Mount Warning

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Mount Warning
Aboriginal: Wollumbin[1]
250px
Mount Warning panorama from the summit platform
Highest point
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Geography
Mount Warning is located in New South Wales
Mount Warning
Mount Warning
Location Northern Rivers, New South Wales, Australia
Parent range Tweed Range
Geology
Age of rock Over 23 million years
Mountain type Volcanic plug
Last eruption ~23 Ma
Climbing
Easiest route Walking track

Mount Warning (Aboriginal: Wollumbin[1]), a mountain in the Tweed Range in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, Australia, was formed from a volcanic plug of the now-gone Tweed Volcano. The mountain is located 14 kilometres (9 mi) west-south-west of Murwillumbah, near the border between New South Wales and Queensland.[1][3] Due to Mount Warning's proximity to Cape Byron, the Australian continent's easternmost point, it is the first place on mainland Australia to receive the sun's rays each day.[4]

Lieutenant James Cook saw the mountain from the sea and named it Mount Warning.[3][5] At he named a bit of land jutting out of the shoreline as point danger Fingal Head. Together they were named as a point of reference to warn other explorers that came afterward.

Shield volcano

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Mount Warning is the central volcanic remnant of an ancient shield volcano, the Tweed Volcano, which would have been about 1,900 m (6,200 ft) above sea level or just under twice the height of the current mountain.[6][7] This volcano erupted around 23 million years ago.[8] As the mountain's central vent cooled it shrank, forming a depression at the top that has greatly eroded.[7]

File:Mount Warning.jpg
Mount Warning and surrounds
File:AU Mt Warning from Tweed.jpg
Mount Warning seen from Point Danger, Coolangatta
File:Mt Warning 011.jpg
View of Byron Bay and surrounding areas from the summit

Today the vast areas that were part of the volcano include many mountains and ranges at some distance from Mount Warning, and include the Border Ranges, Tamborine Mountain, the McPherson Range and both the Lamington Plateau and Springbrook Plateaus. The erosion caldera formed since this eruption is easily visible around the summit and forms the rim of the Tweed Valley.

During the last stages of eruption, different and more resistant forms of lava that were cooler than those flows that created the shield volcano remained to form the current peak. The whole central Mount Warning massif was also pushed up by forces that remained active after lava eruptions had stopped.[7]

Aboriginal significance

Wollumbin was removed as the name of the peak NNE of Mt Warning and applied as a dual name to Mt Warning by NSW Geographical names board in 2006. The mountain remains a place of cultural and traditional significance to the Bundjalung people and is the site of particular ceremonies and initiation rites.[3] The Bundjalung observe cultural and traditional restrictions forbidding the uninitiated from climbing the mountain, and, as such, generally ask that others also do not attempt to climb the mountain.[citation needed] However, there are several websites that encourage climbers to hike the Mt. Warning/Wollumbin Trail up the mountain. The government National Parks and Wildlife Service advertise this request and do not encourage climbers, but it is not expressly forbidden by park regulations.[9]

Etymology

On 16 May 1770, Lieutenant James Cook was the first European to record seeing "… a remarkable sharp peaked Mountain lying inland…"[5] from a point of land he named Cape Byron. Just five hours later while sailing North, Cook was forced to change course to the East after encountering the dangerous reefs that run 3 miles to the East from Fingal Head, now named Danger Reefs (Inner, South, and Outer reefs).[10]

The next morning, Cook recorded:

"…We now saw the breakers [reefs] again within us which we past at the distance of 1 League [5 km], they lay in the Lat de of 38°..8' [later changed to 28°..8'] & stretch off East two Leagues [10 km] from a point under which is a small Island. There situation may always be found by the peaked mountain before mentioned which bears SWBW from them this and on this account I have named Mount Warning it lies 7 or 8 Leagues [35-40 km] inland in the latitude of 28°..22" S° the land is high and hilly about it but it is conspicuous enough to be distinguished from everything else.[5] The point off which these shoals lay I have named Point Danger to the northward of it the land which is low trends NWBN but we soon found that it did not keep that direction long before it turned again to the northward."[5]

Protected area

File:Mt warning path.jpg
On the path to the summit

The mountain is now protected by the surrounding Wollumbin National Park, and access is regulated by the New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service. Mount Warning is part of the United Nations World Heritage-listed Gondwana Rainforests of Australia.

An ascent of the mountain is discouraged out of respect for local Aboriginal lore,[3] but if undertaken, takes approximately 1½ to 3½ hours (one way) and requires a good level of fitness. There are also viewing platforms at the summit. The total journey is 8.8 km (5.5 mi).[4]

Walking track

Over 60,000 people a year make the 8.8-kilometre (5.5 mi), five-hour round-trip trek to the top from Breakfast Creek.[11]

The walking track to the top of Mount Warning was badly damaged during torrential rain and storms on 26 January 2013 causing its closure.[12] The National Parks and Wildlife Service reopened the walking track on 23 September 2013.[13]

See also

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References

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  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 The Caldera of the Mount Warning Shield Volcano. [brochure] New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service. 1990.
  8. Knesel K. M., Cohen B.E., Vasconcelos P. M., and Thiede D.S. (2008) Rapid change in drift of the Australian plate records collision with Ontong Java Plateau, Nature vol 454, pages 754-757.
  9. Park Brochure Park Brochure. Retrieved on 4 November 2015.
  10. Australian Hydrographic Chart "AUS 813"
  11. Introducing Mt Warning National Park. Lonely Planet. Retrieved on 17 December 2012.
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External links