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Quamby Bluff

Quamby Bluff is a mountain in Northern Tasmania, Australia that is an outlying part of the Great Western Tiers mountain range.

Quamby Bluff
Quamby Bluff
Highest point
Elevation1,227[note 1] m (4,026 ft)AHD[1]
Prominence494 m (1,621 ft)[2]
Coordinates41°39′37″S 146°43′20″E / 41.66028°S 146.72222°E / -41.66028; 146.72222[3]
Geography
Quamby Bluff
Location in Tasmania, Australia
LocationTasmania, Australia
Parent rangeGreat Western Tiers
Topo mapTASMAP 1:25,000 Quamby Bluff

Geography and Geology edit

Quamby Bluff lies 19 kilometres (12 mi) from Deloraine by road, just north of the main escarpment of the Great Western Tiers mountain range.[4] The name Quamby has been variously stated to be derived from Quarmby, the district in Huddersfield Yorkshire, or from a Viking word that means "mill farm", though most likely from local Tasmanian languages meaning either a "place of rest" or a "good camping place".[5] Daniel Bunce in his 1859 book of memoirs postulated that the name was derived from an incident where a British colonist in the area aimed his gun at an Indigenous Tasmanian. The Tasmanian fell to his knees and yelled "Quamby!" which was interpreted to mean "Spare me!" or "Mercy!".[6]

The Tasmanian central plateau was uplifted from the lower Meander Valley, most probably in the Eocene epoch though possibly earlier, forming the escarpment of the Great Western Tiers. The face of the tiers has been eroded and retreated approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) since then, leaving Quamby Bluff as a solitary outlier.[7] The bluff has similar geology to the rest of the range, and a similar form with cliffs, and talus (a mixture of scree and soil) slopes. Due to its prominence and isolation, views from the top cover a large portion of Northern Tasmania.[1] In the right conditions Mount Strzelecki on Flinders Island, approximately 200 kilometres (120 mi) distant, can be seen from the peak.[8] Its largely flat peak is 1,227 metres (4,026 ft) above sea level.[9][2] The mountain's sandstone and mudstone base is of Triassic original and lies in near horizontal strata. Dolerite rocks formed during the Jurassic period intrude through this base. Erosion has formed the dolerite into steep cliffs and scree slopes which dominate the top of the mountain.[10] The bluff has outcrops of Proterozoic era rocks that are the amongst the oldest found in Tasmania. These rocks are regarded as metamorphosed sediments containing a laminate of graphite, mica quartz-sericite and sericite schists.[11]

The area around the mountain has an annual average rainfall of 1,100 millimetres (43 in) with a predominance in winter.[12] The rainfall increases significantly with altitude, approximately 1,078 millimetres (42.4 in) measured at 300 metres (980 ft) rising to 2,300 millimetres (91 in) at the summit. Snow is seen above 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) at any time of year,[13] and there is regular snowfall on top of the bluff. Due to its exposed position the summit often experiences severe weather conditions.[14]

Habitation and landuse edit

The original inhabitants of the area were the Pallittorre Clan of the Northern Nation of Aboriginal Tasmanians. The North Midlands Nation name for Quamby Bluff was lartitickitheker (lar.tit.ick.it.he.ker).[15] There are caves south of Meander, in the Great Western Tiers, with deposits showing aboriginal habitation, though these have not been dated. The deposits were either left by the Pallittorre, or their neighbours the Luggermairrernerpairre who were part of the neighbouring Big River tribe. The Pallittorre probably inhabited the area for thousands of years; aborigines are believed to have lived in Tasmania for more than 30,000 years.[16] They maintained cleared grassy plains by regular careful burning, and used this method also to control undergrowth in the forests. This land management technique enabled easier hunting and food gathering.[17] Over an 18 Day period in July, 1827, 100 Indigenous Pallittorre people were massacred by Corporals William Shiner and James Lingren from 40th Regt; stockmen Thomas Baker, James Cubit, Henry Smith and William White in response to the killing of three stockmen.[18]

There has not been a survey of the mountain for aboriginal artefacts. Stumps and trails remain as evidence of logging by European settlers; the remains of a 1940s sawmill can be seen on the Eastern slopes.[19]

