Coorong National Park
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Coorong National Park is a protected area located in South Australia about Template:Convert south-east of Adelaide, that predominantly covers a coastal lagoon ecosystem officially known as The Coorong and the Younghusband Peninsula on the Coorong's southern side. The western end of the Coorong lagoon is at the Murray Mouth near Hindmarsh Island and the Sir Richard Peninsula, and it extends about Template:Convert south-eastwards. Road access is from Meningie. The beach on the coastal side of the peninsula, the longest in Australia, is also commonly called The Coorong.
The Coorong lies within the traditional lands of the Ngarrindjeri people, an Aboriginal Australian group. Notable locations within the park include Salt Creek, Policeman's Point, Jack Point, and Woods Well.
Etymology
[edit]Its name is thought to be a corruption of the Ngarrindjeri word kurangk, also written Kurangh, meaning a long or narrow lagoon or neck.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=aussietowns>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=goodliving>Template:Cite web</ref>
History
[edit]The Coorong National Park was proclaimed on 9 November 1967 under the National Parks Act 1966 in respect to land in sections 17 and 60 in the cadastral unit of the Hundred of Glyde and section 6 in the Hundred of Santo.<ref name="SAGG-1967"/>
At the commencement of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 on 27 April 1972, the national park consisted of land in sections 17, 59 and 60 in the cadastral unit of the Hundred of Glyde and sections 6, 43 and 52 in the Hundred of Santo.<ref name=NPWact>Template:Cite journal</ref>
The Coorong Game Reserve which was purchased by the Government of South Australia in 1968 was abolished on 14 January 1993 and its lands was added to the national park.<ref name=CGR1993>Template:Cite journal</ref> The game reserve occupied part of the Coorong lagoon to the immediate west of Salt Creek and had an area of Template:Convert as of May 1982.<ref name=Ruddock>Template:Cite report</ref>Template:Rp
In February 2013, a lifeboat from MS Oliva, a ship that foundered in the South Atlantic during 2011, washed up on a beach in the national park.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Description
[edit]The western end of the Coorong lagoon is at the Murray Mouth near Hindmarsh Island and the Sir Richard Peninsula, and it extends about Template:Convert south-east. The national park area includes the Coorong itself, and Younghusband Peninsula which separates the Coorong from Gulf St Vincent in the Southern Ocean. The Coorong has been cut off from Lake Alexandrina by the construction of the Goolwa Barrages (weirs) from Goolwa to Pelican Point during the late 1930s.<ref>Map of the Coorong Accessed 3/3/7</ref>
The national park was formed in 1967 as a sanctuary for many species of birds, animals and fish. It attracts many migratory species. It provides refuge for these animals during some of Australia's regular droughts. The Template:Convert also supports coastal dune systems, lagoons and coastal vegetation.<ref name=about>Coorong National Park Template:Webarchive – Things to see and do, Accessed 30/7/9</ref>
One of the unique aspects of the Coorong is the interaction of water along its length, with sea water and Murray River water meeting rainfall and groundwater. The freshwater supports the fauna (animal) of the area while the sea water is the habitat for much of the birdlife.<ref>Coorong National Park Template:Webarchive – Natural Attractions, Accessed 30/7/9</ref>
Notable locations within the park include Salt Creek, Policeman's Point, Jack Point, and Woods Well.<ref name=smh2004>Template:Cite web</ref>
The waters of the Coorong are a popular venue for recreational and commercial fishers. Coorong mullet, mulloway and bream are the main species.<ref name=smh2004/><ref name=aussietowns/>
Beach
[edit]The Template:Cvt long sandy beach running down the outer side of the Younghusband Peninsula and commonly referred to as The Coorong, is the longest beach in Australia. It runs from the Murray mouth to Cape Jaffa.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Cultural significance
[edit]The Coorong is of great cultural significance to the Ngarrindjeri people, who have songlines relating to creation stories associated with the area as well as a long history of living sustainably and looking after the complex environment.<ref name=landcare2021/>
Camp Coorong
[edit]Camp Coorong is a place of cultural learning, where visitors can learn about Ngarrindjeri culture, history, arts and crafts, including basket-weaving. It is owned and run by Ngarrindjeri people, and situated about Template:Cvt south of Meningie.<ref name=aussietowns/> The centre was founded by brothers Tom and George Trevorrow in 1985, with the aim of creating a place where the local community could have camps, younger members of the community might find employment, and Ngarrindjeri culture could be shared. It was officially closed to the public in 2018.<ref name=marsh2022/>
Ngarrindjeri elder and well-known weaver Aunty Ellen Trevorrow, who is Tom's widow, works from one of the rooms at the camp, along with artist and academic Jelina Haines, who was born in the Philippines. Their work has been commissioned for the recently refurbished Department for Infrastructure & Transport offices in Pirie Street.<ref name=marsh2022>Template:Cite web</ref>
Ecology
[edit]The wetlands within the part of the national park containing the Coorong Lagoon form a complex ecosystem of freshwater, estuarine, and hypersaline waterbodies with a unique diversity of habitats for plants and animals. The coastal lagoons are considered critically endangered due to the loss of freshwater flows, local extinction of characteristic submerged plants and subsequent loss of habitat diversity.<ref name='Foundations'>Template:Cite journal</ref>
In December 2018, the Federal and South Australian governments announced a new environmental management program called "Healthy Coorong, Healthy Basin".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Ongoing Template:As of, the Ngarrindjeri Aboriginal Corporation is working with the Department for Environment & Water to share their knowledge of landcare practices, which will be incorporated in a new database.<ref name=landcare2021>Template:Cite web</ref>
Flora and fauna
[edit]The Coorong is an area of huge natural biodiversity.<ref name=landcare2021/>
Birds
[edit]The Coorong National Park has been recognised by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area. It has supported the chestnut teal, Australian shelduck, sharp-tailed sandpiper, red-necked stint, banded stilt, red-necked avocet, pied oystercatcher and red-capped plover. Australasian bitterns have been recorded. It has also supported significant numbers of orange-bellied parrots, fairy terns and hooded plovers, although their usage of the site has declined from reduced freshwater inflows.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The largest pelican rookery in Australia is at Jack Point, just off the Princes Highway and about Template:Cvt north of Salt Creek.<ref name=aussietowns/> The pelicans also breed on North Pelican Island.<ref name=landcare2021/> The Australian pelican (Pelecanus conspicillatus) is the largest species of pelican, and breeds from August until January.<ref name=aussietowns/>
Marine life
[edit]As mentioned above, Coorong mullet, mulloway and bream are the main species caught for human consumption in the Coorong.<ref name=smh2004/><ref name=aussietowns/>
In the arts
[edit]The park was the setting of the popular 1976 film Storm Boy,<ref name=sbremake>Template:Cite web</ref> as well as its 2019 remake. Both films are based on the 1964 novel by Colin Thiele of the same name set on the Coorong that portrays the bond of a young boy who rescues and raises an extraordinary orphaned pelican which he names Mr Percival.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=sbremake/>
Lucy Treloar's award-winning novel, Salt Creek (2015), is set in the Coorong, specifically the area around Salt Creek, in 1855.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
See also
[edit]- Coorong, Lower Lakes and Murray Mouth (CLLMM) Research Centre, a research centre situated in Goolwa
- Protected areas of South Australia
- List of islands within the Murray River in South Australia
References
[edit]Further reading
[edit]External links
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Template:Protected areas of South Australia Template:Limestone Coast Template:Ramsar sites in Australia