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Fraser Island

Fraser Island (Batjala: K'gari) is a World Heritage-listed island along the south-eastern coast in the Wide Bay–Burnett region, Queensland, Australia.[2][3] The island is approximately 250 kilometres (160 mi) north of the state capital, Brisbane, and is within the Fraser Coast Region local government area.[2] The world heritage listing includes the island, its surrounding waters and parts of the nearby mainland.[4]

Fraser Island
Queensland
View of the beach from Indian Head, May 2016
Fraser Island
Coordinates25°13′S 153°08′E / 25.217°S 153.133°E / -25.217; 153.133Coordinates: 25°13′S 153°08′E / 25.217°S 153.133°E / -25.217; 153.133
Population182 (2016 census)[1]
 • Density0.10997/km2 (0.2848/sq mi)
Postcode(s)4581
Area1,655.0 km2 (639.0 sq mi)
Time zoneAEST (UTC+10:00)
LGA(s)Fraser Coast Region
State electorate(s)
Federal division(s)Wide Bay
Suburbs around Fraser Island:
Unnamed Locality Coral Sea
Great Sandy Strait Fraser Island
Great Sandy Strait Eurong
K'gari (Fraser Island)
UNESCO World Heritage Site
CriteriaNatural: vii, viii, ix
Reference630
Inscription1992 (16th Session)

Fraser Island, and some satellite islands off the southern west coast and thus in the Great Sandy Strait, previously formed the County of Fraser, which was subdivided into six parishes. Among the islands were Slain Island, Tooth Island, Roundbush Island, Moonboom Island, Gardner Island, Dream Island, Stewart Island, and the Reef Islands, all part of the southernmost parish of Talboor.[citation needed]

The island is about 123 kilometres (76 mi) long and 22 kilometres (14 mi) wide.[5] It was inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1992.[3] The island is considered to be the largest sand island in the world at 1,840 square kilometres (710 sq mi).[5] It is also Queensland's largest island, Australia's sixth largest island and the largest island on the east coast of Australia.

Fraser Island has rainforests, eucalyptus woodland, mangrove forests, wallum and peat swamps, sand dunes and coastal heaths. It is made up of sand that has been accumulating for approximately 750,000 years on volcanic bedrock that provides a natural catchment for the sediment carried on a strong offshore current northwards along the coast. Unlike on many sand dunes, plant life is abundant due to the naturally occurring mycorrhizal fungi present in the sand, which release nutrients in a form that can be absorbed by the plants.[6] The island is home to a small number of mammal species,[7] as well as a diverse range of birds, reptiles and amphibians, including the occasional saltwater crocodile. The island is protected as part of the Great Sandy National Park, and is a popular tourism destination.[8]

The island has been inhabited for as long as 5,000 years.[9][6] Explorer James Cook sailed by the island in May 1770. Matthew Flinders landed near the most northern point of the island in 1802. The traditional Butchulla name is K'gari or Gari. For a short period the island was known as Great Sandy Island before becoming Fraser Island, named after James Fraser who died there after become shipwrecked on a nearby reef.

In 1992, Fraser Island was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[10] In 2021, the listing was updated to add the traditional Butchulla Aboriginal name of K'gari[11] as well as the island's official name of Fraser Island. In 2009, as part of the Q150 celebrations, Fraser Island was announced as one of the Q150 Icons of Queensland for its role as a "Natural attraction".[12]

Toponymy

The earliest known name of the island is "K'gari" in the Butchulla (Badjala) language (pronounced "gurri"). It comes from a creation story- according to the Butchulla Dreaming story, the creator being Beiral sent his messenger Yendingie to create land and sea for the people. His helper, a "beautiful white spirit called Princess K’gari", worked hard to create the shores and the land, but afterwards persuaded Yedingie to let stay on their beautiful creation. In order to stay, she had to be changed into an island, so Yedingie created lakes, vegetation, animals and people to keep her company. She remains today, happy "in, and as a 'paradise'".[13]

After European colonisation, it was called Great Sandy Island then Fraser Island from 1842, after James Fraser who was shipwrecked nearby and who died on the island in early August 1836, after being speared by an Aboriginal person.[2][14][15]

The island has also been referred to as Thoorgine, or Thoorgine Island.[16][17]

In 2011, the Indigenous names of K'gari and Gari were entered as alternative names for the island in the Queensland Place Names register.[2]

In 2017, the Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service began referring to the Fraser Island section of Great Sandy National Park as the K'gari (Fraser Island) section,[18] in recognition of the Butchulla name.[19]

In September 2021, the World Heritage Area within Great Sandy National Park, along with the surrounding waters and parts of the nearby mainland, had been renamed K’gari, the original Butchulla people’s name for the island. The move was celebrated at a ceremony with Elders and representatives of the Butchulla people on Fraser Island. The name change had been formally adopted at the 44th session of the World Heritage Committee, and is a major milestone in a long running campaign by the region's traditional owners.[4][15]

History

 
Fraser Island: locator map

Pre-settlement

The island was part of the traditional lands of the Badjala people before European settlement.[20]

Eliza Fraser

Captain James Fraser and his wife, Eliza Fraser, were shipwrecked on the island in 1836. Their ship, the brig Stirling Castle, set sail from Sydney to Singapore with 18 crew and passengers. The ship was holed on coral while travelling through the Great Barrier Reef north of the island.[21] Transferring to two lifeboats, the crew set a course south, attempting to reach the settlement at Moreton Bay (now Brisbane). During this trip in the leaking lifeboats, Captain Fraser's pregnant wife gave birth in water up to her waist; the infant drowned after birth. The Captain's lifeboat was becoming more and more unseaworthy and was soon left behind by the other lifeboat which continued on. The sinking boat and its crew was beached on what was then known as the Great Sandy Island. Whether the survivors died due to disease, hunger, exhaustion or battles with the native population will never be known for sure; most likely a little of all of the above. Captain Fraser died leaving Eliza living among the local peoples. She was rescued 6 weeks later by a convict, John Graham,[22] who had lived in the bush as an escapee and who spoke the Aboriginal language. He was sent from the settlement at Moreton Bay by the authorities there who had heard about Eliza's plight, and negotiated her return.[23] Within 6 months, Eliza had married another sea captain. She moved to England and became a sideshow attraction in Hyde Park telling ever more lurid tales about her experiences with the enslavement of the crew, cannibalism, torture, and murder. As she is known to have told several versions of the story, it is unknown which (if any) version was most accurate.[24][25] She was killed in a carriage accident in Melbourne in 1858 during a visit.[21] Fraser's stories were later disputed.[26]

Butchulla

Butchulla (also known as Batjala, Badtjala, Badjela and Badjala) is the language of the Fraser Coast region, including Fraser Island. Butchulla language region includes the landscape within the local government boundaries of the Fraser Coast Regional Council, particularly the towns of Maryborough and Hervey Bay extending south towards Noosa.[27]

Archaeological research and evidence shows that Aboriginal Australians occupied Fraser Island at least 5,000 years ago. There was a permanent population of 400–600 that grew to 2,000–3,000 in the winter months due to abundant seafood resources. The arrival of Europeans in the area was an overwhelming disaster for the Butchulla people. European colonisation in the 1840s destroyed the foundations of Aboriginal life.[7] By 1890, it was reported the permanent Butchulla island population had been reduced to only 300 people.[28] Most of these people were taken off the island in 1904 and relocated to missions in Yarrabah and Durundur, Queensland.[29] It is estimated that up to 500 Indigenous archaeological sites are located on the island.[30]

In October 2014, Native title rights were granted to the Butchulla people by the Federal Court. This essentially enables Butchulla people to hunt, fish and take water for domestic purposes; and opens the island up to economic opportunities for current and future generations of Butchulla people through ecotourism and related business development.[31]

British exploration

Initial European contact was limited to explorers and shipwrecks. The first recorded Briton to sight Fraser Island was James Cook who passed along the coast of the island between 18 and 20 May 1770. He named Indian Head after viewing a number of Aboriginal people gathered on the headland. After Cook's passage an Aboriginal song was composed to commemorate the event. This was later recognised as the first preserved oral testimony of Indigenous observation of Europeans.[32] Matthew Flinders sailed past the island in 1799, and again in 1802, this time landing at Sandy Cape,[33] while charting Hervey Bay. His 1814 chart is a combination of both voyages, but did not confirm Fraser Island as being separate from the mainland. However, Flinders did suggest the presence of shallow swampy areas at the lower part of the bay. Flinders was told of an opening at Hook Point, between Fraser Island and the mainland, by two American whalers who were hunting whales in Hervey Bay.[34] In 1842, Andrew Petrie recorded good pastoral lands and forests, attracting graziers to the region.[35] Lieutenant Robert Dayman was the first European to sail between Fraser Island and the mainland in 1847.[36]

Frontier Conflict 1851-1860

Non-Indigenous settlement of the traditional Butchulla mainland area began in 1847, sparking frontier conflict.

