Australia: Daintree National Park

 

I am writing my life story and having a great time.  I went around Australia when I was 21 and am just remembering the Daintree National Park.  Perhaps my early realisations of how important nature was happened when I travelled through such extraordinary places.  I am fortunate to have grown up in australia it is vast and diverse and has extraoridinary biodiversity.  Yet we are slowly destroying it as we don’t seem to know how to balance human activity with natural ecosystems.  We use words like natural resources as we have costed their value instead of ecological natural systems.  We haven’t designed our engineering using nature as our blueprint or template.  We have just looked at profit and off we go.  We are deeply disconnected from our true nature.

What is clear is that these ecosystems are ancient and they have found balance through trial and error.  The error is extinction and what works lives on.  Perhaps we are next on natures list if we don’t listen deeply, as the indigenous so wisely teach.

Here is a rundown on the Daintree.  Enjoy this amazing place.  Visit it if you get the chance.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daintree_National_Park

Daintree National Park

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Daintree National Park
IUCN category II (national park)

Nearest town/city Daintree
Coordinates 15°57′33″S 145°24′07″E
Area 1200 km² (2,730 mi²)
Established 1988
Managing authorities Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service
Official site Cape Tribulation
Mossman Gorge

Daintree is a national park in Far North Queensland, Australia, 1,502 km (933 mi) northwest of Brisbane and 100 km (62 mi) northwest of Cairns. It was founded in 1981[1] and is part of the Wet Tropics of Queensland. In 1988 it was granted listing as a World Heritage List.[1][2] The park consists of two sections, with a settled agricultural area between them which includes the towns of Mossman and Daintree Village.

The main entrance to Daintree National Park is South of the Daintree River at Mossman Gorge, where visitors can see the very best rainforest. However, the words ‘Daintree National Park’ have been painted out on all street signs in Mossman by the previous Douglas Shire council, in order to direct visitors to the tourist area north of the Daintree River.

Daintree National Park is valued because of its exceptional biodiversity.[3] It contains significant habitat for rare species and prolific birdlife. The name is derived from the Daintree River which was named by George Elphinstone Dalrymple, an early explorer of the area, after his friend, Richard Daintree.

Contents

Mossman Gorge section

The Great Dividing Range is close to the coast in this region. This section covers 56,500 ha of mostly inaccessible rainforests and mountain woodlands.[3] The popular Mossman Gorge is located in the southern part of the park.[2]

Cape Tribulation section

Cape Tribulation also lies in the park.[2] Originally the cape belonged to Cape Tribulation National Park from 1981 but was amalgamated into Daintree National Park in 1983.[3] This section covers 17,000 ha along a narrow coastal strip and contains Australia’s last extensive stands of lowland rainforest.[3]

A typical rainforest scene in Daintree National Park

Mossman River and Gorge

The Daintree National Park’s traditional owners are the Eastern Kuku Yalanji Aboriginal people. Many of the natural features of the landscape hold spiritual significance for the traditional owners.[4] One of these features is the location of the bouncing stones at Thornton Beach. The rocks here have a high density due to vulcanism.[1] The park contains the Daintree River, Bloomfield River and Mossman River.

Flora

Much of the national park is covered by tropical rainforest.[3] The Greater Daintree Rainforest has existed continuously for more than 110 million years, making it possibly the oldest existing rainforest. The persistence of this rainforest is believed to be a product of a fortuitous continental drift; after the breakup of its parent supercontinent a portion drifted toward the pole to become Antarctica, disturbing ocean currents and becoming quite chilly, while other portions were moved to hotter and drier locations. The rainforests of the parent continent preserved its climate, and so also its original forests. Tree species, once thought to be long extinct, have only relatively recently been discovered here.

Fauna

The Wompoo Fruit-dove is one of six species of pigeon that live in the park[1][2] as well as significant populations of the endangered cassowary, a flightless bird of substantial size. Mammals include the Striped possum, Daintree river possum, Brown bandicoot, Long nosed bandicoot, Musky Rat Kangaroo, Bennett’s Tree Kangaroo, Swamp wallaby, Platypus, and Short beaked echidna.

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Mohandas Gandhi

“God has no religion”

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