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Naracoorte Caves Naracoorte Caves Government of South Australia www.naracoortecaves.sa.gov.au A trip to the Limestone Coast wouldn’t be complete without a visit to the Naracoorte Caves. Recognised as one of the world’s most important fossil sites, the caves offer experiences for visitors of all ages. DAILY TOURS FOSSILS (except Christmas Day) Providing a rare insight into Guided tours are suitable for Australia’s past, Victoria people of all ages. The 30 Fossil Cave (tours at minute tour of Alexandra Cave 10.15am/2.15pm) showcases (tours at 9.30am/1.30pm) is world renowned fossil deposits. ideal for young families, while The Wonambi Fossil Centre rare bats and world renowned recreates the ancient world of fossils can be viewed on hour- Australia’s mega-fauna with long tours. The Wonambi Fossil life-size robotics in a simulated Centre, Wet Cave and the World forest and swamp land. Heritage Walk are self-guided and can be enjoyed at any time during the opening hours. Do you know that we have Adventure Caving tours are also on-site camping available? available (please pre-book). And while you’re here, BATS don’t forget to treat yourself at our award The Bat Observation Centre winning Cave Café. (tours at 11.30am/3.30pm) is the only place in the world where visitors can observe a colony of Adelaide Southern Bent-winged bats in their natural SA habitat. The Bat Cave itself is only accessible to scientists, but using specially designed infra- Victoria red cameras, guides are Melbourne able to provide visitors with a ‘bat’s-eye view’! This tour concludes in the adjacent Blanche Cave. FIS 92139 For more information call us on (08) 8762 2340 or visit www.naracoortecaves.sa.gov.au.
Recommended publications
  • Naracoorte Caves National Park
    Department for Environment and Heritage Naracoorte Caves National Park Australian Fossil Mammal Site World Heritage Area www.environment.sa.gov.au Naracoorte Caves Vegetation Wonambi Fossil Centre National Par The vegetation is predominantly Brown Stringybark Step through the doors of the Wonambi Fossil Australian Fossil Mammal Site on the limestone ridge, with River Red Gum lining the Centre into an ancient world where megafauna World Heritage Area banks of the Mosquito Creek. The understorey on the once roamed. The display in the Wonambi Fossil ridge is bracken fern over a diverse array of orchids Centre ‘brings to life’ the megafauna fossils found in the Naracoorte Caves. The self-guided walk Naracoorte Caves National Park covers that flower during spring. through the simulated forest and swampland is approximately 600 hectares of limestone wheelchair accessible and suitable for all ages. ranges and is situated in the Some of the park was cleared for pine forests in the south-east of South Australia, mid 1800s, with other exotic species planted around The Flinders University Gallery has information 10 km south of Naracoorte. the caves. Many of the pines have now been cleared and areas revegetated with endemic species. The panels depicting the various sciences studied at Naracoorte, and touch screen computers to answer The area was first gardens now consist of native plants although a few questions you may have relating to the Wonambi dedicated a forestry of the historic trees remain. Fossil Centre and the fossils of Naracoorte Caves. reserve in 1882, with Fauna the first caretaker Southern employed to look Bentwing Bat The National Parks Code after the caves in The most common marsupial seen at Naracoorte is the Western Grey Kangaroo.
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  • Fire Management Plan Reserves of the South East
    Fire Management Plan Reserves of the South East Department for Environment and Heritage PREPARE. ACT. SURVIVE. www.environment.sa.gov.auwww.environment.sa.gov.au Included Department for Environment and Heritage Reserves Aberdour CP Custon CP Lake Frome CP Padthaway CP Bangham CP Desert Camp CP Lake Hawdon South CP Penambol CP Baudin Rocks CP Desert Camp CR Lake Robe GR Penguin Island CP Beachport CP Dingley Dell CP Lake St Clair CP Penola CP Belt Hill CP Douglas Point CP Little Dip CP Piccaninnie Ponds CP Bernouilli CR Ewens Ponds CP Lower Glenelg River CP Pine Hill Soak CP Big Heath CP Fairview CP Martin Washpool CP Poocher Swamp GR Big Heath CR Furner CP Mary Seymour CP Reedy Creek CP Bool Lagoon GR Geegeela CP Messent CP Salt Lagoon Islands CP Bucks Lake GR Glen Roy CP Mount Boothby CP Talapar CP Bunbury CR Gower CP Mount Monster CP Tantanoola Caves CP Butcher Gap CP Grass Tree CP Mount Scott CP Telford Scrub CP Calectasia CP Guichen Bay CP Mud Islands GR Tilley Swamp CP Canunda NP Gum Lagoon CP Mullinger Swamp CP Tolderol GR Carpenter Rocks CP Hacks Lagoon CP Naracoorte Caves CR Vivigani Ardune CP Coorong NP Hanson Scrub CP Naracoorte Caves NP Woakwine CR Currency Creek GR Jip Jip CP Nene Valley CP Wolseley Common CP CP = Conservation Park NP = National Park GR = Game Reserve CR = Conservation Reserve For further information please contact: Department for Environment and Heritage Phone Information Line (08) 8204 1910, or see SA White Pages for your local Department for Environment and Heritage office.