Violence between Indigenous people and non-Indigenous people was reported.[37] In October 1850, it was reported that "blacks [sic] had driven away 2000 sheep from a station about forty miles from here, and had killed a shepherd."[38] In 1851, a small government-led force including Commandant Frederick Walker and a contingent of the Native Police were called in "for the purpose of endeavouring to apprehend some aboriginal natives [sic] who stand charged with various offences, and who have hitherto found shelter in the scrub" of Fraser Island.[39] Frontier war was anticipated, condoned, and facilitated by the government, with Walker receiving advice from the Attorney-General of New South Wales, John Hubert Plunkett saying, "It must, unhappily, be expected that the proposed attempt at arrest may lead to a warlike conflict and perhaps to loss of life, but the aim of the law must not be paralysed by the expectation of such results".[40]

The force included Walker, Lieutenant Richard Marshall, Sergeant Doolan, three divisions of troopers, and armed locals including James Leith Hay, aboard a schooner. A boat reputedly stolen by "the blacks [sic] from Maryborough" was captured along the way.[41] The force landed on the west coast of the island where the divisions split up. During the night, conflict began and a number of Indigenous people were shot and others captured. The weather was bad and Commandant Walker allowed his division to track down other groups without him. This group tracked a group of Indigenous people across the island to the east coast where they pursued them into the open ocean near Indian Head/Tacky Waroo to an unknown fate. After months of conflict, the force returned to Maryborough in early January 1852 and Captain Currie received a reward of £10 for his contribution.[42] According to Native Police reports, operations on Fraser Island during 24 December 1851 and 3 January 1852 were lawful, and only two Indigenous people were killed while attacking Walker’s police party on the night of 27 December 1851.[43] Academics as well as community advocates have demonstrated that the word dispersed was often used regardless of the actual results of clashes between Native Police and Indigenous Australians and the pursuing of Indigenous people into the sea at Indian Head/Tacky Waroo was most likely a massacre as the relevant report states that the Butchulla were "dispersed into the sea".[44][45]

British commissioners stationed in Maryborough reported non-Indigenous occupants felt threatened by Butchulla people.[46] In 1857, a Native Police barracks under the command of Lieutenant John O'Connell Bligh was established at Coopers Plains, now Owanyilla, not far from Maryborough. Bligh conducted further forays into Fraser Island,[47] Cooloola, and in the town of Maryborough itself.[48]

The 'White Girls' of Fraser Island

In 1859 rumours of two shipwrecked 'white' girls living with Butchulla people on Fraser Island gained some credence when Captain Arnold of the Coquette arrived in Sydney with information seeming to confirm the story.[49] Public interest was stirred and Arnold was requested by the New South Wales Government to return to the island with a rescue party, obtaining the right to a £200 bonus if the girls were brought back. The expedition was carried out with the aid of an Aboriginal man named Tommy, who identified the Aboriginal camp near Indian Head where two girls aged about 12 and 18 were located and captured.[50] On taking them to Sydney, it became evident through their appearance and through their complete lack of knowledge of the English language that the girls were likely Aboriginal 'half-castes'. Edward Preddy of the rescue party wrote that "they could not converse with any of us, nor did they seem capable of talking with the blacks."[47] Arthur Macalister stated that he "thought it very probable that these girls were half castes, and that the whole thing was a trick".[51] Further discredit was placed on the process when it was found that the Aboriginal people who were paid by the search party to find the girls were rewarded in worthless commemorative coins instead of real money.[52] The girls, 'Kitty' Mundi and 'Maria' Quoheen/Coyeen, were not returned to their home but were initially kept at the Immigration Depot, where they yearned for their family.[53] Kitty, the eldest of the two, suffered severe mental distress and died shortly afterwards. Maria survived for about 20 years, dying from pulmonary tuberculosis.[54]

Aboriginal internment camp

 
Shelters at Boggimbah, Fraser Island, 1902. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Negative number: 107735.

In 1897, as part of the implementation of the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act 1897, the Government of Queensland moved 51 Indigenous people who had been deemed to have "reached a deplorable stage of degradation, being completely demoralised by drink, opium, disease, and intermittent periods of semi-starvation" from the Maryborough district to a camp on the west coast of Fraser Island. The main bureaucrat in charge of the relocations of Indigenous people in Queensland at the time, Archibald Meston, transported the 51 men, women and children to a defunct quarantine station at White Cliffs (Beerillbee) about 2 km south of the present day Kingfisher Bay Resort.[55] However, white residents of Maryborough made incursions into the camp area and caused tension and flare ups[56] which resulted in the relocation of the camp 10 km north to Bogimbah creek.[57] The Queensland Government ran the Bogimbah site under the direction of Archibald Meston's son and wife until February 1900, when control was handed over to the Australian Board of Missions.[58] By this time, Bogimbah had become an incarceration facility for Indigenous people from around Queensland, it was described as a hell hole of deprivation, lacking medical supplies, food and shelter and mosquito born diseases were prevalent. [59] At the end of 1899 there were 137 Indigenous people from 25 different locations, including some who had served prison sentences in places like St Helena Island and Townsville Gaol and had been refused permission to return to their homes.[60] A former Native Police trooper named Barney, who had assisted in the operations to capture Ned Kelly, was sent to Bogimbah but drowned there not long after in a boating accident.[61]

 
Archibald Meston. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Negative Number 17065.

Conditions at Bogimbah were dire, with inadequate shelter and rations.[62] Inmates frequently tried to escape to the mainland in order to get access to better food and obtain employment. Some died through malnutrition, pulmonary tuberculosis and geophagia.[63] In 1904, in order to save money on funding to the Missions Board, the Queensland Government decided to shut the Bogimbah facility.[64] Of the 145 Indigenous people counted at the time of closure, 94 were transferred to the Yarrabah facility near Cairns, 33 to the Durundur facility near Woodford, 9 were kept local and another 9 escaped or were sent elsewhere.[65] Those who were removed to Yarrabah were transported by the Rio Loge and there appears to have been deceptive techniques involved in getting the people to separate from loved ones.[66] Once in Yarrabah, similarly poor living standards greeted these people and those who become troublesome were transferred to Fitzroy Island.[67]

Logging

 
McKenzie's Tramway Locomotive, c. 1920

Logging on the island began in 1863, initiated by American Jack Piggott (known as 'Yankee Jack').[35] Piggott's contribution, however, was limited as he was killed the following year by Indigenous people on the northern part of the island after what was rumoured to be a "black-shooting expedition" went awry.[68] Blackbutt trees (Eucalyptus pilularis), Queensland kauri (Agathis robusta) and satinay or Fraser Island turpentine (Syncarpia hillii) were extensively exploited as they provided excellent timber.[35][69] Satinay logs were sent to Egypt to be used in the construction of the Suez Canal.[70] For the first 70 years of logging, bullock drays were used to haul the timber to loading points on the beach.[70] Railway tracks were laid through the forest to facilitate logging, but were later removed. The logging industry continued until 1991, ceasing following concerns raised by the Commission of Inquiry into the Conservation, Management and Use of Fraser Island and the Great Sandy Region, appointed by the Goss Labor government and chaired by Justice Tony Fitzgerald.[71]

Sand mining

The geology of the island includes extensive deposits of rutile, ilmenite, zircon and monazite. Sand mining leases were first granted in 1950, and mining continued until 1977.[72] Without public knowledge the Queensland Government granted mining leases to the American mining company Dillingham-Murphyores in the 1960s. In 1971, the Fraser Island Defenders Organisation (FIDO) opposed the granting of more leases to the company. Despite more than 1,300 submissions that were made to the local mining warden objecting to new leases, the submission was granted.[73][74] FIDO took the case to the High Court of Australia which overruled the decision noting that the public interest was not being upheld. Dillingham-Murphyores continued mining. The Whitlam Government established Australia's first environmental impact inquiry, which recommended that mining cease.[73] Eventually the Fraser Government cancelled the company's mineral export license, which halted mining on the island. That represented a significant win for the conservation movement in Australia.[73] Fraser Island then became the first place to be included in the Australian Heritage Commission's Register of the National Estate.[75]

Wreck of the Maheno

 
The wreck of the S.S. Maheno near Eli Creek, 2019

A major landmark on Fraser Island is the shipwreck of the S.S. Maheno. The Maheno was built in Scotland in 1905 as a luxury passenger ship for the trans-Tasman crossing. During World War I it served as a hospital ship in the English Channel, and was then returned to its owners to resume usual commercial operation. By 1935 the ship had been taken out of service and was sold to a ship-breaker in Japan. On 25 June 1935, while being towed to Osaka to be broken up, the ship was caught in a strong cyclone about 80 kilometres (50 miles) off the coast of Queensland. The towline parted, and on 9 July 1935 the Maheno became beached on the east coast of Fraser Island.

During World War II the wreck served as target bombing practice for the RAAF and was used as an explosives demolition target by special forces from the Fraser Commando School. The remains of the ship are now severely rusted, with almost three and a half storeys buried under the sand. Because of the danger it poses, climbing on the wreck is not permitted.[76]

Fraser Commando School

During World War II, the area near McKenzie's Jetty was used by the Services Reconnaissance Department (popularly known as "Z Special Unit") as a special forces training camp – the Fraser Commando School. Thousands of soldiers were trained here because the conditions were similar to those found on Pacific Islands where the Japanese were fought.[70] Lake McKenzie was used for parachute training and the wreck of the Maheno was used for explosive demolitions practice.

Visitors to the site of the Fraser Commando School today can still see various relics of its military past including armour plates used to test armour piercing explosive charges and weapons and a concrete relief map of Singapore Harbour used as an aid in operations planning.

Nauru resettlement proposition

As part of ongoing meetings in the United Nations Trusteeship Council on the Conditions in the Trust Territories, the Republic of Nauru expressed concern that its phosphate mining exportation would be depleted by the end of the century, endangering the future of the island.[77][78] In 1961, Fraser Island was proposed by Australia as a location for the resettlement of the entire population of the Republic of Nauru. The timber industry on Fraser Island managed to ensure that resettlement on Fraser Island did not proceed.[79] In 1964 in the 31st session of United Nations Trusteeship Council meetings it was concluded that Curtis Island could provide a more satisfactory resettlement for the population of Nauru.[78] Nauru rejected the offer of moving the entire population to Curtis Island due to political independence considerations that Australia would not agree to.[77] When visiting the island in 1964, the head of the Nauru delegation, Hammer de Roburt, insisted on this point of sovereignty in order to protect his people from the overt racism that he himself experienced on this tour.[80] Although a resettlement never did occur, the Republic of Nauru went on to achieve independence on 31 January 1968.

Population

At the 2011 census, Fraser Island had a population of 194 people.[81]

2020 bushfire

On 14 October 2020, a large bushfire was started on the island by an illegal campfire. It impacted multiple communities and caused residents to flee their homes as it burned out of control.[82]

In early December interstate assistance, including from the New South Wales Rural Fire Service (NSWRFS) who provided a Boeing 737-300 Large Air Tanker waterbombing aircraft, was used to fight the fire as Happy Valley township was threatened. High temperatures, 32 °C (90 °F), and strong winds hindered fire fighting and Queensland Fire and Emergency Services (QFES) Director Brian Cox said "A lot of this fire is burning in inaccessible country …".[83]

Heavy rainfall in mid-December helped contain the fire and the QFES was able to hand control back to the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service (QPWS).[84] This was the longest burning fire of the 2020–21 bushfire season up to 14 December 2020 as it had been burning since October, over two months, and as of that date, more than half the island had been "blackened" by fire.[85]

The island reopened to tourists on 15 December. The fire was still burning, but the island was declared safe for visitors, though some walking trails and burner areas were still restricted for safety.[85] It is expected that the burned areas will successfully regenerate.[86]

Geography and ecology

 
NASA Landsat image of insular Fraser Island

Fraser Island is separated from the mainland by Great Sandy Strait. The southern tip, near Tin Can Bay, is situated to the north of Inskip Peninsula. The most northern point of the island is Sandy Cape where the Sandy Cape Light operated from 1870 to 1994.[87] The establishment of the lighthouse was the first permanent European settlement on the island.[36] The nearest large town to the island is Hervey Bay, while Maryborough and Bundaberg are also close by. The bay on the north east coast is called Marloo Bay and on the north west coast is Platypus Bay. The most westerly place on the island is Moon Point.[88]

The island is divided into two localities: the eponymous Fraser Island locality consisting of most of the land on the island and the locality of Eurong on the east coast of the island.[89][90][91]

 
Eli Creek is the largest creek on the eastern beach.
 
