EXCEED JUNE/JULY 2017 june_July_colour emag | Page 16

TRIP REPORT Canning Stock Route 25th April to1st June 2017 Extensive rains in 2016-7 meant many trees and shrubs along the Canning were in flower especially the wattles and ground covers. It was not long before we recognised the marble gum with its unusual habitat on dune tops, the poison camel bush, holly grevillea, mulga and desert poplar, the latter suffering from poor health in the north section of the track. Parts of the Canning were heavily forested especially with Mulga, Casuarina, Melaleuca or Eucalypts including mallees, and many other parts were spinifex on sand plains with dunes. We found that Moore’s “A guide to plants of inland Australia” was invaluable. The geology also varied and we experienced the rough travel on Nullabor limestone, the deeply weathered and eroded low hills north of the Trans line, then the start of gold country heading into Laverton. From Laverton to Wiluna we passed many signs of current and past gold mining activity and included an extensive walk over old workings south of Duketon. That same afternoon was a drive along the famous Yandal gold province, home of many well-known discoveries in the 1990s including Bronzewing and Jundee gold mines. Reaching the old gold mining town of Wiluna meant our last refuelling for 900 km and the real start to the Canning. During following days we went close to the Shoemaker meteorite site and past the Frere Range ironstones. As we merged our geological and botanical knowledge, it was fascinating to realise that the plants we were seeing in central Australia were the product of the complex history of our continent. Over the last few million years as Australia has been drifting north it has moved into warmer and drier equatorial conditions. As this was occurring there were changes from ice-age to greenhouse, and back, on a 100,000 year cycle. During those ice-ages, sea level fell 120-140m compared to today’s level creating land bridges to Tasmania, New Guinea and beyond allowing movement of animals and plant species. During these changes, the dominant tree types adapted or were replaced, but pockets of the old remained. This large-scale picture was overlain by local effects of damp creek beds with River Red Gums and Red Mulga, sand dunes with their own ground water patterns that supported the marble gum, and erratic grass fires that have been part of the landscape for 50,000 years. The various stages of response and recovery from these fires was easily seen along the track. One of the most surprising aspects was the lack of our Coat-of-Arms. It was not until south of Alice Springs on the way home that we saw kangaroos and emu, leaving the 64-dollar question of why are they lacking in much of central Australia. Previous years we had been told it was due to lots of water, lack of water, or extensive hunting, but none of the explanations really gel. Our whole team receives credit for the photos which were compiled and co-ordinated by Gary Wallis 1849. Neil Phillips 1744 14© Vol 34 No. 5 June-July 2017