Flora and fauna edit

 
Forest on the fairy glade track

The bluff's nature as a solitary outlier of the range gives it a greater range, in one place, of habitats and flora than elsewhere in the Great Western Tiers. The plants and trees found on the bluff are common to the rest of the range however, unlike the rest of the range, Quamby Bluff's summit does not show evidence of burning or grazing damage.[20] The mountain has a mixture of habitats including eucalypt forest, rainforest and subalpine vegetation.[1] On the mountain's southern half there are some patches of callidendrous rainforest which are dominated by myrtle (Nothofagus cunninghamii) and sassafras (Atherosperma moschatum) trees with mother shield ferns (Polystichum proliferum), and tree ferns in the gullies. There are scattered king billy pines (Athrotaxis selaginoides) on southern slopes, indicating long periods between bushfires. Other rainforest sections contain some Stringybark trees (Eucalyptus delegatensis). These forests on the mountain were formerly of mixed eucalyptus. High altitude and logging—evidenced by remaining stumps—have changed its character. Other sections contain mixed forest containing stringybark, myrtle, sassafras and dogwood (Pomaderris apetala), with a silver wattle (Acacia dealbata) understorey. Sections have some treeferns, mother shield fern, bat's wing fern (Histiopteris incisa) and kangaroo fern (Microsorum pustulatum). In other areas there is a dryer forest dominated by eucalypts. Messmate Stringybark (eucalyptus obliqua) and stringybark grow over an understorey of silver wattle, dogwood, bracken (Pteridium esculentum) and fireweed. In these sections there is evidence in the flora's pattern of repeated burnings.[21] Eucalyptus dalrympleana and some Australian blackwood (Acacia melanoxylon) occur higher up, with a mixed understorey. The summit is exposed and wind-swept. Here there are mostly low and wind-pruned shrubs including: Narrow-Leaf Orites (Orites revolutus), Baeckea gunniana, Common Shaggy-pea (Oxylobium ellipticum, Leptospermum rupestre, Richea sprengelioides, Richea scoparia and Kerosine Bush (Ozothamnus hookeri).[20]

There has been no formal survey of fauna though the presence of feral goats has been recorded.[8] Pink robins and green rosellas have been seen on the mountain. In shaded and moist areas there are scrubtits and Bassian thrush.[22] The last recorded fires in the forest reserve were 1961, when some of the drier forests burned, and 1968, when the northwest corner was lightly burned.[23] Parts of the reserve had been selectively logged for around 100 years until 1982, mostly for sawlogs.[24] Campaigning to fully protect the area from logging has been carried out by environmentalists, including through the use of citizen science to identify threatened species and areas of significance and then apply for their protection through the use of state regulations.[25]

Reserve edit

The mountain lies within a forest reserve, listed on the Australian Register of the National Estate, declared on 15 December 1982.[1] This reserve largely covers the area above an elevation of 540 metres (1,770 ft)[10] and covers 945 hectares (2,340 acres) of a landscape described as predominantly in its natural state.[26] As of 1990 both Quamby bluff and the forest reserve are closed to mining exploration and prospecting.[12] The reserve was added to the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area in 2013.[27]