Eli Creek where it enters the sea

Eli Creek is the largest freshwater creek on the east coast of Fraser Island with a flow of 80 million litres per day.[92] Eli Creek has its own unique and varied wild life. Coongul Creek, on the west coast, has a flow rate of four to five million litres per hour.[88] Some of the swamps on the island are fens, particularly near Moon Point. That was only discovered in 1996, when a group of experts who had attended a Ramsar conference in Brisbane flew over the island and conducted an aerial survey.[93] From above, they noticed the distinct patterns of potholed peat devoid of trees. That was the first instance of fens being found in Australia and in a sub-tropical region, although more were subsequently discovered on the adjacent Cooloola coast.

Sandmass and The Pinnacles

 
The Pinnacles on Fraser Island

The total volume of sand above sea level on Fraser Island is directly proportional to the mass of 113 cubic kilometres (27 cubic miles).[94] All of the sand, which originated in the Hawkesbury, Hunter and Clarence River catchments in New South Wales, has been transported northward by longshore drift driven by onshore winds from the southeast and repeated wave actions.[94] Along the eastern coast of the island the process is removing more sand than it is depositing, resulting in the slow erosion of beaches which may accelerate with sea level rises attributed to climate change. The sand consists of 98% quartz.[88]

All hills on Fraser Island have been formed by sandblowing. Sandblows are parabolic dunes which move across the island via the wind and are devoid of vegetation. In 2004, there was an estimated total of 36 sandblows on the island.[88] With year-round winds from the southeast, the sand dunes on the island move at the rate of 1 to 2 metres a year and grow to a height of 244 metres. The dune movement creates overlapping dunes and sometimes intersects waterways and covers forests. Dune-building has occurred in episodes as the sea levels have changed, and once extended much further to the east.[35] The oldest dune system has been dated at 700,000 years, which is the world's oldest recorded sequence.[35]

The coloured sands found at Rainbow Gorge, The Cathedrals, The Pinnacles and Red Canyon are examples of the sand being stained over thousands of years due to it conglomerating with clay.[35] Hematite, the mineral pigment responsible for the staining, acts like cement. That allows the steeper cliffs of coloured sand to form. Coffee rock, so-called because when it is dissolved in water it turns the colour of coffee, is found in outcrops along the beaches on both sides of the island.[88]

The "75-Mile Beach" (120 km) runs along most of the east coast of Fraser Island. It is officially designated as a main road and is used as a landing strip for planes. Highway rules state that vehicles must give way to aircraft if they are oncoming. Along the beach are the Champagne Pools, Indian Head, the Maheno Wreck, and the outflow of Eli Creek. Exposed volcanic rocks are found at Indian Head, Waddy Point and Middle Rocks,[95] as well as near Boon Boon Creek.[88]

Lakes

 
The beach at Lake McKenzie, 2016
 
Hammerstone Sandblow and Lake Wabby

Fraser Island has more than 100 freshwater lakes,[96] the second highest concentration of lakes in Australia after Tasmania.[92] The freshwater lakes on the island are some of the cleanest in the world.[6] A popular tourist area, Lake McKenzie, is located inland from the small town of Eurong. It is a perched lake, sitting on top of compact sand and vegetable matter 100 metres (330 ft) above sea level. Lake McKenzie has an area of 150 hectares and is just over 5 metres (16 ft) deep. The beach sand of Lake McKenzie is nearly pure silica. The lakes have very few nutrients and their pH varies, but sunscreen and soaps cause a pollution problem. Fresh water on the island may become stained by organic acids found in decaying vegetation. Because of the organic acids, a pH level as low as 3.7 has been measured in some of the island's perched lakes.[88] The acidity prevents many species from inhabiting the lakes.

Another perched lake on Fraser Island is Lake Boomanjin which, at 200 hectares in size, is the largest perched lake on any sea island in the world.[70] In total there are 40 perched lakes on the island, half of all known lakes of this kind on the planet.[7] Lake Boomanjin is fed by two creeks that pass through a wallum swamp where it collects tannins which tint the water red.[88] Lake Wabby is the deepest lake on the island, at 12 metres (39 ft) in depth, and is also the least acidic, which means it has the most aquatic life of all the lakes.

Some of the lakes on Fraser Island are window lakes, which form when the water table has risen to a point higher than the surrounding land. Most of the valleys on the island have creeks which are fed by springs.[88] Motor boats and jet skis are banned from the lakes on the island.[30]

Climate

Fraser Island has a tropical wet and dry climate (Köppen: Aw); it is generally warm and not subject to extremes in temperature due to the moderating influence of the ocean. Temperatures rarely rise above 33 °C (91 °F) or drop below 7 °C (45 °F) and humidity is consistently high. Rainfall is heaviest during the summer and early autumn, and the annual average is 1,251 mm (49.25 in). Cyclones can be a threat; Cyclone Hamish brushed the island as a category 5 in March 2009, while Cyclone Oswald in January 2013 was significantly weaker at a Category 1. Both storms however caused severe beach erosion, particularly on the island's northern tip.[97] The average annual temperature of the sea ranges from 22 °C (72 °F) between July and September to 27 °C (81 °F) between January and March.[98]

Climate data for Fraser Island (Sandy Cape Lighthouse), 1991 - 2020
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 34.2
(93.6)
35.8
(96.4)
34.7
(94.5)
31.4
(88.5)
28.7
(83.7)
27.8
(82.0)
26.5
(79.7)
27.2
(81.0)
29.3
(84.7)
31.8
(89.2)
33.2
(91.8)
36.0
(96.8)
36.0
(96.8)
Average high °C (°F) 29.8
(85.6)
29.8
(85.6)
28.9
(84.0)
27.1
(80.8)
24.4
(75.9)
22.4
(72.3)
21.8
(71.2)
22.8
(73.0)
24.9
(76.8)
26.3
(79.3)
27.8
(82.0)
29.1
(84.4)
26.3
(79.3)
Daily mean °C (°F) 26.2
(79.2)
26.3
(79.3)
25.4
(77.7)
23.7
(74.7)
21.1
(70.0)
19.1
(66.4)
18.2
(64.8)
19.1
(66.4)
21.2
(70.2)
22.6
(72.7)
24.2
(75.6)
25.5
(77.9)
22.7
(72.9)
Average low °C (°F) 22.7
(72.9)
22.8
(73.0)
22.0
(71.6)
20.3
(68.5)
17.9
(64.2)
15.8
(60.4)
14.7
(58.5)
15.5
(59.9)
17.5
(63.5)
19.0
(66.2)
20.6
(69.1)
21.9
(71.4)
19.2
(66.6)
Record low °C (°F) 16.7
(62.1)
16.1
(61.0)
14.6
(58.3)
13.3
(55.9)
9.6
(49.3)
6.7
(44.1)
5.2
(41.4)
5.6
(42.1)
9.4
(48.9)
11.2
(52.2)
13.9
(57.0)
16.0
(60.8)
5.2
(41.4)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 150.3
(5.92)
157.6
(6.20)
141.8
(5.58)
111.0
(4.37)
127.9
(5.04)
101.5
(4.00)
70.1
(2.76)
53.8
(2.12)
42.4
(1.67)
90.7
(3.57)
62.2
(2.45)
99.8
(3.93)
1,209.1
(47.61)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 9.9 10.0 11.4 11.2 11.0 9.8 8.2 6.1 4.7 5.5 5.5 7.4 100.7
Source: Bureau of Meteorology[99]

Fauna

Mammals

Estimates of the number of mammal species present on Fraser Island range from 25 to 50.[96][100] Mammals include swamp wallabies, echidnas, ringtail and brushtail possums, sugar gliders, squirrel gliders, phascogales, bandicoots, potoroos, flying foxes and dingoes. The swamp wallaby finds protection from dingos in the swampy areas which have dense undergrowth.[101] There are 19 species of bats which live on or visit the island.[101]

Until 2003, when they were removed by the Environmental Protection Agency,[102] there were a few brumbies (horses) on the island, descendants of Arab stock turned loose for breeding purposes, and joined in 1879 by horses brought over for the logging industry.[103][104]

Dingoes

 
Fraser Island dingoes

Dingoes were once common on Fraser Island, but are now decreasing. The island dingoes are reputedly some of the last remaining 'pure' dingoes in Eastern Australia and to prevent cross-breeding, dogs are not allowed on the island. According to DNA-examinations from the year 2004, the island dingoes are "pure".[105] However, skull measurements from the 1990s detected crossbreeds between dingoes and domestic dogs among the population.[106]

Up until 1995, there were no official records of dingoes attacking humans on Fraser Island. In April 2001, a boy named Clinton Gage wandered away from his family and was attacked and killed by several dingoes.[107] More than 120 dingoes were killed by rangers as a result of the incident, though locals believe the number was much greater.[103] After the 2001 attack, four dedicated rangers were allocated dingo management roles and ranger patrols were increased.[108] There are fines for feeding dingoes or leaving food and rubbish out which may attract them.[100]

As of January 2008, the number of dingoes on Fraser Island was estimated to be 120 to 150, and sightings have become less common. A University of Queensland researcher, Nick Baker, claims the island dingoes have adopted unusual behaviour. Rather than hunt in small packs, island dingoes had developed a tolerance for each other and work together in one big hunting pack.[108] Dingo-proof fences, consisting of metals bars across a concrete pit and a 1.8 m high mesh fence were built around nine island settlements in 2008, to keep the dingoes out of the townships.[109]

In March 2010, three separate reports of dingos biting tourists were made.[110] Tourists have been criticised for ignoring advice from park rangers as they try to provoke reactions from dingoes while taking photographs.[110]

As of 2015, the number of dingoes on Fraser Island was estimated to be around 180 to 220.[111]

Reptiles and amphibians

There has been a total of 74 different species of reptiles recorded on Fraser Island.[101] 18 species of snakes have been identified with one third of them considered dangerous, including the extremely venomous eastern brown snake.[96] Goannas, snakes, geckos, skinks and frogs are all present on the island. Some frog species have evolved to cope with the acidic waters of lakes and swamps on the island, and are appropriately called acid frogs.[100][104] The island is home to the recently discovered Fraser Island sand skink. Freshwater turtles such as Kreffts river turtle are found in the island's lakes and creeks.

