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framlessdirect.com.au - blue mountain accomodation and hotel acommodation
The GREATER BLUE MOUNTAIN AREA (GBMA) is a very rugged tablelands with sheer cliffs, deep, inaccessible valleys and rivers and lakes teeming with life. The unique plants and animals that live in this natural place relate an extraordinary story of Australia's antiquity, its diversity of life.
The GBMA consists of over 10 000km squared mostly forested landscape on a sandstone plateau ranging from sixty to one-eighty kilometres inland from central Sydney. The area includes vast expanses of wilderness and is equivalent in area to almost 33% Belgium or 200% Brunei. Who wouldn't want to stay at .
The property, which includes 8 national parts is seperated by a transportation and urban development corridor which is made up of several outstanding national parks (e.g. famous Jenolan Caves Blue Mountains National Park, Wollemi National Park, Yengo National Park & Gardens of Stone National Park). Want to stay nearby by these national parks then choose .
The area has been described as a natural laboratory for studying the evolution of the eucalypts and other native Australian species. The largest area of high diversity of eucalypts on the continent is located in south-east Australia. The Greater Blue Mountains Area (GBMA) includes much of this eucalypt diversity. Additionally, this landscaper supports numerous and significant proportions of the world's eucalypt species, the area provides examples of the range of structural adaptations of the eucalypts to Australian environments. If you stay here at a you will see ther variety of tall forests at the margins of rainforest in the deep valleys, through open forests and woodlands, to shrublands of stunted mallees on the exposed tablelands.
The located nearby/within this GBMA will be great for holidaying at. In addition to beautiful hotels and nature the GBMA also contains ancient, relict species of global significance. The most famous of these is the recently-discovered Wollemi pine, thought to be from dinosaur ages and thought to have been extinct for millions of years (yet some are surviving. The Wollemi pine is one of the world's rarest species.)
With 400+ different kinds of animals live within the rugged gorges and tablelands of the Greater Blue Mountains Area this GBMA area has been made a world heritage site by the UN in recent years.
Enjoy this world heritage site today and have a great time on holiday at a . |