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  • Thursday, 22 June 2017
    No. 39 2203 SUPPLEMENTARY GAZETTE THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT GAZETTE PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY ADELAIDE, THURSDAY, 22 JUNE 2017 CONTENTS Appointments, Resignations, Etc. ............................................ 2204 Boxing and Martial Arts Act 2000—Notice ............................ 2204 Communities and Social Inclusion Disability Services, Department for—Notices ..................................................... 2205 Consumer and Business Services—Notice .............................. 2205 Controlled Substances Act 1984—Notice ............................... 2208 Domiciliary Care Services—Notice ........................................ 2205 Emergency Services Funding Act 1998—Notice .................... 2206 Environment, Water and Natural Resources, Department of—Notice ....................................................... 2209 Harbors and Navigation Act 1993—Notices ........................... 2206 Health Care Act 2008—Notices .............................................. 2207 Passenger Transport Regulations 2009—Notices .................... 2213 Police Service—Fees and Charges .......................................... 2216 Proclamations .......................................................................... 2223 Public Sector Act 2009—Notice ............................................. 2217 All public Acts appearing in this gazette are to be considered official, and obeyed as such Printed and published weekly by authority of SINEAD O’BRIEN, Government Printer, South Australia $7.21 per issue (plus postage), $361.90
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  • Palaeontology Bibliography for the Naracoorte Caves National Park and World Heritage Area
    Palaeontology Bibliography for the Naracoorte Caves National Park and World Heritage Area P = Palaeoecology; T = Taxonomy; D = Depositional setting and dating; S = Species Occurrence within/among sites; PC = Palaeoclimate; Taph = Taphonomy; F = Functional Morphology; IF = Five-year impact factor (as at Sept 2014) Peer-reviewed scientific publications Ashwell, K.W.S., Hardman, C.D. and Musser, A.M. 2014. Brain and behaviour of living and extinct echidnas. Zoology 117, 349–361. (F) IF = 1.6 Ayliffe, L. and Veeh, H.H. 1988. Uranium-series dating of speleothems and bones from Victoria Cave, Naracoorte, South Australia. Chemical Geology (Isotope Geoscience Section) 72, 211–234. (D) IF = 4.4 Ayliffe, L.K., Marianelli, P.C., Moriarty, K.C., Wells, R.T., McCulloch, M.T., Mortimer, G.E. and Hellstrom, J.C. 1998. 500 ka precipitation record from south-eastern Australia: evidence for interglacial relative aridity. Geology 26, 147–150. (PC) IF = 4.9 Bestland, E.A. and Rennie, J. 2006. Stable isotope record (δ 18O and δ13C) of a Naracoorte Caves speleothem (Australia) from before and after the Last Interglacial. Alcheringa Special Issue 1, 19–29. (PC) IF = 1 Bishop, N. 1997. Functional anatomy of the macropodid pes. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 117, 17–50. (F) No IF Boles, W.E. 2008. Systematics of the fossil Australian giant megapodes Progura (Aves: Megapodiidae). Oryctos 7, 191–211. (T) IF = 1.7 Brown, S.P. and Wells, R.T. 2000. A Middle Pleistocene vertebrate fossil assemblage from Cathedral Cave, Naracoorte, South Australia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 124, 91–104.