Saltwater crocodiles are exclusively tropical reptiles and usually found in Far North Queensland (several hundred kilometres north-west of Fraser Island), however, occasionally during the warmer season (December through March, when water temperatures reach consistent tropical temperatures) crocodiles may appear in areas in and around the island. During the 2008–2009 summer several crocodiles (one over 4 metres in length) were present in the surrounding ocean.[112] It is thought that these reptiles are seasonal visitors, as they always disappear during the cold months (presumably returning to tropical northern Queensland.) This sort of activity was apparently reported but unverified decades ago (a handful of crocodiles have also historically been observed on very rare occurrences around Brisbane, the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast during the warmer season) but within recent years has been proven and observed more often. Crocodiles do not breed nor do they appear to have any permanent populations living on the island.

Birds

Fraser Island forms part of the Cooloola and Fraser Coast Important Bird Area (IBA).[113] There are over 350 different species of birds on the island.[7] Birds of prey include sea eagles, peregrine falcon, osprey and kites. Other common birds include pelicans, terns, honeyeaters, gulls, kingfishers, kookaburra, owls, doves, thornbills, ducks, brolgas, and cockatoos. The island is visited by 20 species of migratory wader birds from as far afield as Siberia.[101] The island provides habitat for 22 different species of gull and tern, four species of falcon and six species of kingfisher.[114] A rare bird on the island is the eastern ground parrot, already extinct in some parts of Australia.[103][104]

 
A humpback whale with the sand dunes of Fraser Island in the background

Other

Cetaceans, such as humpback whales and some species of dolphins are frequent visitors to the area. Dugongs and sea turtles can also be found in surrounding waters.[100] Great white, bull and tiger sharks can be found, with the latter species sometimes approaching fishermen wading in the surf.[100] Mud crabs are found on the western side of the island near mangrove-lined estuaries.[70] 24 freshwater fish species are found in the island's lakes.[96]

There has been 300 species of ants recorded on Fraser Island.[101] Long finned eels and giant earthworms are also found on the island.

Flora

The flora of Fraser Island is diverse. More than 865 species of plants grow on the island.[88] It is the only place on earth where tall rainforest grows in sand.[100] The island contains the largest extent of wallum heath remnants in Queensland. In Pile Valley, 1,000-year-old rough-barked satinays are found.[100] Despite being logged the kauri pines dominate in some areas. Scribbly gums, red gums, piccabeen palms, blue quandong, brush box and pandanus all grow on the island. Along the coast, the foredunes are dominated by salt-tolerant species which includes pigface, goats foot vine and beach spinifex.[35] Spinifex sericeus is an important foundation species. Decayed matter from this dune grass breaks down in the sand, providing vital nutrients for other plant species, such as the beach oak.[88] The rare Angiopteris evecta, a species of fern that has the largest fronds in the world, grows on the island.[96] The southwest coast is dominated by mangroves.[88] Persoonia prostrata was a shrub native to the island which is now extinct.

As one travels from east to west across Fraser Island, the dune age increases. This leads to the progressive maturing of vegetation in the same direction, except for some areas along the western coast where soil leaching has decreased the nutrient soil layer to a depth beyond the reach of plant roots.[101] Each lake on the island is surrounded by concentric vegetation zones. Typically these zones range from rushes in the shallows, then a mix of pioneer species on the beaches, through to sedges, heath, paperbarks, shrubs and finally eucalypt or banksia woodlands.[101]

Administration

 
Fraser Island seen from Spot Satellite

Fraser Island is part of the local government area Fraser Coast Region, which was created in March 2008 as a result of the report of the Local Government Reform Commission released in July 2007. Before the local government reorganisation, the island was split up evenly between the City of Hervey Bay (northern part) and the City of Maryborough (southern part).

In 1971, the northern half of Fraser Island was declared a national park.[35] Now almost all of the island is included in the Great Sandy National Park, which is administered by Queensland's Environmental Protection Agency. This was extended in 1992 when heritage listing was granted. Except for a few small urban areas the island is protected by a Wild Rivers declaration.[115]

Domestic dogs are not permitted on Fraser Island and fines can be given for non-compliance. The ban, first applied in 1981,[107] is imposed so that the island's dingo population is not exposed to diseases.[116]

In 2010, the management of the park, particularly the treatment of dingoes by the Department of Environment and Resource Management was called into question by Glen Elmes in the Queensland Parliament.[117] Camp grounds are sometimes closed so as to reduce human contact with dingo populations.[110]

Heritage listings

Fraser Island has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:

The island was placed on the Australian National Heritage List on 21 May 2007.[7]

Tourism

 
A 4WD Bus in Fraser Island
 
Scenic flight over Fraser Island, which lands and takes off from the beach
 
It is popular to drive at the beaches of Fraser Island

Fraser Island is one of Queensland's most popular islands for tourists, who can reach the island by ferry from Hervey Bay or Rainbow Beach, which takes approximately 50-minutes.[119] Estimates of the number of visitors to the island each year range from 350,000 to 500,000.[107][120] The chance of seeing a dingo in its natural setting is one of the main reasons people visit the island.[107] The use of boardwalks and marked tracks by visitors is encouraged to reduce erosion.[30]

Urinating tourists have created environmental problems in Fraser Island lakes and on coastal dunes. The foredunes are used as a toilet by bush campers, who are estimated to number 90,000 each year.[120] Many of the perched lakes have no outflow or inflow which exacerbates the problem. Water quality in some lakes is being affected by storm water run-off from dune roads, and by swimmers' use of sunscreen.

In April 2009, a vehicle overturned on the beach after being hit by a wave. Two backpackers were killed in the accident. Following the incident speed limits on the beach were reduced from 100 km/h to 80 km/h, and from 40 km/h to 30 km/h inland.[121] Everyone who hires a vehicle on the island from an organisation accredited by the Fraser Coast 4WD Operators Association must attend a one-hour-long briefing on vehicle safety.

"Central Station", which was formerly the hub of the forestry industry when there was logging on Fraser Island, is now a popular tourist destination. Some of the rarest ferns grow in the rainforest near the location.

Access

 
Fraser Island Ferry
 
Kingfisher Bay Resort, 2022

The island can be reached by a ferry from River Heads (South of Hervey Bay) to Kingfisher Bay and Wanggoolba Creek or Inskip Point to north of Rainbow Beach to Hook Point, or by chartered flight from Sunshine Coast Airport.[122]

A four-wheel drive is required for all landings (except Kingfisher Bay), and travel on the island (except within the Kingfisher Bay Resort). A permit is required for vehicles and is obtainable on-line from DERM and several outlets at Rainbow Beach. Several firms provide four-wheel drive vehicles for hire.[123] Tour buses travel the island as well as several kinds of self-drive tours departing regularly from Hervey Bay, Rainbow Beach and Noosa.[124]

Angling

Tailor is one of the more common species sought by anglers on Fraser Island and along the Queensland coast. Other fish caught on the eastern coast include jewfish, golden trevally and surf bream, while whiting, flathead and surf bream prefer the calmer western waters.[70] Pilchards, bloodworms, yabbies, pipi and sandworms can all be used for bait. Fishing is banned in the island's freshwater creeks and lakes.[101] There is an annual seasonal fishing closure between the beginning of 1 August to the end of 29 September, for eastern foreshore waters as well as waters within 400 m out to sea from the eastern shore and between 400 m north of Waddy Point and 400 m south of Indian Head. The fishing closure prohibits the taking of fin fish only and anglers are still allowed to hand collect worms and pipis during the closure.[125]

Camping

There are many campgrounds on Fraser Island with varying amenities and access. The main camping areas are: Dundubara Campground, Cathedrals on Fraser,[126] Waddy Point campground, Central Station Tent Sites, Waddy Beach (tent only campsites), Cornwells Break (large group site), One Tree Rocks camp zone (Eurong-One Tree Rocks), however there are others. Permits are required for camping and also for vehicle access.[127]

Hiking

There are various possibilities for overnight hiking on the island. Most notable is the 90 km long Fraser Island Great Walk. A shorter hike would be for example to start in Kingfisher Bay (ferry drop off) and head to Lake McKenzie, stay there for one night, and then hike back.[citation needed]

