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Wallaga Lake is an estuarine lake in Bega Valley Shire in New South Wales, Australia, [1] the largest lake in southern NSW. [2] It is located between Bermagui to the south and between Tilba Tilba to the north, [ 1 ] situated beneath Mount Gulaga , in the traditional lands of the Yuin people . [ 2 ]
Wallaga Lake National Park is a former national park in New South Wales, 296 km (184 mi) south-west of Sydney and north of Bermagui. It now forms part of a greater Gulaga National Park .
Dumbleyung Lake Nature Reserve: 5,200 12,849: 18: Lake Dundas: Saline: Goldfields-Esperance: 19: Forrestdale Lake: Brackish seasonal groundwater: Perth: Forrestdale Lake Nature Reserve; Forrestdale and Thomsons Lakes Ramsar Site: 245 605 [45] 20: Lake Gore: Seasonal freshwater: Goldfields-Esperance: Lake Gore Nature Reserve; Lake Gore Ramsar ...
Australia sits south of the equator and under a strong, migrating zone of high-pressure called the subtropical ridge; this can lead to some interesting cloud cover. Using an advanced supercomputer climate model called GEOS-5, NASA scientists recreated 19 days of changing cloud cover over Australia. Watch the visualisation to explore the ...
Gulaga was an active volcano more than 60 million years ago. [1]In 2001, as part of the Southern Comprehensive Regional Forest Agreement and at the request of Yuin people, Gulaga National Park was created out of the existing Wallaga Lake National Park, Goura Nature Reserve, and Mt Dromedary Flora Reserve.
Willandra Lakes is located in south-western New South Wales. The lakes system, a remnant of the Lachlan River drainage pattern, is approximately 150 km long by 40 km wide and runs generally in a north–south direction from Lake Mulurulu in the north to Lake Prungle in the south. The approximate area is 600,000 hectares.
The lake's depth when full can range from 1.5–4.5 metres (4 ft 11 in – 14 ft 9 in); however in many areas it is only around 0.8–1.0 metre (2 ft 7 in – 3 ft 3 in) deep. Its deepest point has been measured as 7.5 metres (25 ft). When full, the lake holds about 500,000,000 cubic metres (1.8 × 10 10 cu ft) of water.
The Wallagaraugh River rises below Mount Poole, approximately 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) northeast of Nungatta, in New South Wales. The river flows generally south, then east, and then south, crossing the Black-Allan Line that forms part of the border between Victoria and New South Wales, joined by eight minor tributaries and flowing through Nadgee Nature Reserve, before reaching its confluence ...