Great for an extended lunch time walk. Terice Reynolds. October 17, Hiking Off trail. Laurel F. September 4, Erich Futterleib. August 16, Walking Rocky. Hannah Catt. Walking Muddy. Great walk for kids. Jess Sutcliffe.
August 9, Lots of fences and closures. Ludmila Chinoy. August 1, Very busy with bikes, not much wilderness. Johan Van Zyl. June 13, Beautiful scenery - would love to see it shortly after heavy rains!
Kevin Lee. May 10, Tanya Lindsay. May 3, Hiking Blowdown. First to Review. Jack Li. October 15, Claire Seaton-Lea. October 9, Halina Drury. October 4, Thomas Kropman. September 25, Caronwen Richards. Katherine Wu. A piling rig recovered the fossils from a layer of oil shale some 15 m underground and dumped them in a spoil heap, where they were noticed.
The fossils were within an area of sedimentary deposits that geologists have called the Petrie Formation. These cover an area of some 50 km 2 north of the mouth of the Brisbane River. These basins consist of a mixture of different types of rock, including mudstone, shale, and sandstone, as well as limestone and brown coal. Crocodile remains have long been known from the Oxley Group sediments, which also contain fossils of turtles, fish, branchiopods crustaceans , freshwater mussels, and leaves of flowering plants.
They sit on top of some enormous geological structures, such as the sediments of the Great Artesian Basins, the Ipswich Basin, and the folded rocks of the New England Fold Belt. Because these basins are so late in the geological sequence, and because of the sorts of fossils found in them, geologists have assigned them to the Lower Tertiary this is now known as the Paleogene. This is why the fossils were said to be 50 million years old, according to mainstream geological philosophy.
In other words, just because they dug the fossils out of the sediments of the Petrie Formation they said the fossils were 50 million years old. Although this event is ignored by mainstream geologists there is much evidence that the Flood was a real event in recent earth history.
Various geological units of eastern Australia have already been classified within this event. In other words, the Petrie Formation was deposited after most of the floodwaters had receded.
This suggests that deposition was not post-Flood but occurred during the Flood when there was much more water involved. The sediments are estimated to be up to m thick as estimated from composite sections. The sediments tend to sit at higher elevations.
They have been significantly eroded since deposition and the present drainage follows the pattern set up by this erosion. Such erosion is not expected by the normal erosive processes we see happening after the Flood.
The erosion suggests there was more water involved, and points to the late state of the Flood. Once you have found the plant that looks right for you, the next step is where to buy it. Most nurseries stock a good range of plants, but due to space and supplies, they may not always have the plant that you are searching for in stock. Below is a list of our favourite specialist nurseries. Click on the links for their details-. Geelong Native Plants — Victoria.
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