See also

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External links

  • Fraser Island From the Air 24 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Official Website of the Department of Environment and Resource Management for more information and camping permits
  • World heritage listing for K'gari
  • Great Sandy Biosphere
  • University of Queensland: Queensland Places: Fraser Island
  • Satellite image of S.S. Maheno from Google Maps
  • Fraser Island Blazes NASA Earth Observatory

fraser, island, this, article, about, island, australia, locality, part, island, queensland, island, canada, nunavut, territory, nunavut, batjala, gari, world, heritage, listed, island, along, south, eastern, coast, wide, burnett, region, queensland, australia. This article is about the island in Australia For the locality on part of the island see Fraser Island Queensland For the island in Canada s Nunavut Territory see Fraser Island Nunavut Fraser Island Batjala K gari is a World Heritage listed island along the south eastern coast in the Wide Bay Burnett region Queensland Australia 2 3 The island is approximately 250 kilometres 160 mi north of the state capital Brisbane and is within the Fraser Coast Region local government area 2 The world heritage listing includes the island its surrounding waters and parts of the nearby mainland 4 Fraser Island QueenslandView of the beach from Indian Head May 2016Fraser IslandCoordinates25 13 S 153 08 E 25 217 S 153 133 E 25 217 153 133 Coordinates 25 13 S 153 08 E 25 217 S 153 133 E 25 217 153 133Population182 2016 census 1 Density0 10997 km2 0 2848 sq mi Postcode s 4581Area1 655 0 km2 639 0 sq mi Time zoneAEST UTC 10 00 LGA s Fraser Coast RegionState electorate s Hervey BayBurnettFederal division s Wide BaySuburbs around Fraser Island Unnamed Locality Coral SeaGreat Sandy Strait Fraser IslandGreat Sandy Strait EurongK gari Fraser Island UNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaNatural vii viii ixReference630Inscription1992 16th Session Fraser Island and some satellite islands off the southern west coast and thus in the Great Sandy Strait previously formed the County of Fraser which was subdivided into six parishes Among the islands were Slain Island Tooth Island Roundbush Island Moonboom Island Gardner Island Dream Island Stewart Island and the Reef Islands all part of the southernmost parish of Talboor citation needed The island is about 123 kilometres 76 mi long and 22 kilometres 14 mi wide 5 It was inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1992 3 The island is considered to be the largest sand island in the world at 1 840 square kilometres 710 sq mi 5 It is also Queensland s largest island Australia s sixth largest island and the largest island on the east coast of Australia Fraser Island has rainforests eucalyptus woodland mangrove forests wallum and peat swamps sand dunes and coastal heaths It is made up of sand that has been accumulating for approximately 750 000 years on volcanic bedrock that provides a natural catchment for the sediment carried on a strong offshore current northwards along the coast Unlike on many sand dunes plant life is abundant due to the naturally occurring mycorrhizal fungi present in the sand which release nutrients in a form that can be absorbed by the plants 6 The island is home to a small number of mammal species 7 as well as a diverse range of birds reptiles and amphibians including the occasional saltwater crocodile The island is protected as part of the Great Sandy National Park and is a popular tourism destination 8 The island has been inhabited for as long as 5 000 years 9 6 Explorer James Cook sailed by the island in May 1770 Matthew Flinders landed near the most northern point of the island in 1802 The traditional Butchulla name is K gari or Gari For a short period the island was known as Great Sandy Island before becoming Fraser Island named after James Fraser who died there after become shipwrecked on a nearby reef In 1992 Fraser Island was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site 10 In 2021 the listing was updated to add the traditional Butchulla Aboriginal name of K gari 11 as well as the island s official name of Fraser Island In 2009 as part of the Q150 celebrations Fraser Island was announced as one of the Q150 Icons of Queensland for its role as a Natural attraction 12 Contents 1 Toponymy 2 History 2 1 Pre settlement 2 2 Eliza Fraser 2 3 Butchulla 2 4 British exploration 2 5 Frontier Conflict 1851 1860 2 6 The White Girls of Fraser Island 2 7 Aboriginal internment camp 2 8 Logging 2 9 Sand mining 2 10 Wreck of the Maheno 2 11 Fraser Commando School 2 12 Nauru resettlement proposition 2 13 Population 2 14 2020 bushfire 3 Geography and ecology 3 1 Sandmass and The Pinnacles 3 2 Lakes 4 Climate 5 Fauna 5 1 Mammals 5 1 1 Dingoes 5 2 Reptiles and amphibians 5 3 Birds 5 4 Other 6 Flora 7 Administration 8 Heritage listings 9 Tourism 9 1 Access 9 2 Angling 9 3 Camping 9 4 Hiking 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksToponymy EditThe earliest known name of the island is K gari in the Butchulla Badjala language pronounced gurri It comes from a creation story according to the Butchulla Dreaming story the creator being Beiral sent his messenger Yendingie to create land and sea for the people His helper a beautiful white spirit called Princess K gari worked hard to create the shores and the land but afterwards persuaded Yedingie to let stay on their beautiful creation In order to stay she had to be changed into an island so Yedingie created lakes vegetation animals and people to keep her company She remains today happy in and as a paradise 13 After European colonisation it was called Great Sandy Island then Fraser Island from 1842 after James Fraser who was shipwrecked nearby and who died on the island in early August 1836 after being speared by an Aboriginal person 2 14 15 The island has also been referred to as Thoorgine or Thoorgine Island 16 17 In 2011 the Indigenous names of K gari and Gari were entered as alternative names for the island in the Queensland Place Names register 2 In 2017 the Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service began referring to the Fraser Island section of Great Sandy National Park as the K gari Fraser Island section 18 in recognition of the Butchulla name 19 In September 2021 the World Heritage Area within Great Sandy National Park along with the surrounding waters and parts of the nearby mainland had been renamed K gari the original Butchulla people s name for the island The move was celebrated at a ceremony with Elders and representatives of the Butchulla people on Fraser Island The name change had been formally adopted at the 44th session of the World Heritage Committee and is a major milestone in a long running campaign by the region s traditional owners 4 15 History Edit Fraser Island locator map Pre settlement Edit The island was part of the traditional lands of the Badjala people before European settlement 20 Eliza Fraser Edit Captain James Fraser and his wife Eliza Fraser were shipwrecked on the island in 1836 Their ship the brig Stirling Castle set sail from Sydney to Singapore with 18 crew and passengers The ship was holed on coral while travelling through the Great Barrier Reef north of the island 21 Transferring to two lifeboats the crew set a course south attempting to reach the settlement at Moreton Bay now Brisbane During this trip in the leaking lifeboats Captain Fraser s pregnant wife gave birth in water up to her waist the infant drowned after birth The Captain s lifeboat was becoming more and more unseaworthy and was soon left behind by the other lifeboat which continued on The sinking boat and its crew was beached on what was then known as the Great Sandy Island Whether the survivors died due to disease hunger exhaustion or battles with the native population will never be known for sure most likely a little of all of the above Captain Fraser died leaving Eliza living among the local peoples She was rescued 6 weeks later by a convict John Graham 22 who had lived in the bush as an escapee and who spoke the Aboriginal language He was sent from the settlement at Moreton Bay by the authorities there who had heard about Eliza s plight and negotiated her return 23 Within 6 months Eliza had married another sea captain She moved to England and became a sideshow attraction in Hyde Park telling ever more lurid tales about her experiences with the enslavement of the crew cannibalism torture and murder As she is known to have told several versions of the story it is unknown which if any version was most accurate 24 25 She was killed in a carriage accident in Melbourne in 1858 during a visit 21 Fraser s stories were later disputed 26 Butchulla Edit Butchulla also known as Batjala Badtjala Badjela and Badjala is the language of the Fraser Coast region including Fraser Island Butchulla language region includes the landscape within the local government boundaries of the Fraser Coast Regional Council particularly the towns of Maryborough and Hervey Bay extending south towards Noosa 27 Archaeological research and evidence shows that Aboriginal Australians occupied Fraser Island at least 5 000 years ago There was a permanent population of 400 600 that grew to 2 000 3 000 in the winter months due to abundant seafood resources The arrival of Europeans in the area was an overwhelming disaster for the Butchulla people European colonisation in the 1840s destroyed the foundations of Aboriginal life 7 By 1890 it was reported the permanent Butchulla island population had been reduced to only 300 people 28 Most of these people were taken off the island in 1904 and relocated to missions in Yarrabah and Durundur Queensland 29 It is estimated that up to 500 Indigenous archaeological sites are located on the island 30 In October 2014 Native title rights were granted to the Butchulla people by the Federal Court This essentially enables Butchulla people to hunt fish and take water for domestic purposes and opens the island up to economic opportunities for current and future generations of Butchulla people through ecotourism and related business development 31 British exploration Edit Initial European contact was limited to explorers and shipwrecks The first recorded Briton to sight Fraser Island was James Cook who passed along the coast of the island between 18 and 20 May 1770 He named Indian Head after viewing a number of Aboriginal people gathered on the headland After Cook s passage an Aboriginal song was composed to commemorate the event This was later recognised as the first preserved oral testimony of Indigenous observation of Europeans 32 Matthew Flinders sailed past the island in 1799 and again in 1802 this time landing at Sandy Cape 33 while charting Hervey Bay His 1814 chart is a combination of both voyages but did not confirm Fraser Island as being separate from the mainland However Flinders did suggest the presence of shallow swampy areas at the lower part of the bay Flinders was told of an opening at Hook Point between Fraser Island and the mainland by two American whalers who were hunting whales in Hervey Bay 34 In 1842 Andrew Petrie recorded good pastoral lands and forests attracting graziers to the region 35 Lieutenant Robert Dayman was the first European to sail between Fraser Island and the mainland in 1847 36 Frontier Conflict 1851 1860 Edit Non Indigenous settlement of the traditional Butchulla mainland area began in 1847 sparking frontier conflict Violence between Indigenous people and non Indigenous people was reported 37 In October 1850 it was reported that blacks sic had driven away 2000 sheep from a station about forty miles from here and had killed a shepherd 38 In 1851 a small government led force including Commandant Frederick Walker and a contingent of the Native Police were called in for the purpose of endeavouring to apprehend some aboriginal natives sic who stand charged with various offences and who have hitherto found shelter in the scrub of Fraser Island 39 Frontier war was anticipated condoned and facilitated by the government with Walker receiving advice from the Attorney General of New South Wales John Hubert Plunkett saying It must unhappily be expected that the proposed attempt at arrest may lead to a warlike conflict and perhaps to loss of life but the aim of the law must not be paralysed by the expectation of such results 40 The force included Walker Lieutenant Richard Marshall Sergeant Doolan three divisions of troopers and armed locals including James Leith Hay aboard a schooner A boat reputedly