Australian Alps

Australian Alps
Australian Alps
The Alps, Victorian Alps, Snowy Mountains, New South Wales Alps
Mountain range
Mount Hotham, looking towards Mount Feathertop; during winter these mountains are blanketed in snow
Country Australia
Region Victoria, New South Wales
Part of Great Dividing Range
Highest point Mount Kosciuszko
 - elevation 2,228 m (7,310 ft)
Geology Igneous, Sedimentary, Metamorphic
Period Devonian
Alpine National Parks
The Australian Alps viewed from Snowy River Road, near Suggan Buggan, Victoria
Sunset over the alps from Mount Hotham, Victoria

The Australian Alps are the highest mountain ranges of mainland Australia. They are located in southeastern Australia and straddle the Australian Capital Territory, south-eastern New South Wales and eastern Victoria. The Alps contain the Australian mainland's only peaks exceeding 2,000 metres (6,500 feet) and the only place on the mainland in which deep snow occurs regularly (snow also falls on Tasmania's high country).

The Australian Alps are part of the Great Dividing Range, the series of hills and plateaus which run about 3,000 kilometres from northern Queensland to central Victoria. These highlands divide the rivers and streams which flow eastwards into the Pacific Ocean, from those rivers and streams which flow inland to the Murray River system or internal catchments. The highlands reach their greatest height in the Alps.

The Snowy Mountains in New South Wales are part of the Alps. The southwestern half of the Australian Alps, in Victoria, are also referred to as the Victorian Alps. In and around the Australian Capital Territory, the mountains are known as the Brindabella Ranges.

Contents

Ecology

The Alps are important for conservation, recreation and as a water catchment, with much of the eastern slopes' runoff diverted into the Murray River and its tributary the Murrumbidgee River through the Snowy Mountains Scheme.

They are protected by large National Parks, in particular the Kosciuszko National Park in New South Wales and the Alpine National Park in Victoria which are managed cooperatively as Australian Alps National Parks by agencies of the Australian, New South Wales, Victorian and Australian Capital Territory governments.

They also contain mainland Australia's only ski resorts, which along with the Snowy Mountains Scheme town of Cabramurra represent virtually the only permanent settlements in the area. Several medium-sized towns are present in the valleys immediately below including Jindabyne, Corryong and Mount Beauty.

The Australian Alps are mostly considerably less steep in character than the Alps, and most peaks can be reached without specialised mountaineering equipment (though there are some cliffs suitable for abseiling and rock climbing).

Birds

The Australian Alps have been classified by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area. Their montane forests and woodlands support large breeding populations of Flame Robins and Pilotbirds.[1]

Bushfires

Due to its mostly hot, dry climate, bushfires in Australia occur frequently, particularly in the well forested areas of the Australian Alps. The Alps, particularly the Victorian Alps, are periodically subject to major bushfires and have been almost entirely burnt through by bushfires on various occasions, notably; Black Thursday in 1851, Black Friday (1939), and during fires in 2003 and 2006-07.

Certain native flora in Australia have evolved to rely on bushfires as a means of reproduction and fire events are an interwoven and an essential part of the ecology of the continent. In some eucalypt and banksia species, for example, fire causes seed pods to open, which allows them to germinate. Fire also encourages the growth of new grassland plants. Other species have adapted to recover quickly from fire.

Nevertheless, damage to surrounding human habitations and native fauna can be extensive and occasionally catastrophic. The 2003 Canberra bushfires severely affected almost 70% of the Australian Capital Territory’s pasture, forests (pine plantations) and nature parks. After burning for a week through the Brindabella Ranges above Canberra, the fires entered the suburbs of the city on 18 January 2003. Four people died and more than 500 homes were destroyed or severely damaged. The Victorian Black Saturday bushfires were particularly intense in parts of the Victorian Highcountry and destroyed several towns, including Kinglake and Marysville. The fires killed 173 people, Australia's highest ever loss of life from a bushfire.[2] Statewide, the fires affected 78 townships and destroyed over 2,030 houses, 3,500+ structures.[3]

Alpine huts

Within the Australian Alps there are 120 still active alpine huts that mainly originate from the early cattlemen days, ski huts, research and surveying. Many have remained in use by fly fishers (seasonal), hikers and skiing groups throughout the year. Most of these huts are maintained by volunteers through the Kosciuszko Huts Association and the local National Parks services.

Some of the more famous huts include Moscow Villa Hut, Valentine Hut, Seaman's Hut and Mawsons Hut. In recent years many huts have been lost through lack of maintenance and bush fire - as occurred with the Pretty Plain Hut and Mount Franklin Chalet, which were lost in the Bushfires of 2003.

