The surrounding countrysideLark Quarry Conservation Park is situated in Jump Up country – a landscape of mesas, gullies and steep escarpments. This dry and dramatic landscape has been created by water. Scientists call this landscape “dissected residuals�, because the sediments laid down by ancient lakes and seas have been carved over the millennia by runoff from countless summer storms. The soils are easily eroded from around and underneath areas of 'cap rock'. This weathered and hardened rock, resistent to erosion, give the mesas their distinctive flat tops. |  | |
 | VegetationThe dominant vegetation is spinifex grass, with lancewood and Normanton box. Many small herbs flourish after summer rains. From the lookout on the mesa behind the Trackways building, you can see Mitchell grass plains rolling away to the west and Coolibah trees growing along the watercourses. These are natural grass plains - they have not been cleared. Further to the west is the Diamantina River and the channel country - a vast, flat plain crisscrossed by braided watercourses, many of which join during floods. » To find out more, download Fact Sheet 3 - 'Lark Quarry's Landscape - Jump Up Country' (306.06 KB) |
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