stolen by the blacks sic from Maryborough was captured along the way 41 The force landed on the west coast of the island where the divisions split up During the night conflict began and a number of Indigenous people were shot and others captured The weather was bad and Commandant Walker allowed his division to track down other groups without him This group tracked a group of Indigenous people across the island to the east coast where they pursued them into the open ocean near Indian Head Tacky Waroo to an unknown fate After months of conflict the force returned to Maryborough in early January 1852 and Captain Currie received a reward of 10 for his contribution 42 According to Native Police reports operations on Fraser Island during 24 December 1851 and 3 January 1852 were lawful and only two Indigenous people were killed while attacking Walker s police party on the night of 27 December 1851 43 Academics as well as community advocates have demonstrated that the word dispersed was often used regardless of the actual results of clashes between Native Police and Indigenous Australians and the pursuing of Indigenous people into the sea at Indian Head Tacky Waroo was most likely a massacre as the relevant report states that the Butchulla were dispersed into the sea 44 45 British commissioners stationed in Maryborough reported non Indigenous occupants felt threatened by Butchulla people 46 In 1857 a Native Police barracks under the command of Lieutenant John O Connell Bligh was established at Coopers Plains now Owanyilla not far from Maryborough Bligh conducted further forays into Fraser Island 47 Cooloola and in the town of Maryborough itself 48 The White Girls of Fraser Island Edit In 1859 rumours of two shipwrecked white girls living with Butchulla people on Fraser Island gained some credence when Captain Arnold of the Coquette arrived in Sydney with information seeming to confirm the story 49 Public interest was stirred and Arnold was requested by the New South Wales Government to return to the island with a rescue party obtaining the right to a 200 bonus if the girls were brought back The expedition was carried out with the aid of an Aboriginal man named Tommy who identified the Aboriginal camp near Indian Head where two girls aged about 12 and 18 were located and captured 50 On taking them to Sydney it became evident through their appearance and through their complete lack of knowledge of the English language that the girls were likely Aboriginal half castes Edward Preddy of the rescue party wrote that they could not converse with any of us nor did they seem capable of talking with the blacks 47 Arthur Macalister stated that he thought it very probable that these girls were half castes and that the whole thing was a trick 51 Further discredit was placed on the process when it was found that the Aboriginal people who were paid by the search party to find the girls were rewarded in worthless commemorative coins instead of real money 52 The girls Kitty Mundi and Maria Quoheen Coyeen were not returned to their home but were initially kept at the Immigration Depot where they yearned for their family 53 Kitty the eldest of the two suffered severe mental distress and died shortly afterwards Maria survived for about 20 years dying from pulmonary tuberculosis 54 Aboriginal internment camp Edit Shelters at Boggimbah Fraser Island 1902 John Oxley Library State Library of Queensland Negative number 107735 In 1897 as part of the implementation of the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act 1897 the Government of Queensland moved 51 Indigenous people who had been deemed to have reached a deplorable stage of degradation being completely demoralised by drink opium disease and intermittent periods of semi starvation from the Maryborough district to a camp on the west coast of Fraser Island The main bureaucrat in charge of the relocations of Indigenous people in Queensland at the time Archibald Meston transported the 51 men women and children to a defunct quarantine station at White Cliffs Beerillbee about 2 km south of the present day Kingfisher Bay Resort 55 However white residents of Maryborough made incursions into the camp area and caused tension and flare ups 56 which resulted in the relocation of the camp 10 km north to Bogimbah creek 57 The Queensland Government ran the Bogimbah site under the direction of Archibald Meston s son and wife until February 1900 when control was handed over to the Australian Board of Missions 58 By this time Bogimbah had become an incarceration facility for Indigenous people from around Queensland it was described as a hell hole of deprivation lacking medical supplies food and shelter and mosquito born diseases were prevalent 59 At the end of 1899 there were 137 Indigenous people from 25 different locations including some who had served prison sentences in places like St Helena Island and Townsville Gaol and had been refused permission to return to their homes 60 A former Native Police trooper named Barney who had assisted in the operations to capture Ned Kelly was sent to Bogimbah but drowned there not long after in a boating accident 61 Archibald Meston John Oxley Library State Library of Queensland Negative Number 17065 Conditions at Bogimbah were dire with inadequate shelter and rations 62 Inmates frequently tried to escape to the mainland in order to get access to better food and obtain employment Some died through malnutrition pulmonary tuberculosis and geophagia 63 In 1904 in order to save money on funding to the Missions Board the Queensland Government decided to shut the Bogimbah facility 64 Of the 145 Indigenous people counted at the time of closure 94 were transferred to the Yarrabah facility near Cairns 33 to the Durundur facility near Woodford 9 were kept local and another 9 escaped or were sent elsewhere 65 Those who were removed to Yarrabah were transported by the Rio Loge and there appears to have been deceptive techniques involved in getting the people to separate from loved ones 66 Once in Yarrabah similarly poor living standards greeted these people and those who become troublesome were transferred to Fitzroy Island 67 Logging Edit McKenzie s Tramway Locomotive c 1920 Logging on the island began in 1863 initiated by American Jack Piggott known as Yankee Jack 35 Piggott s contribution however was limited as he was killed the following year by Indigenous people on the northern part of the island after what was rumoured to be a black shooting expedition went awry 68 Blackbutt trees Eucalyptus pilularis Queensland kauri Agathis robusta and satinay or Fraser Island turpentine Syncarpia hillii were extensively exploited as they provided excellent timber 35 69 Satinay logs were sent to Egypt to be used in the construction of the Suez Canal 70 For the first 70 years of logging bullock drays were used to haul the timber to loading points on the beach 70 Railway tracks were laid through the forest to facilitate logging but were later removed The logging industry continued until 1991 ceasing following concerns raised by the Commission of Inquiry into the Conservation Management and Use of Fraser Island and the Great Sandy Region appointed by the Goss Labor government and chaired by Justice Tony Fitzgerald 71 Sand mining Edit The geology of the island includes extensive deposits of rutile ilmenite zircon and monazite Sand mining leases were first granted in 1950 and mining continued until 1977 72 Without public knowledge the Queensland Government granted mining leases to the American mining company Dillingham Murphyores in the 1960s In 1971 the Fraser Island Defenders Organisation FIDO opposed the granting of more leases to the company Despite more than 1 300 submissions that were made to the local mining warden objecting to new leases the submission was granted 73 74 FIDO took the case to the High Court of Australia which overruled the decision noting that the public interest was not being upheld Dillingham Murphyores continued mining The Whitlam Government established Australia s first environmental impact inquiry which recommended that mining cease 73 Eventually the Fraser Government cancelled the company s mineral export license which halted mining on the island That represented a significant win for the conservation movement in Australia 73 Fraser Island then became the first place to be included in the Australian Heritage Commission s Register of the National Estate 75 Wreck of the Maheno Edit The wreck of the S S Maheno near Eli Creek 2019 A major landmark on Fraser Island is the shipwreck of the S S Maheno The Maheno was built in Scotland in 1905 as a luxury passenger ship for the trans Tasman crossing During World War I it served as a hospital ship in the English Channel and was then returned to its owners to resume usual commercial operation By 1935 the ship had been taken out of service and was sold to a ship breaker in Japan On 25 June 1935 while being towed to Osaka to be broken up the ship was caught in a strong cyclone about 80 kilometres 50 miles off the coast of Queensland The towline parted and on 9 July 1935 the Maheno became beached on the east coast of Fraser Island During World War II the wreck served as target bombing practice for the RAAF and was used as an explosives demolition target by special forces from the Fraser Commando School The remains of the ship are now severely rusted with almost three and a half storeys buried under the sand Because of the danger it poses climbing on the wreck is not permitted 76 Fraser Commando School Edit During World War II the area near McKenzie s Jetty was used by the Services Reconnaissance Department popularly known as Z Special Unit as a special forces training camp the Fraser Commando School Thousands of soldiers were trained here because the conditions were similar to those found on Pacific Islands where the Japanese were fought 70 Lake McKenzie was used for parachute training and the wreck of the Maheno was used for explosive demolitions practice Visitors to the site of the Fraser Commando School today can still see various relics of its military past including armour plates used to test armour piercing explosive charges and weapons and a concrete relief map of Singapore Harbour used as an aid in operations planning Nauru resettlement proposition Edit As part of ongoing meetings in the United Nations Trusteeship Council on the Conditions in the Trust Territories the Republic of Nauru expressed concern that its phosphate mining exportation would be depleted by the end of the century endangering the future of the island 77 78 In 1961 Fraser Island was proposed by Australia as a location for the resettlement of the entire population of the Republic of Nauru The timber industry on Fraser Island managed to ensure that resettlement on Fraser Island did not proceed 79 In 1964 in the 31st session of United Nations Trusteeship Council meetings it was concluded that Curtis Island could provide a more satisfactory resettlement for the population of Nauru 78 Nauru rejected the offer of moving the entire population to Curtis Island due to political independence considerations that Australia would not agree to 77 When visiting the island in 1964 the head of the Nauru delegation Hammer de Roburt insisted on this point of sovereignty in order to protect his people from the overt racism that he himself experienced on this tour 80 Although a resettlement never did occur the Republic of Nauru went on to achieve independence on 31 January 1968 Population Edit At the 2011 census Fraser Island had a population of 194 people 81 2020 bushfire Edit On 14 October 2020 a large bushfire was started on the island by an illegal campfire It impacted multiple communities and caused residents to flee their homes as it burned out of control 82 In early December interstate assistance including from the New South Wales Rural Fire Service NSWRFS who provided a Boeing 737 300 Large Air Tanker waterbombing aircraft was used to fight the fire as Happy Valley township was threatened High temperatures 32 C 90 F and strong winds hindered fire fighting and Queensland Fire and Emergency Services QFES Director Brian Cox said A lot of this fire is burning in inaccessible country 83 Heavy rainfall in mid December helped contain the fire and the QFES was able to hand control back to the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service QPWS 84 This was the longest burning fire of the 2020 21 bushfire season up to 14 December 2020 as it had been burning since October over two months and as of that date more than half the island had been