History and Development of Coal Mining in the Burragorang Valley Area

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
11
File Size:
457 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1976

Abstract

The Burragorang Valley lies approx. 95 km by road south west of Sydney and some 35 km west of Camden. It is over 80 km in length and varies in width from 3 km to over 16 km. Geologically, the history of the Burragorang Valley is of interest. It was referred to by early geographers and N.R.M.A. booklets as the largest sunken valley in Australia. This description is incorrect as it is a water worn valley formed by the dissection of an uplift in the south western portion of the large Sydney Sedimentary Basin. Ages2 ago there extended right across the Blue Mountains, a continuous tableland into which the Nattai, Wollondilly and Cox's Rivers have carved out the formation of the Burragorang. This dissection together with other valleys such as the Megalong, Jamieson and Grose, formed part of the eastward drainage pattern of the uplifting tableland into the Pacific ocean. The lapse of time since the streams in the Burragorang began their work of erosion can
Citation

APA:  (1976)  History and Development of Coal Mining in the Burragorang Valley Area

MLA: History and Development of Coal Mining in the Burragorang Valley Area. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1976.

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