Gulaga-Nationalpark

The Gulaga National Park is a national park in the southeast of the Australian state of New South Wales. The park was created in January 2001 and is 46.73 km ².

The park, which is also known as Mount Dromedary is, northwest and southwest of the Wallaga Lake and includes the former Wallaga Lake National Park. In Wallaga Lake, the Merriman Iceland is, the importance of the myths of Aborigines has, where an access is prohibited. He is the focus of Aboriginal culture, because the island is connected with the story of King Merriman, which is very well known among the Yuin Aboriginal people of the south coast of New South Wales. On the island, and the Elder Umbarra, also called King Merriman lived.

From Mount Dromedary from, on the one reaches old mining roads, can the coast of Narooma to Bermagui overlook. For the local Aboriginal people, especially for women, Mount Dromedary has mystical significance. On 6 May 2006, the land rights on Biamanga National Park and Gulaga National Park were returned by the government of New South Wales, to the aboriginal tribe of the Yuin.

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