blackened by fire 85 The island reopened to tourists on 15 December The fire was still burning but the island was declared safe for visitors though some walking trails and burner areas were still restricted for safety 85 It is expected that the burned areas will successfully regenerate 86 Geography and ecology Edit NASA Landsat image of insular Fraser Island Fraser Island is separated from the mainland by Great Sandy Strait The southern tip near Tin Can Bay is situated to the north of Inskip Peninsula The most northern point of the island is Sandy Cape where the Sandy Cape Light operated from 1870 to 1994 87 The establishment of the lighthouse was the first permanent European settlement on the island 36 The nearest large town to the island is Hervey Bay while Maryborough and Bundaberg are also close by The bay on the north east coast is called Marloo Bay and on the north west coast is Platypus Bay The most westerly place on the island is Moon Point 88 The island is divided into two localities the eponymous Fraser Island locality consisting of most of the land on the island and the locality of Eurong on the east coast of the island 89 90 91 Eli Creek is the largest creek on the eastern beach Eli Creek where it enters the sea Eli Creek is the largest freshwater creek on the east coast of Fraser Island with a flow of 80 million litres per day 92 Eli Creek has its own unique and varied wild life Coongul Creek on the west coast has a flow rate of four to five million litres per hour 88 Some of the swamps on the island are fens particularly near Moon Point That was only discovered in 1996 when a group of experts who had attended a Ramsar conference in Brisbane flew over the island and conducted an aerial survey 93 From above they noticed the distinct patterns of potholed peat devoid of trees That was the first instance of fens being found in Australia and in a sub tropical region although more were subsequently discovered on the adjacent Cooloola coast Sandmass and The Pinnacles Edit The Pinnacles on Fraser Island The total volume of sand above sea level on Fraser Island is directly proportional to the mass of 113 cubic kilometres 27 cubic miles 94 All of the sand which originated in the Hawkesbury Hunter and Clarence River catchments in New South Wales has been transported northward by longshore drift driven by onshore winds from the southeast and repeated wave actions 94 Along the eastern coast of the island the process is removing more sand than it is depositing resulting in the slow erosion of beaches which may accelerate with sea level rises attributed to climate change The sand consists of 98 quartz 88 All hills on Fraser Island have been formed by sandblowing Sandblows are parabolic dunes which move across the island via the wind and are devoid of vegetation In 2004 there was an estimated total of 36 sandblows on the island 88 With year round winds from the southeast the sand dunes on the island move at the rate of 1 to 2 metres a year and grow to a height of 244 metres The dune movement creates overlapping dunes and sometimes intersects waterways and covers forests Dune building has occurred in episodes as the sea levels have changed and once extended much further to the east 35 The oldest dune system has been dated at 700 000 years which is the world s oldest recorded sequence 35 The coloured sands found at Rainbow Gorge The Cathedrals The Pinnacles and Red Canyon are examples of the sand being stained over thousands of years due to it conglomerating with clay 35 Hematite the mineral pigment responsible for the staining acts like cement That allows the steeper cliffs of coloured sand to form Coffee rock so called because when it is dissolved in water it turns the colour of coffee is found in outcrops along the beaches on both sides of the island 88 The 75 Mile Beach 120 km runs along most of the east coast of Fraser Island It is officially designated as a main road and is used as a landing strip for planes Highway rules state that vehicles must give way to aircraft if they are oncoming Along the beach are the Champagne Pools Indian Head the Maheno Wreck and the outflow of Eli Creek Exposed volcanic rocks are found at Indian Head Waddy Point and Middle Rocks 95 as well as near Boon Boon Creek 88 Lakes Edit The beach at Lake McKenzie 2016 Hammerstone Sandblow and Lake Wabby Fraser Island has more than 100 freshwater lakes 96 the second highest concentration of lakes in Australia after Tasmania 92 The freshwater lakes on the island are some of the cleanest in the world 6 A popular tourist area Lake McKenzie is located inland from the small town of Eurong It is a perched lake sitting on top of compact sand and vegetable matter 100 metres 330 ft above sea level Lake McKenzie has an area of 150 hectares and is just over 5 metres 16 ft deep The beach sand of Lake McKenzie is nearly pure silica The lakes have very few nutrients and their pH varies but sunscreen and soaps cause a pollution problem Fresh water on the island may become stained by organic acids found in decaying vegetation Because of the organic acids a pH level as low as 3 7 has been measured in some of the island s perched lakes 88 The acidity prevents many species from inhabiting the lakes Another perched lake on Fraser Island is Lake Boomanjin which at 200 hectares in size is the largest perched lake on any sea island in the world 70 In total there are 40 perched lakes on the island half of all known lakes of this kind on the planet 7 Lake Boomanjin is fed by two creeks that pass through a wallum swamp where it collects tannins which tint the water red 88 Lake Wabby is the deepest lake on the island at 12 metres 39 ft in depth and is also the least acidic which means it has the most aquatic life of all the lakes Some of the lakes on Fraser Island are window lakes which form when the water table has risen to a point higher than the surrounding land Most of the valleys on the island have creeks which are fed by springs 88 Motor boats and jet skis are banned from the lakes on the island 30 Climate EditFraser Island has a tropical wet and dry climate Koppen Aw it is generally warm and not subject to extremes in temperature due to the moderating influence of the ocean Temperatures rarely rise above 33 C 91 F or drop below 7 C 45 F and humidity is consistently high Rainfall is heaviest during the summer and early autumn and the annual average is 1 251 mm 49 25 in Cyclones can be a threat Cyclone Hamish brushed the island as a category 5 in March 2009 while Cyclone Oswald in January 2013 was significantly weaker at a Category 1 Both storms however caused severe beach erosion particularly on the island s northern tip 97 The average annual temperature of the sea ranges from 22 C 72 F between July and September to 27 C 81 F between January and March 98 Climate data for Fraser Island Sandy Cape Lighthouse 1991 2020Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 34 2 93 6 35 8 96 4 34 7 94 5 31 4 88 5 28 7 83 7 27 8 82 0 26 5 79 7 27 2 81 0 29 3 84 7 31 8 89 2 33 2 91 8 36 0 96 8 36 0 96 8 Average high C F 29 8 85 6 29 8 85 6 28 9 84 0 27 1 80 8 24 4 75 9 22 4 72 3 21 8 71 2 22 8 73 0 24 9 76 8 26 3 79 3 27 8 82 0 29 1 84 4 26 3 79 3 Daily mean C F 26 2 79 2 26 3 79 3 25 4 77 7 23 7 74 7 21 1 70 0 19 1 66 4 18 2 64 8 19 1 66 4 21 2 70 2 22 6 72 7 24 2 75 6 25 5 77 9 22 7 72 9 Average low C F 22 7 72 9 22 8 73 0 22 0 71 6 20 3 68 5 17 9 64 2 15 8 60 4 14 7 58 5 15 5 59 9 17 5 63 5 19 0 66 2 20 6 69 1 21 9 71 4 19 2 66 6 Record low C F 16 7 62 1 16 1 61 0 14 6 58 3 13 3 55 9 9 6 49 3 6 7 44 1 5 2 41 4 5 6 42 1 9 4 48 9 11 2 52 2 13 9 57 0 16 0 60 8 5 2 41 4 Average rainfall mm inches 150 3 5 92 157 6 6 20 141 8 5 58 111 0 4 37 127 9 5 04 101 5 4 00 70 1 2 76 53 8 2 12 42 4 1 67 90 7 3 57 62 2 2 45 99 8 3 93 1 209 1 47 61 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 9 9 10 0 11 4 11 2 11 0 9 8 8 2 6 1 4 7 5 5 5 5 7 4 100 7Source Bureau of Meteorology 99 Fauna EditMammals Edit Estimates of the number of mammal species present on Fraser Island range from 25 to 50 96 100 Mammals include swamp wallabies echidnas ringtail and brushtail possums sugar gliders squirrel gliders phascogales bandicoots potoroos flying foxes and dingoes The swamp wallaby finds protection from dingos in the swampy areas which have dense undergrowth 101 There are 19 species of bats which live on or visit the island 101 Until 2003 when they were removed by the Environmental Protection Agency 102 there were a few brumbies horses on the island descendants of Arab stock turned loose for breeding purposes and joined in 1879 by horses brought over for the logging industry 103 104 Dingoes Edit Fraser Island dingoes See also Dingo attacks in Australia and Interbreeding of dingoes with other domestic dogs Dingoes were once common on Fraser Island but are now decreasing The island dingoes are reputedly some of the last remaining pure dingoes in Eastern Australia and to prevent cross breeding dogs are not allowed on the island According to DNA examinations from the year 2004 the island dingoes are pure 105 However skull measurements from the 1990s detected crossbreeds between dingoes and domestic dogs among the population 106 Up until 1995 there were no official records of dingoes attacking humans on Fraser Island In April 2001 a boy named Clinton Gage wandered away from his family and was attacked and killed by several dingoes 107 More than 120 dingoes were killed by rangers as a result of the incident though locals believe the number was much greater 103 After the 2001 attack four dedicated rangers were allocated dingo management roles and ranger patrols were increased 108 There are fines for feeding dingoes or leaving food and rubbish out which may attract them 100 As of January 2008 the number of dingoes on Fraser Island was estimated to be 120 to 150 and sightings have become less common A University of Queensland researcher Nick Baker claims the island dingoes have adopted unusual behaviour Rather than hunt in small packs island dingoes had developed a tolerance for each other and work together in one big hunting pack 108 Dingo proof fences consisting of metals bars across a concrete pit and a 1 8 m high mesh fence were built around nine island settlements in 2008 to keep the dingoes out of the townships 109 In March 2010 three separate reports of dingos biting tourists were made 110 Tourists have been criticised for ignoring advice from park rangers as they try to provoke reactions from dingoes while taking photographs 110 As of 2015 update the number of dingoes on Fraser Island was estimated to be around 180 to 220 111 Reptiles and amphibians Edit There has been a total of 74 different species of reptiles recorded on Fraser Island 101 18 species of snakes have been identified with one third of them considered dangerous including the extremely venomous eastern brown snake 96 Goannas snakes geckos skinks and frogs are all present on the island Some frog species have evolved to cope with the acidic waters of lakes and swamps on the island and are appropriately called acid frogs 100 104 The island is home to the recently discovered Fraser Island sand skink Freshwater turtles such as Kreffts river turtle are found in the island s lakes and creeks Saltwater crocodiles are exclusively tropical reptiles and usually found in Far North Queensland several hundred kilometres north west of Fraser Island however occasionally during the warmer season December through March when water temperatures reach consistent tropical temperatures crocodiles may appear in areas in and around the island During the 2008 2009 summer several crocodiles one over 4 metres in length were present in the surrounding ocean 112 It is thought that these reptiles are seasonal visitors as they always disappear during the cold months presumably returning to tropical northern Queensland This sort of activity was apparently reported but unverified decades ago a handful of crocodiles have also historically been observed on very rare occurrences around Brisbane the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast during the warmer season but within recent years has been proven and observed more often Crocodiles do not breed nor do they appear to have any permanent populations living on the island Pied oystercatcher Birds Edit Fraser Island forms part of the Cooloola and Fraser Coast Important Bird Area IBA 113 There are over 350 different species of birds on the island 7 Birds of prey include sea eagles peregrine falcon osprey and kites Other common birds include pelicans terns honeyeaters gulls kingfishers kookaburra owls