Quamby Bluff is one of the Tiers' easier peaks to ascend on foot. The walk to the summit is a popular day walk and can be easily completed in an afternoon.[4] The most popular trail, of the four that are marked, is the fairly glade track that is accessed from Lake Highway. There are no formal car parks or facilities in the forest reserve. The walks are marked simply, with some small coloured metal triangles, cairns and track markers of coloured plastic tape.[9] Camping is permitted and dogs are allowed on leashes. Hunting is not permitted.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Forestry Commission of Tasmania, p.9
  2. ^ a b "Quamby Bluff, Australia". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  3. ^ "Place Names Search: QUAMBY BLUFF". Geoscience Australia. Retrieved 30 August 2007.
  4. ^ a b John Champman, MonicaChapman (2003), Day Walks Tasmania, John Champman
  5. ^ Lloyd, p.5
  6. ^ Bunce, Daniel (1859). Travels with Dr Leichhardt in Australia. p. 41. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
  7. ^ Fish and Yaxley, pp.12,253
  8. ^ a b Lloyd, p.15
  9. ^ a b Forestry Commission of Tasmania, p.19
  10. ^ a b Forestry Commission of Tasmania, p.11
  11. ^ Reid, p.16
  12. ^ a b Lloyd, p.11
  13. ^ Lloyd, p.7
  14. ^ Lloyd, p.12
  15. ^ Plomley, N.J.B (Brian) (1991). Tasmanian Aboriginal Place Names. Launceston: QVMAG. p. 20.
  16. ^ Breen p.1
  17. ^ Breen, p.3
  18. ^ "Centre for 21st Century Humanities".
  19. ^ Lloyd, p.16
  20. ^ a b Lloyd, p.14
  21. ^ Lloyd, p.13
  22. ^ Lloyd, pp.10–11
  23. ^ Forestry Commission of Tasmania, p.18
  24. ^ a b Forestry Commission of Tasmania, p.20
  25. ^ Hardinge, Alice; Beckerling, Jess (16 January 2024). "Campaigns to End Logging in Australia (Commons Conversations Podcasts)". The Commons Social Change Library. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  26. ^ "Forest Management Act 2013 - Schedule 3". Government of Tasmania. 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  27. ^ "Notice of areas added to the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area in 2010, 2012 and 2013". Department for Environment. 5 August 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2015.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The bluff is listed as 1,228 metres (4,029 ft) in the Quamby Bluff 1:25000 Topographic/Cadastral Map Number#4638 published by TASMAP, by 1,227 metres (4,026 ft) in other sources

Bibliography edit

  • Breen, Shayne (1991). "Chapter 1: The Pall-i-torre, Chapter 2: Black and White: The struggle for the land". Meander Valley memories. Meander: Meander Primary School. pp. 1–18. ISBN 0-646-04684-5.
  • Fish, Graham L.; Yaxley, Murray L. (1966). Behind the scenery : the geological background to Tasmanian landforms. Hobart: Tasmanian Education Department.
  • Forestry Commission of Tasmania (October 1990). Quamby Bluff Forest Reserve Management Plan. ISBN 0-7246-3507-6.
  • Lloyd, Sarah (July 2007). Save me : a natural history of Quamby Bluff. Birralee: Sarah Lloyd.
  • Reid, A McIntosh (1924). "The Oil Shale Resources of Tasmania" (PDF). Geological Survey, Mineral Resources No. 8. 1. Department of Mines.