Attractions

The restored former courthouse and ski chalet of Kiandra, where Skiing in Australia began.

New South Wales:

Victoria:

Australian Capital Territory:

Resort skiing areas

The Kosciuszko Main Range seen from Charlotte Pass ski resort.
Perisher, New South Wales, is Australia's largest ski resort.

The Australian Alps are the main region in which skiing in Australia takes place (although skiing is also possible in Tasmania). Skiable terrain stretches through large areas of territory from June to October. New South Wales is home to Australia's highest snow country, oldest skifields and largest resort. Recreational skiing in Australia began around 1861 at Kiandra, New South Wales, when Norwegian gold miners introduced the idea to the frozen hills around the town.[4] The first and longest surviving ski club in the world, The Kiandra Snow Shoe Club is believed to have been formed at Kiandra in that year.[5][6] Steeper slopes and more reliable snows lie further to the south and in the 20th Century, the focus of recreational skiing in New South Wales shifted southward, to mountains in and around the Kosciuszko Main Range region, where Australia's best vertical drop is found at Thredbo and Australia's biggest resort, Perisher is now found.

Victoria is the State with the greatest number of ski resorts in Australia and skiing is conducted in ten different alpine locations.[7] Mount Bogong at 1986m, is the highest peak in Victoria and the surrounding Bogong High Plains provide one of the most extensive snow country in Australia, including the leading resorts of Falls Creek and Mount Hotham.[8] Recreational and practical skiing was being practised in the Victorian Alps by the 1880s and 90s with skis made from local timbers, and making use of single steering poles.[9] Skiing began at Mount Buffalo in the 1890s and a Chalet was constructed in 1910. Australia's first ski tow was constructed near Mount Buffalo in 1936.[10]

Cross country skiing is possible in the Australian Capital Territory as well as in New South Wales and Victoria, but downhill ski resorts currently exist only in New South Wales and Victoria:

New South Wales

Victoria

Panoramas

The Victorian High Country from Mount Hotham
The Victorian Alps Fire Complex during the 2006-07 Australian bushfire season, looking towards Dargo from Swifts Creek
Panoramic view of Thredbo ski resort and the Thredbo River valley in the Snowy Mountains from the Kosciuszko Express Terminal
The city of Canberra looking towards the Brindabella Ranges

References

External links

Coordinates: 37°00′S 148°00′E / 37°S 148°E / -37; 148


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Australian Alps —   [ɔs treɪljən ælps], Australische Alpen …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Australian Alps — mountain range in SE Australia, in the states of Victoria and New South Wales: S end of the Great Dividing Range: highest peak, Mt. Kosciusko …   English World dictionary

  • Australian Alps — a mountain range in SE Australia. Highest peak, Mt. Kosciusko, 7328 ft. (2234 m). * * * Mountain range, southeastern Australia. The mountains form the southern end of the Great Dividing Range and the watershed between the headstreams of the… …   Universalium

  • Australian Alps — Blick über die australischen Alpen Der Begriff Australische Alpen (engl. Australian Alps) bezeichnet eine Reihe von Bergketten, die sich im Hinterland von Südostaustralien befinden. In den Australischen Alpen findet man die höchsten Bergspitzen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Australian Alps Walking Track — though it is not exclusively restricted to national parks. This path takes it to some of the country s highest mountains including Victoria s highest; Mt Bogong, New South Wales highest; Mt Kosciuszko and ACT s highest peak; Bimberi Peak. The… …   Wikipedia

  • Australian Alps montane grasslands — The Australian Alps montane grasslands is a montane grassland ecoregion of Australia, restricted to the montane regions of south eastern Australia above 1300 metres (the upper altitudinal limit of Eucalyptus pauciflora ). This region occupies… …   Wikipedia

  • Australian Alps — Austral′ian Alps′ n. geg a mountain range in SE Australia. Highest peak, Mt. Kosciusko, 7328 ft. (2234 m) …   From formal English to slang

  • Australian Alps — /əstreɪljən ˈælps/ (say uhstraylyuhn alps) plural noun the highest section of the Great Dividing Range, extending from south eastern NSW to southern central Victoria; site of the Snowy Mountains Hydro electric Scheme. Highest peak, Mount… …  

  • Australian Alps — geographical name mountain range SE Australia in E Victoria & SE New South Wales forming S end of Great Dividing Range …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Australian Alps — mountains of New South Wales and Victoria …   Eponyms, nicknames, and geographical games

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