doves thornbills ducks brolgas and cockatoos The island is visited by 20 species of migratory wader birds from as far afield as Siberia 101 The island provides habitat for 22 different species of gull and tern four species of falcon and six species of kingfisher 114 A rare bird on the island is the eastern ground parrot already extinct in some parts of Australia 103 104 A humpback whale with the sand dunes of Fraser Island in the background Other Edit Cetaceans such as humpback whales and some species of dolphins are frequent visitors to the area Dugongs and sea turtles can also be found in surrounding waters 100 Great white bull and tiger sharks can be found with the latter species sometimes approaching fishermen wading in the surf 100 Mud crabs are found on the western side of the island near mangrove lined estuaries 70 24 freshwater fish species are found in the island s lakes 96 There has been 300 species of ants recorded on Fraser Island 101 Long finned eels and giant earthworms are also found on the island Flora EditThe flora of Fraser Island is diverse More than 865 species of plants grow on the island 88 It is the only place on earth where tall rainforest grows in sand 100 The island contains the largest extent of wallum heath remnants in Queensland In Pile Valley 1 000 year old rough barked satinays are found 100 Despite being logged the kauri pines dominate in some areas Scribbly gums red gums piccabeen palms blue quandong brush box and pandanus all grow on the island Along the coast the foredunes are dominated by salt tolerant species which includes pigface goats foot vine and beach spinifex 35 Spinifex sericeus is an important foundation species Decayed matter from this dune grass breaks down in the sand providing vital nutrients for other plant species such as the beach oak 88 The rare Angiopteris evecta a species of fern that has the largest fronds in the world grows on the island 96 The southwest coast is dominated by mangroves 88 Persoonia prostrata was a shrub native to the island which is now extinct As one travels from east to west across Fraser Island the dune age increases This leads to the progressive maturing of vegetation in the same direction except for some areas along the western coast where soil leaching has decreased the nutrient soil layer to a depth beyond the reach of plant roots 101 Each lake on the island is surrounded by concentric vegetation zones Typically these zones range from rushes in the shallows then a mix of pioneer species on the beaches through to sedges heath paperbarks shrubs and finally eucalypt or banksia woodlands 101 Administration Edit Fraser Island seen from Spot Satellite Fraser Island is part of the local government area Fraser Coast Region which was created in March 2008 as a result of the report of the Local Government Reform Commission released in July 2007 Before the local government reorganisation the island was split up evenly between the City of Hervey Bay northern part and the City of Maryborough southern part In 1971 the northern half of Fraser Island was declared a national park 35 Now almost all of the island is included in the Great Sandy National Park which is administered by Queensland s Environmental Protection Agency This was extended in 1992 when heritage listing was granted Except for a few small urban areas the island is protected by a Wild Rivers declaration 115 Domestic dogs are not permitted on Fraser Island and fines can be given for non compliance The ban first applied in 1981 107 is imposed so that the island s dingo population is not exposed to diseases 116 In 2010 the management of the park particularly the treatment of dingoes by the Department of Environment and Resource Management was called into question by Glen Elmes in the Queensland Parliament 117 Camp grounds are sometimes closed so as to reduce human contact with dingo populations 110 Heritage listings EditFraser Island has a number of heritage listed sites including North end of island Sandy Cape Light 87 Protected Area SS Marloo 118 The island was placed on the Australian National Heritage List on 21 May 2007 7 Tourism Edit A 4WD Bus in Fraser Island Scenic flight over Fraser Island which lands and takes off from the beach It is popular to drive at the beaches of Fraser Island Fraser Island is one of Queensland s most popular islands for tourists who can reach the island by ferry from Hervey Bay or Rainbow Beach which takes approximately 50 minutes 119 Estimates of the number of visitors to the island each year range from 350 000 to 500 000 107 120 The chance of seeing a dingo in its natural setting is one of the main reasons people visit the island 107 The use of boardwalks and marked tracks by visitors is encouraged to reduce erosion 30 Urinating tourists have created environmental problems in Fraser Island lakes and on coastal dunes The foredunes are used as a toilet by bush campers who are estimated to number 90 000 each year 120 Many of the perched lakes have no outflow or inflow which exacerbates the problem Water quality in some lakes is being affected by storm water run off from dune roads and by swimmers use of sunscreen In April 2009 a vehicle overturned on the beach after being hit by a wave Two backpackers were killed in the accident Following the incident speed limits on the beach were reduced from 100 km h to 80 km h and from 40 km h to 30 km h inland 121 Everyone who hires a vehicle on the island from an organisation accredited by the Fraser Coast 4WD Operators Association must attend a one hour long briefing on vehicle safety Central Station which was formerly the hub of the forestry industry when there was logging on Fraser Island is now a popular tourist destination Some of the rarest ferns grow in the rainforest near the location Access Edit Fraser Island Ferry Kingfisher Bay Resort 2022 The island can be reached by a ferry from River Heads South of Hervey Bay to Kingfisher Bay and Wanggoolba Creek or Inskip Point to north of Rainbow Beach to Hook Point or by chartered flight from Sunshine Coast Airport 122 A four wheel drive is required for all landings except Kingfisher Bay and travel on the island except within the Kingfisher Bay Resort A permit is required for vehicles and is obtainable on line from DERM and several outlets at Rainbow Beach Several firms provide four wheel drive vehicles for hire 123 Tour buses travel the island as well as several kinds of self drive tours departing regularly from Hervey Bay Rainbow Beach and Noosa 124 Angling Edit Tailor is one of the more common species sought by anglers on Fraser Island and along the Queensland coast Other fish caught on the eastern coast include jewfish golden trevally and surf bream while whiting flathead and surf bream prefer the calmer western waters 70 Pilchards bloodworms yabbies pipi and sandworms can all be used for bait Fishing is banned in the island s freshwater creeks and lakes 101 There is an annual seasonal fishing closure between the beginning of 1 August to the end of 29 September for eastern foreshore waters as well as waters within 400 m out to sea from the eastern shore and between 400 m north of Waddy Point and 400 m south of Indian Head The fishing closure prohibits the taking of fin fish only and anglers are still allowed to hand collect worms and pipis during the closure 125 Camping Edit There are many campgrounds on Fraser Island with varying amenities and access The main camping areas are Dundubara Campground Cathedrals on Fraser 126 Waddy Point campground Central Station Tent Sites Waddy Beach tent only campsites Cornwells Break large group site One Tree Rocks camp zone Eurong One Tree Rocks however there are others Permits are required for camping and also for vehicle access 127 Hiking Edit There are various possibilities for overnight hiking on the island Most notable is the 90 km long Fraser Island Great Walk A shorter hike would be for example to start in Kingfisher Bay ferry drop off and head to Lake McKenzie stay there for one night and then hike back citation needed See also Edit Queensland portalGeography of Queensland Great Sandy Biosphere Reserve John Sinclair environmentalist Clifford Harry Thompson geomorphologist influential Fraser Island researcher List of islands of Australia Tourism in AustraliaReferences Edit Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 June 2017 Fraser Island SSC 2016 Census QuickStats Retrieved 20 October 2018 a b c d Fraser Island island in the Fraser Coast Region entry 47533 Queensland Place Names Queensland Government Retrieved 14 October 2021 a b UNESCO World Heritage Centre 2007 Fraser Island Australia Archived from the original on 8 March 2007 Retrieved 14 January 2007 a b World Heritage Area renamed K gari after long campaign by Butchulla people Ministerial Media Statements 20 September 2021 Archived from the original 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15 26 doi 10 1046 j 1440 1770 2003 00205 x hdl 10072 6102 Archived from the original on 17 November 2021 Retrieved 17 November 2021 In view of the increasing tourism to Fraser Island Queensland a tourist pressure index TPI was developed to assess the potential threat of tourism to 15 of the most accessible dune lakes on the island Buchanan Kallee Kay Ross Ford Elaine 24 October 2014 Native title rights granted for Qld s Fraser Island ABC News Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 9 February 2021 Paradise found as World Heritage Area reinstates traditional name NITV 20 September 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2021 Retrieved 20 September 2021 World Heritage Places K gari Fraser Island Australian Government Archived from the original on 2 October 2021 Retrieved 14 October 2021 Bligh Anna 10 June 2009 Premier Unveils Queensland s 150 Icons Queensland Government Archived from the original on 24 May 2017 Retrieved 24 May 2017 Office of the Inspector General 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Archived PDF from the original on 14 February 2017 Retrieved 13 February 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Fraser Wild River Declaration 2007 PDF Department of Resources and Water Archived from the original PDF on 15 March 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2010 Jackson Vernon 30 August 2010 Call to up domestic dog fines on Fraser Island ABC News Online Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 4 November 2010 Retrieved 12 September 2010 Arthur Gorrie 2 September 2010 Claims of Fraser Island cover up Gympie Times APN News amp Media Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 12 September 2010 Protected Area SS Marloo entry 800001 Queensland Heritage Register Queensland Heritage Council Retrieved 7 July 2013 Alchin Jessica 21 October 2020 The Weekender Fraser Island Queensland Hunter and Bligh Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2020 a b Brian Williams 7 August 2009 Fraser Island one big toilet Courier Mail Queensland Newspapers Archived from the original on 18 March 2010 Cosima Marriner 21 December 2009 Inexperience and thrill seeking a lethal mix on Fraser Island The Age Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 27 December 2009 FraserIsland net 2006 Fraser Island General Access Archived from the original on 4 January 2007 FraserIsland net 2006 Fraser Island 4WD and Permits Archived from the original on 4 January 2007 Retrieved 2 January 2007 Fraser Island Station PDF Archived PDF from the original on 6 April 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2016 Closed waters in tidal waters 1 January 2013 archived from the original on 29 September 2021 retrieved 29 September 2021 Cathedrals on Fraser Fraser Island Accommodation amp Camping Cathedrals on Fraser Archived from the original on 24 January 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Fraser Island Camping 2010 Archived from the original on 17 February 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fraser Island Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Fraser Island Fraser Island From the Air Archived 24 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the Department of Environment and Resource Management for more information and camping permits World heritage listing for K gari Great Sandy Biosphere University of Queensland Queensland Places Fraser Island Satellite image of S S Maheno from Google Maps Fraser Island Blazes NASA Earth Observatory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fraser Island amp oldid 1136615581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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