King River Prison Tree
Enormous boab (Adansonia gregorii) that has been used as a prison. Tree has a circumference of 11.62 m, it is 14 m tall.
The Boab Prison Tree, Derby
An unusual boab (Adansonia gregorii), circumference 14.64 m, height just 9.5 m. It was used to lock up indigenous Australians in the 1860s on their way to sentencing.
Rullah Longatyle (Strong Girl)
The largest eucalypt and largest Tasmanian blue gum (Eucalyptus globulus Labill.) in the world. Volume 368 m3. Height 82.3 m, diameter 5.54 m (circumference around 19 m). After the fire in January 2019 it has collapsed.
Huon pine growth of Mount Read
Growth of genetically identical Huon pines (Lagarostrobos franklinii (Hook.f.) Quinn), stand of trees is 10,500 years old although none of the individual trees is that old.
Mount Cripps Giant (Australian Oak)
The largest Australian oak (Eucalyptus obliqua L’Hér.). Girth 21.08 m, height 60.9 m, volume 341 m3. Tree has large hollows and may collapse soon.
Wollemi pine stands
The three only existing populations of Wollemia nobilis pine in deep, inaccessible gorges with less than 100 Wollemi pines remaining. This tree was thought to be extinct 150 million years ago until it was discovered not far from Sydney in 1994.
Yea Flora Fossil Site
Site with 415 million year old (Silurian) fossils of ancient vascular land plants Baragwanathia, oldest of its kind in the world.
Riversleigh
Outstanding fossil site. Fosilized remains of very unusual animals have been discovered here such as marsupial lions Wakaleo, 3 meters high birds Dromornis, giant platypus Obdurodon, tree-dwelling-crocodiles Mekosuchus and up to 6 meters long snakes Wonambi. Riversleigh lies within the traditional country of the Waanyi Aboriginal people.
Naracoorte Caves
Group of 28 caves that contain remnants of 99 species of mammals plus remnants of other kinds of animals. Exceptionally well preserved remains of extinct animals range in size from small frogs to extinct giant marsupials.
Nilpena Ediacaran Fossil Site
The world’s richest find of Ediacaran fossils, contains unique fossils of extremely ancient soft-bodied animals who lived 630 – 542 million years ago. Geological period was named after the nearby site – Ediacara.