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  • Cave and Karst Management in Australasia XX I Proceedings of the 21St Australasian Conference on Cave and Karst Management Naracoorte, South Australia, 2015
    Cave and Karst Management in Australasia XX I Proceedings of the 21st Australasian Conference on Cave and Karst Management Naracoorte, South Australia, 2015 Australasian Cave and Karst Management Association 2015 ACKMA Cave and Karst Management in Australasia 21 Naracoorte Caves , South Australia , 201 5 i Proceedings of the Twenty first Australasian Conference on Cave and Karst Management 2015 Conference Naracoorte, South Australia, 2015 Cave and Karst Management in Australasia XXI Australasian Cave and Karst Management Association 2015 ACKMA Cave and Karst Management in Australasia 21 Naracoorte Caves , South Australia , 201 5 ii Cave and Karst Management in Australasia XXI Editors: Rauleigh and Samantha Webb ACKMA Western Australia Publisher: Australasian Cave and Karst Management Association PO Box 27, Mount Compass South Australia, Australia 5210 www.ackma.org Date: August 2015 ISSN No: 0159-5415 Copyright property of the contributing authors: Copyright on any paper contained in these Proceedings remains the property of the author(s) of that paper. Apart from use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1994 (New Zealand) no part may be reproduced without prior permission from the author(s). It may be possible to contact contributing authors through the Australasian Cave and Karst Management Association Proceedings available: Publications Officer Australasian Cave and Karst Management Assn Cover illustration: Top photo: Fossil Bed (Pit A), Victoria Fossil Cave, Naracoorte Photo by Steve Bourne Bottom photo: Stalactites in Blanche Cave,
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  • Screen Quality
    Helictite, (2018) 44: 45-58 New evidence confirms Thomas Hannay as the first photographer of Naracoorte Caves and emphasises the importance of historical writing in caves Elizabeth Reed1,2 and Steven Bourne3 1 Environment Institute and School of Physical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, 5005. 2 Palaeontology Department, South Australian Museum, Adelaide, South Australia, 5005. 3 Naracoorte Lucindale Council, Naracoorte, South Australia, 5271. Corresponding author: [email protected] Abstract Naracoorte Caves National Park in South Australia is a UNESCO World Heritage site renowned for its Quaternary vertebrate fossil record spanning the past 500,000 years. Although the primary heritage values of the park relate to the fossil deposits, significant other values include biological, geological, cultural and historical aspects. In 1860, the Reverend Julian Tenison-Woods commissioned a series of photographs of Blanche Cave for use by the engraver Alexander Burkitt in illustrating Woods’ 1862 book Geological observations in South Australia. The identity of the photographer was unknown until recently, when we discovered an engraving in a Melbourne periodical that cited Thomas Hannay of Maldon as the producer of the photo. Despite this breakthrough, there was no direct evidence linking Hannay to Naracoorte Caves. In May 2018, we discovered an inscription on the wall of Blanche Cave that can be attributed to Thomas Hannay, providing evidence of the photographer’s visit to the caves. This inscription highlights the importance of historical writing in caves as primary information for historical research. In this paper we present background information on the 1860 Hannay photographs of Naracoorte Caves and describe the inscription found in Blanche Cave.
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  • Naracoorte Heritage Survey of the South
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  • Dspace.Flinders.Edu.Au/Dspace
    Archived at the Flinders Academic Commons: http://dspace.flinders.edu.au/dspace/ This is the authors’ version of an article published in Quaternary Science Reviews. The published version is available by subscription at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/quaternary-science-reviews/ Please cite this as: Macken, A.C., Jankowski, N.R., Price, G.J., Bestland, E.A., Reed, E.H., Prideaux, G.J. and Roberts, R.G., 2011. Application of sedimentary and chronological analyses to refine the depositional context of a Late Pleistocene vertebrate deposit, Naracoorte, South Australia. Quaternary Science Reviews, 30, 2690-2702. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2011.05.023 Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Please note that any alterations made during the publishing process may not appear in this version. “NOTICE: this is the author s’ version of a work that was accepted for publication in the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in Cities. Published Journal Articles (PJAs) Definition: A published journal article (PJA) is the definitive final record of published research that appears or will appear in the journal and embodies all value-adding publisher activities including copy-editing, formatting and (if relevant) pagination. Policy: Elsevier guarantees each PJA’s authenticity, we work with others (e.g. national libraries) to preserve them for posterity and in perpetuity, and we invest to drive their usage.
