Carruthers Peak

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Carruthers Peak

Carruthers Peak from the south
Elevation 2,145 metres (7,037 ft)
Location New South Wales, Australia
Range Main Range / Great Dividing Range
Prominence 80 m (262 ft) (approx)
Coordinates 36°24′31″S 148°17′28″E / -36.40861, 148.29111
Topo map NSW Department of Lands Perisher Valley
Easiest route walk (track)

Carruthers Peak is a peak in the Snowy Mountains between Mount Lee and Mount Twynam. It was named after NSW Premier Joseph Carruthers, who facilitated the building of the Summit Road to Mount Kosciuszko. It can be easily accessed, with the Main Range walk going straight up it.

The area around it contains patches of the rare windswept feldmark ecotope. Due to a century of grazing on the Main Range, the area around it was heavily eroded. From the 1950s Soil Conservation Service undertook an extensive program of rehabilitation of the vegetation of the Carruthers Peak–Mount Twynam area using bitumen, wire netting and bales of straw[1]. It lies on a vein of shale running south-southeast through the predominant granite.

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  1. ^ None of these methods were very effective. However, by chance the bales of hay carried Sheep Sorrel which held the soil together for the recolonisation of native plants.
  • Geehi Bushwalking Club, (2001) 8th ed. Snowy Mountains Walks, Canberra: National Capital Printing. ISBN 0-9599651-4-9