Boodjamulla National Park, also known as Turf Hill National Park, is located in the northwest inland of Queensland, close to the border of the Northern Territory, about 2100 kilometers by car from the Queensland capital Brisbane. The mining town of Mount Isa, an inland mining town in western Queensland, is about 350km by car and covers an area of about 2820 square kilometers.
Boodjamulla National Park is one of Queensland's most delightful national parks with magnificent canyon villages, sandstone range and historic fossils. The Wanyi (Waanyi) aborigines have strong cultural ties with the region, as well as with the descendants of modern European herdsmen. (LawnHillGorge), located at the eastern entrance to the National Park, is the most glamorous location in Boodjamulla National Park, where the mountains are green and green, unlike the arid Australian hinterland. Carved from (LawnHillCreek), the Canyon is a collection of fresh water springs flowing westward from the limestone plateau. On both sides of the gorge are rows of giant sandstone cliffs, with emerald streams and lush vegetation, with magnificent scenery. As an oasis, spring water and surrounding vegetation attract a large number of wildlife to live here.
(Riversleigh Fossil Site), a fossil site in the National Park, is a fossil site covering an area of about 100 square kilometers, scattered with fossil remains of ancient mammals, birds, reptiles and so on. The Fresley fossil site was inscribed on the World Natural Heritage list by UNESCO in 1994 (Australian mammal fossil site, together with Naracoorte Caves National Park, South Australia's Narakut Cave National Park).
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