"Considered ‘a corridor through time’, Brachina Gorge is a window into 650 million years of the earth’s history, providing geologists with crucial information about a time long before sure-footed wallabies made their homes among the tortured rocks."http://www.raa.com.au/travel/blog/295
Walking along a dry river bed we could see were wallabies had been digging for water, a few inches below the surface. We also saw what looked like fossils in the rock.
The river gum here has one of the largest trunks I have ever seen. Magnificent.
It amazes me how you can see how the rocks have been pushed and lifted out of the earth by fearsome forces millions of years ago. Just love this place.
The cars are dwarfed by the towering cliffs and by time itself.
The ABC Range. |
There was even a display of fossils to look at.
Ruins near Cottage Creek. |
A quick stop at the Lyndhurst Pub for lunch and another photo stop at the ochre cliffs and then we were off to Farina for the night. |
Situated near the old Ghan railway track , Farina was meant to be the wheat capitol of South Australia and was proclaimed a town in 1878. But after a few years of good rainfall, drought set in and the town was eventually deserted in the 1960's. It is being lovingly restored by a dedicated group of people. There is a lovely camping ground and we had the tents set up with plenty of time to explore the town
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