Undara Volcanic National Park 2/1/12
![](/static/images/logos/site-logo.png)
Glenoverland
Wed 4 Jan 2012 22:51
18:12.1S 144:34.3E
Undara Volcanic National Park
Yet another wonderful national park, Australia does the parks so well, and
this one was lovely. We learned about lava tubes. We had never even
heard of lava tubes before we came here. This is what we learned.
There are 2 kinds of volcano – scoria cones are
pointy like a limpet, and spit out rocks, gases and ash (I think Bromo where we
went in Java is one of these). The other type is a shield
cone – much wider and flatter and spews out lava. The lava runs
down in streams which solidify on the outside, and the inside stays molten and
continues to flow till it’s all run away, leaving an empty tube. They get
buried by more flows, or more may run through them and sculpt the inside, and
they only become accessible if their roofs collapse.
Based on this explanation, what we expected to see was some rock burrows
into the ground – but no, they are vast rock cathedrals 80m high, miles long,
some with water in the bottom which you can wade through. The great pits
formed where the roofs have collapsed house pockets of rainforest amid the arid
land. (although this is the wet season they are rainless for months in the
dry). Tiny carnivorous bats and invertebrates live there and visitors like
snakes and kangaroos, but little else. There are no cave paintings because
there is no permanent water, but the sculpting of the walls is so dramatic it
doesn’t need any decoration.
Later we walked around the volcanic rim, avoiding a bush fire which was
close, but moving slowly across the grass, and from that vantage point you can
look for miles across a landscape studded with volcanic cones. What a
great place! |