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The Colours of Sunrise - Brachina Gorge
Brachina Gorge, Flinders Ranges National Park, South Australia, Australia
September 20th, 6.15 a.m.
© 2008 Chas Adlard, All Rights Reserved.
This colourful and spectacular gorge has long attracted visitors to marvel at its beauty. The gorge was used from 1862 as a commercial route for cartage of copper ore from the Blinman Mine, 35 kilometres to the north. It provided access to the western plains until a road through Parachilna Gorge was established in the 1880's to connect Blinman to the northern railway. The gorge today provides a pathway through the rock sequence which reveals their history as a corridor through time.
Rocks which are exposed along the Brachina Gorge were once sediments deposited in a shallow, elongated basin known as the Adelaide Geosyncline. These sediments were transported by rivers and at times by glaciers and deposited on the seafloor between 650 and 500 million years ago. The area was flooded by the sea for much of that 150 million year period, during which the sea level rose and fell many times.
The colours, sounds and peace of Brachina Gorge as the sun rises are an unforgettable experience.
Sound by littlemutt
Australia - New Zealand / Australia
Lat: 32° 20' 58.38" S
Long: 138° 36' 5.35" E
Elevation: 425
Precision is: Medium. Nearby, but not to the last decimal.