Kings Plains National Park

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NearestcityGlen Innes
Coordinates29°34′48″S 151°21′56″E / 29.58000°S 151.36556°E / -29.58000; 151.36556
Area57 km2 (22 sq mi)
Kings Plains National Park
Map showing the location of Kings Plains National Park
Map showing the location of Kings Plains National Park
Kings Plains National Park
LocationNew South Wales
Nearest cityGlen Innes
Coordinates29°34′48″S 151°21′56″E / 29.58000°S 151.36556°E / -29.58000; 151.36556
Area57 km2 (22 sq mi)
Established1988
Governing bodyNSW National Parks & Wildlife Service
WebsiteOfficial website

Kings Plains is a national park in New South Wales, Australia, 48 km from Inverell, 50 km from Glen Innes and 478 km north of Sydney.

Kings Plains was founded in January 1988 and was made a national park to preserve and protect the array of wild animals, plants and the Kings Plains creek with its many water features and found in 1988.

Land features

Kings Plains National Park is not widely known to people for the land, people mostly enjoy the array of water features joining the Kings Plains creek from non-drying pools to rapids to waterfalls, which leads to a gorge. The land itself is mostly made up of sandy soils with shrub. The soil is more fertile around the creek.

Vegetation

Some vegetation in the Kings Plains woodland includes iron-barks, cypress pine, yellow box, stringy-barks, eucalyptus trees, and apple box. Among the shrubs are rare species such as the grey guinea flower, folded leaf waxflower and Rodd's star-hair. During spring the park's wildflowers are at their most colourful.[1]

Wildlife

Amongst the large variety of wildlife are eastern grey kangaroos, wallaroos, wallabies and koalas which live in the park near water and fertile soils.[1] Also the rare brush-tail wallaby has been in the park. Platypus can be seen along the creek, but some of their habitat above the falls is considered fragile. In the area, 82 bird species have been recorded, including eastern and crimson rosellas, king parrots, yellow-tailed black cockatoos, currawongs, wattle birds and many species of honeyeaters. There are also the endangered glossy black cockatoos, turquoise parrots and regent honeyeaters. In and around Kings Plains Creek the straw-necked ibis can be found and high above "birds of prey" such as the wedge-tailed eagle and the peregrine falcon are seen.

Activities

See also

Sources

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