Bundjalung National Park

Coordinates: 29°14′51″S 153°19′43″E / 29.24750°S 153.32861°E / -29.24750; 153.32861
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Bundjalung National Park
New South Wales
Lookout from Woody Head towards the Tasman Sea
Bundjalung National Park is located in New South Wales
Bundjalung National Park
Bundjalung National Park
Nearest town or cityEvans Head
Coordinates29°14′51″S 153°19′43″E / 29.24750°S 153.32861°E / -29.24750; 153.32861
Established1980
Area210 km2 (81.1 sq mi)
Managing authoritiesNSW National Parks and Wildlife Service
WebsiteBundjalung National Park
See alsoProtected areas of
New South Wales

The Bundjalung National Park is a 210-square-kilometre (81 sq mi) national park located on the north coast of New South Wales, Australia, 554 kilometres (344 mi) north-east of Sydney. It protects an area of coastal plain, heathland and solitary beaches between the towns of Iluka and Evans Head.[citation needed]

The park features coffee rock formations that can be found on the beaches at its northern end.[citation needed]

Background[edit]

Along the Iluka peninsula coast at the southern end of the park are a number of closely spaced headlands that create small crescent shaped beaches of white sand. Each headland features rock platforms cut by waves and contain rock pools that are havens for intertidal marine life.[citation needed]

The park is named for the Bundjalung Aboriginal nation, the original occupiers of the land.[citation needed]

Facilities in the park include camping areas at Black Rocks (a nature-based camping area with minimal facilities, adjacent to Ten Mile Beach) and at Woody Head (which provides amenities including hot showers, cabins and a kiosk).[citation needed]

The park contains six picnic areas: Gummi Garra near Evans Head and Shark Bay, Old Ferry Crossing, Back Beach, Frazers Reef and Iluka Bluff on the Iluka Peninsula.[citation needed]

The north-eastern portion of the park contains an exclusion zone utilised by the RAAF as an active bombing range and public access is restricted. The bombing range has been in use since World War II as a training facility for target practice. Its existence predates the gazettal of the park and provides a mixed benefit in that it has preserved a large area that has been relatively untouched by human interference for many years.[citation needed]

Dual-language entrance sign at Bundjalung National Park, in English and Bundjalung languages

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Department of Environment and Conservation NSW: Bundjalung National Park, promotional flyer, 2006
  • National Parks and Wildlife Service NSW : Broadwater National Park, Bundjalung National Park and Iluka Nature Reserve – Plan of Management. Sydney, August 1997. ISBN 0-7310-7655-9

External links[edit]