Mount Warning National Park

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Mount Warning as seen from the Tweed River and Point Danger.
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Mount Warning as seen from the Tweed River and Point Danger.

Mount Warning National Park is a park in northern New South Wales (Australia), 642 km north of Sydney near the border with the state of Queensland. It surrounds Mount Warning, part of a remnant caldera of a much larger extinct volcano (the Tweed volcano). The park is administered by the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, and also incorporates lands of traditional significance to the local Bundjalung people.

The local Aboriginal name for the mountain is "Wollumbin"; meaning, "cloud-catcher", or alternatively "fighting chief of the mountains".

The mountain's English name was bestowed on it by Lieutenant James Cook in May 1770, as his expedition in command of the Endeavour passed it by on their route northwards along the eastern coastline of Australia. The designation "Mount Warning" was meant to indicate the danger of the offshore reefs they encountered.

The park was reserved for public recreation in 1928, dedicated as a national park in 1966, and included in the UNESCO World Heritage Listings in 1986.

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