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  • Welcome to Naracoorte 21St Australasian Conference on Cave and Karst Management 10 to 15 May 2015 Naracoorte, South Australia
    Welcome to Naracoorte 21st Australasian Conference on Cave and Karst Management 10 to 15 May 2015 Naracoorte, South Australia Come to Naracoorte’s 2015 Conference! Alternatively (and a better option) is travel via coach from Adelaide. Premier Stateliner Coach Group travels The 21st Conference on Caves and Karst Management to Naracoorte daily from Adelaide (see below for (ACKMA) Conference will be convened in May 2015 at timetable). The required service is Adelaide to Mount Naracoorte, South Australia under the auspices of the Gambier (via inland) leaving from the Central Bus Department of Environment, Water and Natural Station (Franklin St, Adelaide), with delegates getting Resources (DEWNR) with input from the South off the bus in Naracoorte township (Battery Service, Australian (SA) Friends of Parks group, the Friends of Smith St). It is then only a short walk or taxi ride to Naracoorte Caves and local ACKMA members. accommodation. Go to http:// DEWNR manages a majority of the sites that the www.premierstateliner.com.au/ for more information conference will visit on field excursions, including on the bus service. three that are internationally significance - Naracoorte There are three taxi services in Naracoorte township; Caves National Park World Heritage Area, and Bool Naracoorte Taxis 131 008 and South East Taxi Service Lagoon and Piccaninnie Ponds RAMSAR sites. Ph: (08) 8762 0689 or (08) 8762 0798. Conference excursions will visit many of the sites in the south-east of SA to which participants were introduced in 1999, when the ACKMA conference was Accommodation in Naracoorte township based in Mt Gambier. The achievements of DEWNR See - http://naracoorte-sa.street-map.net.au and its partner agencies will be showcased in 2015 as Kincraig Hotel – 158 Smith Street, Naracoorte will the investigations and findings of Flinders Ph: (08) 8762 2200 University palaeontologists in Naracoorte Caves Email: [email protected] National Park.
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  • Area Location Artist Title Date SOUTH AUSTRALIAN HISTORICAL PICTURES INDEX SUBJECT INDEX by REGION (Series 2)
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  • Naracoorte Caves
    ABSTRACT Naracoorte Caves: a critical window on faunal extinctions and past climates LIZ REED PhD, School of Physical Sciences and the Environment Institute, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia Naracoorte Caves National Park in South Australia was inscribed onto the UNESCO World Heritage list in December 1994 in recognition of its outstanding Quaternary vertebrate fossil deposits. Listed as a serial nomination with Riversleigh in Queensland, the sites reveal much about the evolution of Australia’s unique mammals including the extinct megafauna. Importantly, they provide insight into how vertebrate communities have responded to environmental change over the past 20 million years. Spanning the last 500,000 years of this long record, the vast fossil deposits of Naracoorte Caves allow scientists to reconstruct high resolution records of biodiversity and past climate. The caves contain the most diverse and abundant deposits of Quaternary vertebrates in Australia with over 130 species from dozens of sites within the park. The exceptional preservation of the Naracoorte fossils is well known, with complete skeletons and delicate specimens preserved in all of their detail. The first fossils were reported from Naracoorte by the Reverend Julian Tenison- Woods in 1858; but it was a discovery made by cave explorers in the Victoria Cave in 1969 that set the stage for World Heritage listing. Research has been ongoing since then and in the last ten years knowledge has increased tenfold as new scientific discoveries are re-writing the story of Naracoorte’s fossil caves. From fossil plants to ancient DNA, new insights are providing a more complete understanding of Naracoorte’s role in reconstructing the wonders of ancient Australia.
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  • OF MICE and MEGAFAUNA: NEW INSIGHTS Into NARACOORTE's
    RESEARCH OF MICE and MEGAFAUNA: NEW INSIGHTS into NARACOORTE’S FOSSIL DEPOSITS Liz Reed School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001. “The important thing in science is not so much to obtain new facts as to discover new ways of thinking about them.” Sir William Bragg, British physicist (1862 - 1942). BEGINNINGS Bourne, 2000). This discovery put Naracoorte on the map as a fossil site and ultimately paved the way for the Father Julian Tenison Woods first visited the Mosquito park’s World Heritage listing in 1994. Now considered Plains Caves (Naracoorte Caves) in 1857. Although he one of the world’s most significant Quaternary fossil found the landscape singularly unremarkable, he was localities, the caves within the Naracoorte Caves enthralled by what lay beneath the surface. He wrote in National Park contain literally dozens of fossil sites. 1862 : Each one of these sites provides a window into the “....... in the midst of a swampy sandy country, plentifully biodiversity and landscape history of the area during covered with stringy bark, a series of caves are found, the past 500,000 years. While no one would claim the whose internal beauty is at strange variance with the Naracoorte landscape is a scenic wonder, looks can be wildness of the scenery around.” (Woods, 1862). deceiving. The fossil record preserved in the caves reveals this unremarkable landscape has been a In Blanche Cave, at the base of calcite columns, he biodiversity ‘hot spot’ for hundreds of thousand of found countless bones of small mammals. These he years. recognised as being of ‘recent’ origin; in contrast to the giant marsupial fossils previously discovered at Little did Woods know that what he had discovered in Wellington Caves, New South Wales.
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