Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Newer Volcanics Province

Newer Volcanics Province
Mount Buninyong, the highest peak in the Newer Volcanics Province.
Highest point
Elevation745 m (2,444 ft)
Coordinates37°39′S 143°56′E / 37.650°S 143.933°E / -37.650; 143.933
Geography
Map
LocationVictoria and South Australia, Australia
Geology
Mountain typeVolcanic field / Cinder cones / Maars / Crater lakes
Last eruptionHolocene
Climbing
First ascentBCE

The Newer Volcanics Province is a geological area which is a volcanic field, formed by the East Australia hotspot across south-eastern Australia. It covers an area of 15,000 square kilometres (5,800 sq mi), with over 400 small shield volcanoes and volcanic vents. The area contains the youngest volcanoes in Australia.[1][2]

The volcanoes date from the Late-Pleistocene to Holocene ages. The area is characterised by flat lava flows, forming a plain above which rise numerous small scoria cones, tuff rings, and maars. The most recent eruptions in the region took place at Mount Schank and Mount Gambier, estimated about 5000 years BP, when several maars were formed and associated lava flows spread around the cones.[3][2]

Volcanoes

Mount Napier
Mount Elephant viewed from Derrinallum, Oct. 2010

Prominent volcanoes within the province include:

Aboriginal Dreamtime connections

History

Three groups of Aboriginal Australians, the Kulin nation in central and western Victoria, the Maar nation on the southwest coast of Victoria and the Bunganditj nation on the South Australian border with Victoria, are the traditional owners of the lands that the NVP is situated on.[4] These Indigenous Australians tell Dreamtime stories regarding volcanic activity on the Australian continent. These stories act as oral histories of natural events, and can be utilised by modern scientists to understand historical geological and seismic activity on the continent.[4]

Budj Bim

The Gunditjmara people retell the story of their people who witnessed the creation of an important being known as Budj Bim, one of four giant beings who arrived in southeast Australia. While three of these beings strode out to other parts of the continent, one stayed in place; that was Budj Bim. His body transformed into the volcano later given the same name, and his teeth became the lava[5] that transformed the landscape.[6]

Theories and Disagreements

In 1878, Robert B. Smyth, a mining engineer and geologist, raised a question on how Aboriginal Australians get fire. He agreed that there were active volcanoes in Victoria; however, he claimed that there was uncertainty as to whether people actually inhabited that land.[4] However, it was later proven that Smyth had an incomplete idea of Australia's geological past.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Rawlinson, N.; Sandiford, M. (2012). "Illuminating the upper mantle beneath the Newer Volcanics province, southeast Australia, using seismic body wave tomography". AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts. 2012. Bibcode:2012AGUFM.T31B2594R.
  2. ^ a b "Newer Volcanics Province". Volcano Discovery. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  3. ^ Selina, Kate; Green, Webber (27 May 2016). "Long time to wait for Australia's next volcanic eruption". ABC News. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d Wilkie, Benjamin (2020). "Volcanism in Aboriginal Australian oral traditions". Geology Today. 36 (5): 183–187. doi:10.1111/gto.12324. ISSN 1365-2451. S2CID 225322581.
  5. ^ "Is an Aboriginal tale of an ancient volcano the oldest story ever told?". www.science.org. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
  6. ^ Bell, Damein; Johnston, Chris (2008). "Budj Bim. Caring for the spirit and the people" (PDF). Quebec, Canada: 1–18. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

37°46′12″S 142°30′00″E / 37.77000°S 142.50000°E / -37.77000; 142.50000

Further reading