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Mount Buninyong

Mount Buninyong
Mount Buninyong.jpg
Mount Buninyong viewed from south at the Midland Highway east of Scotsburn
Highest point
Elevation 745 metres (2,444 ft) AHD
Listing List of volcanoes in Australia
Coordinates 37°39′S 143°56′E / 37.650°S 143.933°E / -37.650; 143.933Coordinates: 37°39′S 143°56′E / 37.650°S 143.933°E / -37.650; 143.933
Geography
Mount Buninyong is located in Victoria
Mount Buninyong
Mount Buninyong
Location in Victoria
Location Buninyong, Victoria, Australia

Mount Buninyong is an extinct volcano in western Victoria, Australia rises to 719 metres (2,359 ft) AHD. Within the Mount Buninyong Scenic Reserve 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) north of the town of Buninyong and 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) south of Ballarat, it is on the regional city's rural-urban fringe.

The mountain was originally named Mount Bonan Yowing, which is said to derive from an Aboriginal word meaning 'a man lying on his back with his knee raised'. It was from its peak that Thomas Learmonth and a group of squatters first viewed in 1837 what would become the Ballarat district. It is one of the more recognizable landmarks in the entire Goldfields region.

Mount Buninyong is located on crown land. Much of it is a public reserve with a substantial native forest that is a major koala habitat. It is an important piece of regional infrastructure as a site for multiple communications antenna for radio and television broadcasting. It is home to picnic areas and the observation tower at its summit is a local tourist destination.

Much of the mountain was cleared for agriculture or housing, but widespread protests during the 1980s led to the preservation of native forest cover on much of the upper portion.

Total annual rainfall for the Mount Buninyong area is 779 millimetres (30.7 in). During the colder months growing conditions are restricted. Severe frosts and snow fall occur during winter.

The soils of the mount are very fertile and the high permeability and available water capacity makes these soils very favourable for agriculture.

The Keyeet balug clan of the Wada Wurrung (or Wathaurong) tribe occupied the Mount Buninyong area. An aboriginal burial site was located in the 1860s and more recently stone tools have been found. Mount Buninyong is seen as a significant site for the recognition of the ongoing connection of Aboriginal people with the land through creation stories and cultural sites and is an ideal site for interpreting Aboriginal cultural history. There have been no records of Aboriginal archaeological sites for Mount Buninyong. There is no evidence that the area has been surveyed. Aboriginal Affairs Victoria has recommended that a survey should take place.


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Wikipedia

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