Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Gimbat District/ SouthWest Kakadu Part III


FF
Tourism and Conservation
The tourist industry started to develop here in the mid 1950s. Visitors used mining tracks around the South Alligator River to get to the rivers, creeks and waterfalls. With buffalo to see and barramundi to catch this area became one of the Northern Territory's most popular visitor destinations by the 1960s. Gunlom was then known as UDP Falls because it was the early camp site of the Uranium Development and Prospecting Company. The mining company built a cricket pitch here in 1956. In 1972 the falls were included in a 300 acre Recreation Reserve managed by the Northern Territory Reserves Board. From the 1970s, resource enquiries recommended that a national park be created to protect the natural and cultural values of the upper South Alligator River. This southern region was added progressively to Kakadu National Park in 1987 and 1992.
FF
Distichostemon hispidulus
FF

FF
Gardenia fucata Plum Tree Creek Escarpment
FF



FF
Helicteres sp. Plum Tree Creek
FF

FF
Plum Tree Creek West plateau Vista
FF

FF
Plum Tree Creek West Escarpment Vista
FF

FF
Rapanea benthamiana
FF

FF
Red Bush Apple Syzygium suborbiculare
FF


FF
Red-backed Fairy-wren Malurus melanocephalus female
FF

FF
Red-browed Pardalote Pardalotus rubricatus
FF
FF
Red-headed Honeyeater Myzomela erythrocephala
feeding on
Grevillea pteridiflolia
FF
FF
Striped Rainbow Skink Carlia munda
FFFF
FF
Saint Andrew's Cross Spider Argiope keyserlingi
FF
FF
Scaevola taccada
FF
FF
Scarlet Gum Eucalyptus phoenicea dried seed pods
FF
FF
Scarlet Pigmyfly Nannophya paulsoni
FF
FF
Silver-leaved Paperbark Melaleuca argentea
FF
FF
Striped Rainbow Skink Carlia munda
FF
FF
Striped Rainbow Skink Carlia munda
FF
FF
Stylidium multiscapum
FF
FF
Swamp Bloodwood Eucalyptus ptychocarpa
FF
FF
Terminalia erythrocarpa
FF
FF
Three-spined Rainbow Skink Carlia triacantha
FF
FF
Two-lined Dragon Diporiphora bilineata
FF
FF

No comments: