Bungle Bungle
Purnululu is the name given to the
sandstone area of the Bungle Bungle Range by the Kija
Aboriginal people. The range is situated within the park, rises
up to 578 m (1896 feet) above sea level and is famous for the
unusual and striking sandstone domes striped with alternating
orange and grey bands.
The banding of the domes at Bungle
Bungle is due to differences in clay content
and porosity of the sandstone layers. The grey banding is
cyanobacteria which grows on the layers where moisture
accumulates. The orange bands are layers of oxidised iron
compounds that dry out too quickly for the cyanobacteria
to form.
Access to the park by road is via Spring Creek Track from
the Great Northern Highway approximately 250 km (155 miles)
south of Kununurra. The track is 53 km (33 miles) long and is
only usable in the dry season (1 April to 31 December) for 4WD
vehicles.
It will take approximately 3 hours to negotiate that
distance to the Bunble Bungle visitor centre. Access by air is
less painful and helicopter flights are available from Turkey
Creek Roadhouse (Warmun), 187 km (116 miles) south of
Kununurra, or by light aircraft from Kununurra.
Purnululu National Park is a World Heritage Site
in Western
Australia, 2054 km northeast of
Perth. The nearest major town is Kununurra to the north, or
Halls Creek to the south. Access to the park by road is via
Spring Creek Track, from the Great Northern Highway
approximately 250 km south of Kununurra, to the track's end at
the visitor centre. The track is 53 km long and is usable only
in the dry season (about April 1 to December 31), and only by
four-wheel-drive (4WD) vehicles. Safely navigating it takes
approximately 3 hours.
Access by air is less demanding; helicopter flights are
available, from Turkey Creek Roadhouse at Warmun, 187 km south
of Kununurra, and light aircraft, from Kununurra.
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