Mount Gibraltar

Mount Gibraltar
Aboriginal 'bowrell'

Mount Gibraltar seen from the west
Elevation 863 m (2,831 ft)
Location
Location Bowral, NSW Australia
Geology
Age of rock 150 million years
Climbing
First ascent (by European) 1798

Mount Gibraltar is a small mountain between Bowral and Mittagong in New South Wales, Australia

Contents

Facts and Figures

The mountain is locally known as 'The Gib', and is in the form of a ridge, rather than an obvious conical peak. The western extremity of the ridge is commonly pointed out as the mountain itself. 'The Gib' is primarily a residential area with a large nature reserve at its peak.

The first European to climb the mountain, in 1798, was explorer John Wilson. He learned from local Aborigines the name 'Bowrell', which meant 'a high place'. Surveyor Sir Thomas Mitchell also climbed Mount Gibraltar.

Railway

The Main South Railway skirts Mount Gibraltar at its western foothills, passing through a tunnel under Evans Street, Bowral.[3] The original tunnel was single track, but it was replaced in the 1920s by a double track tunnel.

References

  1. ^ Much of the above info. comes from the Visitors' Guide. See 'External Links' below.
  2. ^ http://www.pbsregen.com.au/projects.html Retrieved 1 May 2010
  3. ^ Bayley, p.39. See Biblio.

Bibliography

Bayley, W. A. 1975. Picton-Mittagong Main Line Railway. Bulli: Austrail. ISBN 0 909597 15 4

External links