friendliness to outright hostility. Relationships were complex, varying not only geographically but rapidly changing over time as one rush was superseded by another rush and extremely large heterogeneous and transient populations waxed and waned across the region. Aboriginal voices A belief amongst Victorian Aboriginal people in claiming certain non-Indigenous people as resuscitated clanspeople continued during the gold rush period. Samuel Clutterbuck recounted being instructed on this subject: ‘I told him of poor Wight’s death. Aha! Said he [Murray, an Aboriginal] “Mr Wight, quamby [stay or sleep] alonga this, (pointing to ground) come up black fellow, bye and bye.” This is their tradition of the final state of white men and vice versa of their own people’. Clutterbuck further related another instance of a very dark skinned squatter ‘who was suddenly embraced on one occasion by a black, who in great glee exclaimed “Brother belonging to mine, I believe quamby a long time ago on Murray”’. -
8. Planning and Land
8-1 The Project would result in longer term 8. Planning and Land Use benefits for the economy and tourism in the area due to improved accessibility following The Planning and Land Use Assessment the duplication of the highway. It would also examined the potential effects of the Project deliver benefits for Buangor in particular, due on land use, zoning and public infrastructure to the diversion of freight and other vehicles and consistency with the Pyrenees Planning out of the town centre, thereby improving the Scheme and the Ararat Planning Scheme and safety and amenity of the town. other relevant planning strategies. The Planning and Land Use Assessment The study area spans part of Pyrenees Shire concluded that the Project as a whole would and Ararat Rural City. It includes land that has not result in any significant inconsistency with been developed for grazing, cropping, planning policy, nor would it result in any plantations, residential and rural residential broad change of land use within the study purposes. The Ballarat – Ararat Railway line is area. On balance, Option 2 has less land within the study area, following a similar severance impacts than Option 1 because it alignment to that of the existing highway. aligns more closely with property boundaries, the existing highway and the railway line. The assessment found that most land use and planning related impacts would be experienced in the construction phase and so 8.1 EES Objectives they are short term only. These include potential impacts on existing infrastructure The EES objectives relevant to the Planning and due to the temporary relocation and/or Land Use Assessment are: disconnection of services, potential impacts on To avoid or minimise disruption and other amenity such as noise and dust emissions, adverse effects on infrastructure, land use traffic disruptions and changes to landscape (including agriculture and residential) and due to removal of vegetation. -
Aboriginal People on the Goldfields of Victoria, 1850-1870
Black Gold Aboriginal People on the Goldfields of Victoria, 1850-1870 Fred Cahir Black Gold Aboriginal People on the Goldfields of Victoria, 1850-1870 Fred Cahir Published by ANU E Press and Aboriginal History Incorporated Aboriginal History Monograph 25 This title is also available online at: http://epress.anu.edu.au/ National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Author: Cahir, Fred. Title: Black gold : Aboriginal people on the goldfields of Victoria, 1850-1870 / Fred Cahir. ISBN: 9781921862953 (pbk.) 9781921862960 (eBook) Series: Aboriginal history monograph ; 25. Notes: Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Gold mines and mining--Victoria--1851-1891. Aboriginal Australians--Victoria--History--19th century. Dewey Number: 994.503 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Published with the assistance of University of Ballarat (School of Business), Sovereign Hill Parks and Museum Association and Parks Victoria This publication has been supported by the Australian Historical Association Cover design with assistance from Evie Cahir Front Cover photo: ‘New diggings, Ballarat’ by Thomas Ham, 1851. Courtesy State Library of Victoria Printed by Griffin Press This edition © 2012 ANU E Press Contents Preface and acknowledgements . .vii Introduction . 1 1 . Aboriginal people and mining . 5 2 . Discoverers and fossickers . 21 3 . Guiding . 35 4 . Trackers and Native Police . 47 Illustrations . 57 5 . Trade, commerce and the service sector . 67 6 . Co-habitation . 85 7. Off the goldfields . 103 8 . Social and environmental change . 109 9 . -
Recreation Strategy
Recreation Strategy 2017-2022 Disclaimer The information contained in this report is intended for the specific use of the within named party to which it is addressed ("the communityvibe client") only. All recommendations by communityvibe are based on information provided by or on behalf of the communityvibe client and communityvibe has relied on such information being correct at the time this report is prepared. communityvibe shall take no responsibility for any loss or damage caused to the communityvibe client or to any third party whether direct or consequential as a result of or in any way arising from any unauthorised use of this report or any recommendations contained within. Prepared By Wendy Holland Director communityvibe PO Box 421 Strathdale Vic 3550 Ph: 0438 433 555 E: [email protected] W: www.communityvibe.com.au Table of Contents Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................. 1 1.0 Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 6 1.1 Aim of the strategy ....................................................................................................................... 6 1.2 Scope ............................................................................................................................................. 6 1.3 Methodology ................................................................................................................................ -
Western Highway Project: Buangor to Ararat, Victoria - Section 2B Threatened Species Management Plan for Spiny Rice-Flower (Pimelea Spinescens Subsp
Western Highway Project: Buangor to Ararat, Victoria - Section 2B Threatened Species Management Plan For Spiny Rice-flower (Pimelea spinescens subsp. spinescens ), Golden Sun Moth (Synemon plana), Button Wrinklewort (Rutidosis leptorhynchoides) and Brown Toadlet (Pseudophryne bibronii) March 2018 Table of Con tents 1. INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................. 4 2. BASELINE INFORMATION ...................................................................................... 11 3. SPINY RICE-FLOWER ............................................................................................ 12 4. DWARF GALAXIAS ............................................................................................... 17 5. BUTTON WRINKLEWORT ....................................................................................... 18 6. GOLDEN SUN MOTH ............................................................................................ 23 7. BROWN TOADLET ............................................................................................... 30 8. STATE LISTED THREATENDED SPECIES .......................................................................... 32 9. EROSION AND SEDIMENT CONTROL .......................................................................... 33 10. FUELS AND CHEMICALS ..................................................................................... 35 11. AIR QUALITY ................................................................................................. -
District 16 Map (PDF, 2.6
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