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Rising from the
broad desert plain in the deep centre of Australia, Uluru/Ayers Rock is
Australia's most recognisable natural icon. The famous sandstone monolith
stands 348 metres high and, like an iceberg, has most of its bulk below the
surface. It is located 440 kilometres south-west of Alice Springs in the
Uluru-Kata
Tjuta National Park.
Situated 462
kilometres south-west of Alice Springs, Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park is
connected to Alice by networks of sealed roads and has its own airport, with
flights to and from Alice Springs, Melbourne, Sydney, Cairns, Perth and
Darwin.
40 kilometres to
the west of Uluru sits Kata Tjuta, also known as The Olgas - a massive pile
of ancient rock domes. The Uluru and Kata Tjuta you see today are the
remains of erosion that began around 500 million years ago. Like icebergs,
both formations are but visible tips of enormous slabs of rock that extend
as far as six kilometres into the ground.
Archaeological
work suggests that Aboriginal people have lived in the area for at least
22,000 years. The Anangu people are Uluru's traditional custodians but until
recently, the famous monolith was known as Ayers Rock, named after former
premier Sir Henry Ayers by European explorer William Gosse, who first
sighted the rock in 1873. Uluru was returned to the care and ownership of
the Anangu in 1985 and they now jointly manage the national park with Parks
Australia.
There is a $25
entry fee into Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park which allows multiple entry
for three consecutive days. A range of accommodation from camp sites to
five-star luxury is available at the Ayers Rock Resort in the township of
Yulara, purpose built to service travellers to the Park. The Yulara Visitors
Centre provides information on local history, geology, flora, fauna and
culture and sells souvenirs and educational gifts.
Both Uluru and
Kata Tjuta have great cultural significance for the Anangu traditional
landowners, who lead walking tours that inform about the local flora and
fauna, bush foods and the Aboriginal Dreamtime stories of the area. |