Northern Tablelands (New South Wales)

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Bergen-op-Zoom Creek, Irish Town, Walcha
Bergen-op-Zoom Creek, Irish Town, Walcha
Green Gully area, Yarrowitch, NSW
Green Gully area, Yarrowitch, NSW
Dangar Lagoon, Uralla, NSW
Dangar Lagoon, Uralla, NSW

The Northern Tablelands is a plateau and a region of the Great Dividing Range in northern New South Wales, Australia. It is the narrow highlands area of the New England region, stretching from the Moonbi Range in the south to the Queensland border in the north. The region corresponds generally to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology's forecast area of the Northern Tablelands which in this case includes Inverell although it is significantly lower.

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[edit] Geography

These tablelands are the largest highland area in Australia. There are widespread high points over 1000 metres and the highest point at Round Mountain is 1,584 metres above sea level. The now closed railway station at Ben Lomond, was the highest railway station in Australia. This elevation means cool summers (rarely over 32°C) but winters are cold with occasional snowfalls and many frosty mornings. Winter minimums can go as low as -10°C around Guyra, Woolbrook and Walcha during frosty mornings, but this usually results in clear sunny days.

The eastern escarpment of the Tableland has spectacular gorges, rainforests and waterfalls, protected in several National Parks and also with a World Heritage listing under Central Eastern Rainforest Reserves (CERRA). Oxley Wild Rivers National Park, one of the largest national parks in NSW is accessible from the Oxley Highway at Walcha and via Waterfall Way east of Armidale and south of Hillgrove. The New England National Park is located in the south-eastern part of the region.

[edit] History

Walcha was the first part of the Northern Tablelands to be discovered in 1818, by the explorer, John Oxley. In 1832 Hamilton Collins Semphill, a settler from Belltrees on the Hunter River, formed a station in the upper Apsley Valley and named it Wolka (Walcha) from the local Aboriginal language. Soon others followed, seeking new lands away from the influence of the Australian Agricultural Company, which dominated resources in the Hunter valley, and settled around the present Armidale district. Armidale was then gazetted as a town in 1849. Squatters soon settled the tablelands with their large sheep runs before Glen Innes and Tenterfield were surveyed in 1851. Armidale is the only city on the Tablelands and is the administrative centre for the Northern Tablelands region.

Wool display, Walcha show.
Wool display, Walcha show.
A Northern Tableland weaner sale
A Northern Tableland weaner sale

The Tablelands cover an area of approximately 3.12 million hectares including 2.11 million hectares occupied by some 2300 agricultural establishments producing agricultural commodities valued at more than $220 million. The area around Armidale and Walcha is noted for its superfine wool production together with the beef cattle studs that are in most of the tablelands area. Gold and antimony are mined at Hillgrove. Guyra produces prime lambs, potatoes, tulips and glasshouse tomatoes. Dorrigo has some dairy farms. Apples, pears and other stone fruit are grown at Kentucky. Lockheed Martin operates a satellite tracking dish near Uralla.

The Northern Tablelands is an Ovine Johne's disease (OJD) Exclusion Area (EA), which may include part or all of a Rural Lands Protection Board, that is declared a Protected Area under the Stock Diseases Act 1923, but given the name of OJD Exclusion Area.

[edit] Flora and fauna

Bolivia Hill and the adjacent nature reserve are the only recorded locations of the endangered Bolivia Hill Boronia (Boronia boliviensis)[1] and the shrub Pimelea venosa.[2] Some rare Eucalyptus michaeliana (Hillgrove Gum) trees may be seen growing along the Long Point Road and the Big Lease, Oxley Wild Rivers National Park. These trees have a distinctive, mottled, greenish trunk with peeling yellow-brown bark.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Threatened Species of the New England Tablelands, NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, 2003
  2. ^ Threatened Species of the New England Tablelands, NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, 2003

The Australian Encyclopaedia, Vol. VI.

[edit] See also

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