41°39′14″S 146°41′48″E / 41.65389°S 146.69667°E / -41.65389; 146.69667

quamby, bluff, mountain, northern, tasmania, australia, that, outlying, part, great, western, tiers, mountain, range, highest, pointelevation1, note, prominence494, coordinates41, 66028, 72222, 66028, 72222, geographylocation, tasmania, australialocationtasman. Quamby Bluff is a mountain in Northern Tasmania Australia that is an outlying part of the Great Western Tiers mountain range Quamby BluffQuamby BluffHighest pointElevation1 227 note 1 m 4 026 ft AHD 1 Prominence494 m 1 621 ft 2 Coordinates41 39 37 S 146 43 20 E 41 66028 S 146 72222 E 41 66028 146 72222 3 GeographyQuamby BluffLocation in Tasmania AustraliaLocationTasmania AustraliaParent rangeGreat Western TiersTopo mapTASMAP 1 25 000 Quamby Bluff Contents 1 Geography and Geology 2 Habitation and landuse 3 Flora and fauna 4 Reserve 5 See also 6 References 7 Notes 8 BibliographyGeography and Geology editQuamby Bluff lies 19 kilometres 12 mi from Deloraine by road just north of the main escarpment of the Great Western Tiers mountain range 4 The name Quamby has been variously stated to be derived from Quarmby the district in Huddersfield Yorkshire or from a Viking word that means mill farm though most likely from local Tasmanian languages meaning either a place of rest or a good camping place 5 Daniel Bunce in his 1859 book of memoirs postulated that the name was derived from an incident where a British colonist in the area aimed his gun at an Indigenous Tasmanian The Tasmanian fell to his knees and yelled Quamby which was interpreted to mean Spare me or Mercy 6 The Tasmanian central plateau was uplifted from the lower Meander Valley most probably in the Eocene epoch though possibly earlier forming the escarpment of the Great Western Tiers The face of the tiers has been eroded and retreated approximately 4 miles 6 4 km since then leaving Quamby Bluff as a solitary outlier 7 The bluff has similar geology to the rest of the range and a similar form with cliffs and talus a mixture of scree and soil slopes Due to its prominence and isolation views from the top cover a large portion of Northern Tasmania 1 In the right conditions Mount Strzelecki on Flinders Island approximately 200 kilometres 120 mi distant can be seen from the peak 8 Its largely flat peak is 1 227 metres 4 026 ft above sea level 9 2 The mountain s sandstone and mudstone base is of Triassic original and lies in near horizontal strata Dolerite rocks formed during the Jurassic period intrude through this base Erosion has formed the dolerite into steep cliffs and scree slopes which dominate the top of the mountain 10 The bluff has outcrops of Proterozoic era rocks that are the amongst the oldest found in Tasmania These rocks are regarded as metamorphosed sediments containing a laminate of graphite mica quartz sericite and sericite schists 11 The area around the mountain has an annual average rainfall of 1 100 millimetres 43 in with a predominance in winter 12 The rainfall increases significantly with altitude approximately 1 078 millimetres 42 4 in measured at 300 metres 980 ft rising to 2 300 millimetres 91 in at the summit Snow is seen above 1 000 metres 3 300 ft at any time of year 13 and there is regular snowfall on top of the bluff Due to its exposed position the summit often experiences severe weather conditions 14 Habitation and landuse editThe original inhabitants of the area were the Pallittorre Clan of the Northern Nation of Aboriginal Tasmanians The North Midlands Nation name for Quamby Bluff was lartitickitheker lar tit ick it he ker 15 There are caves south of Meander in the Great Western Tiers with deposits showing aboriginal habitation though these have not been dated The deposits were either left by the Pallittorre or their neighbours the Luggermairrernerpairre who were part of the neighbouring Big River tribe The Pallittorre probably inhabited the area for thousands of years aborigines are believed to have lived in Tasmania for more than 30 000 years 16 They maintained cleared grassy plains by regular careful burning and used this method also to control undergrowth in the forests This land management technique enabled easier hunting and food gathering 17 Over an 18 Day period in July 1827 100 Indigenous Pallittorre people were massacred by Corporals William Shiner and James Lingren from 40th Regt stockmen Thomas Baker James Cubit Henry Smith and William White in response to the killing of three stockmen 18 There has not been a survey of the mountain for aboriginal artefacts Stumps and trails remain as evidence of logging by European settlers the remains of a 1940s sawmill can be seen on the Eastern slopes 19 Flora and fauna edit nbsp Forest on the fairy glade trackThe bluff s nature as a solitary outlier of the range gives it a greater range in one place of habitats and flora than elsewhere in the Great Western Tiers The plants and trees found on the bluff are common to the rest of the range however unlike the rest of the range Quamby Bluff s summit does not show evidence of burning or grazing damage 20 The mountain has a mixture of habitats including eucalypt forest rainforest and subalpine vegetation 1 On the mountain s southern half there are some patches of callidendrous rainforest which are dominated by myrtle Nothofagus cunninghamii and sassafras Atherosperma moschatum trees with mother shield ferns Polystichum proliferum and tree ferns in the gullies There are scattered king billy pines Athrotaxis selaginoides on southern slopes indicating long periods