| Home > Tasmania > Tarkine Wilderness |
in
the North-West of Tasmania, Australia
from the Arthur River in the north
down to the Pieman River in the South,
bounded by the West
Coast and the Murchison Highway to the East
| The word 'Tarkine'
comes from one of a number of bands of Aboriginals that lived in the
North-West Region of Tasmania. The 'Tarkiners' were a group who were
based at Sandy Cape. The Australian Heritage Commission describes the Tarkine as "one of the world's great archaeological regions" due to the number and significance of aboriginal sites, many of which pre-date the pyramids. There are descendants of the Tarkiners still living on Flinders Island in Bass Strait. |
The Tarkine contains the second largest tract
(over 377,000 hectares) of temperate rainforest on Earth (second
only in size to that in British Columbia, Canada). Temperate
Rainforest is the rarest of the rainforests, and more highly
threatened than tropical and subtropical rainforests. The Tarkine satisfies the entire cultural and natural heritage criterion which makes a property suitable for inclusion on the world heritage list. It is currently under consideration for inclusion in The UNESCO World Heritage List. |
click on thumbnail photo for a larger image
BROWSE 800 MORE LANDSCAPE PHOTOS OF UNITED STATES AND AUSTRALIA
|
visit our other free sites: Large Format Landscape Photography | NewspaperObituaries.net | GenealogyLinks.net Free Genealogy Search Engines | A Guide to Obtaining US Vital Records | Discovering Surnames | Genealogy of the UK 5% of revenue generated at this site supports The Prem Rawat Foundation Dignity, Peace and Prosperity for people who want it. copyright © Southern Sun Digital Media All Rights Reserved |