between bushfires Other rainforest sections contain some Stringybark trees Eucalyptus delegatensis These forests on the mountain were formerly of mixed eucalyptus High altitude and logging evidenced by remaining stumps have changed its character Other sections contain mixed forest containing stringybark myrtle sassafras and dogwood Pomaderris apetala with a silver wattle Acacia dealbata understorey Sections have some treeferns mother shield fern bat s wing fern Histiopteris incisa and kangaroo fern Microsorum pustulatum In other areas there is a dryer forest dominated by eucalypts Messmate Stringybark eucalyptus obliqua and stringybark grow over an understorey of silver wattle dogwood bracken Pteridium esculentum and fireweed In these sections there is evidence in the flora s pattern of repeated burnings 21 Eucalyptus dalrympleana and some Australian blackwood Acacia melanoxylon occur higher up with a mixed understorey The summit is exposed and wind swept Here there are mostly low and wind pruned shrubs including Narrow Leaf Orites Orites revolutus Baeckea gunniana Common Shaggy pea Oxylobium ellipticum Leptospermum rupestre Richea sprengelioides Richea scoparia and Kerosine Bush Ozothamnus hookeri 20 There has been no formal survey of fauna though the presence of feral goats has been recorded 8 Pink robins and green rosellas have been seen on the mountain In shaded and moist areas there are scrubtits and Bassian thrush 22 The last recorded fires in the forest reserve were 1961 when some of the drier forests burned and 1968 when the northwest corner was lightly burned 23 Parts of the reserve had been selectively logged for around 100 years until 1982 mostly for sawlogs 24 Campaigning to fully protect the area from logging has been carried out by environmentalists including through the use of citizen science to identify threatened species and areas of significance and then apply for their protection through the use of state regulations 25 Reserve editThe mountain lies within a forest reserve listed on the Australian Register of the National Estate declared on 15 December 1982 1 This reserve largely covers the area above an elevation of 540 metres 1 770 ft 10 and covers 945 hectares 2 340 acres of a landscape described as predominantly in its natural state 26 As of 1990 both Quamby bluff and the forest reserve are closed to mining exploration and prospecting 12 The reserve was added to the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area in 2013 27 Quamby Bluff is one of the Tiers easier peaks to ascend on foot The walk to the summit is a popular day walk and can be easily completed in an afternoon 4 The most popular trail of the four that are marked is the fairly glade track that is accessed from Lake Highway There are no formal car parks or facilities in the forest reserve The walks are marked simply with some small coloured metal triangles cairns and track markers of coloured plastic tape 9 Camping is permitted and dogs are allowed on leashes Hunting is not permitted 24 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Quamby Bluff nbsp Australia portal nbsp Mountains portal List of highest mountains of TasmaniaReferences edit a b c d Forestry Commission of Tasmania p 9 a b Quamby Bluff Australia Peakbagger com Retrieved 5 June 2017 Place Names Search QUAMBY BLUFF Geoscience Australia Retrieved 30 August 2007 a b John Champman MonicaChapman 2003 Day Walks Tasmania John Champman Lloyd p 5 Bunce Daniel 1859 Travels with Dr Leichhardt in Australia p 41 Retrieved 11 October 2017 Fish and Yaxley pp 12 253 a b Lloyd p 15 a b Forestry Commission of Tasmania p 19 a b Forestry Commission of Tasmania p 11 Reid p 16 a b Lloyd p 11 Lloyd p 7 Lloyd p 12 Plomley N J B Brian 1991 Tasmanian Aboriginal Place Names Launceston QVMAG p 20 Breen p 1 Breen p 3 Centre for 21st Century Humanities Lloyd p 16 a b Lloyd p 14 Lloyd p 13 Lloyd pp 10 11 Forestry Commission of Tasmania p 18 a b Forestry Commission of Tasmania p 20 Hardinge Alice Beckerling Jess 16 January 2024 Campaigns to End Logging in Australia Commons Conversations Podcasts The Commons Social Change Library Retrieved 29 February 2024 Forest Management Act 2013 Schedule 3 Government of Tasmania 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Notice of areas added to the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area in 2010 2012 and 2013 Department for Environment 5 August 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Notes edit The bluff is listed as 1 228 metres 4 029 ft in the Quamby Bluff 1 25000 Topographic Cadastral Map Number 4638 published by TASMAP by 1 227 metres 4 026 ft in other sourcesBibliography editBreen Shayne 1991 Chapter 1 The Pall i torre Chapter 2 Black and White The struggle for the land Meander Valley memories Meander Meander Primary School pp 1 18 ISBN 0 646 04684 5 Fish Graham L Yaxley Murray L 1966 Behind the scenery the geological background to Tasmanian landforms Hobart Tasmanian Education Department Forestry Commission of Tasmania October 1990 Quamby Bluff Forest Reserve Management Plan ISBN 0 7246 3507 6 Lloyd Sarah July 2007 Save me a natural history of Quamby Bluff Birralee Sarah Lloyd Reid A McIntosh 1924 The Oil Shale Resources of Tasmania PDF Geological Survey Mineral Resources No 8 1 Department of Mines 41 39 14 S 146 41 48 E 41 65389 S 146 69667 E 41 65389 146 69667 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quamby Bluff amp oldid 1211034909, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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