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Kakadu National Park

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Jabiru="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;"> [12°06′06″S, 132°22′47″E]="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;"> Department of the Environment and Heritage
Aboriginal traditional land owners (the Gun-djeihmi, Kunwinjku and Jawoyn peoples'')="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;"> Kakadu National Park]="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;">
Kakadu National Park
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Nearest town/city: Jabiru
Coordinates: [12°06′06″S, 132°22′47″E]
Area: 19,804.00 km²
Established: 1981
Visitation: (in [[]])
Managing authorities: Department of the Environment and Heritage
Aboriginal traditional land owners (the Gun-djeihmi, Kunwinjku and Jawoyn peoples'')
Official site: [Kakadu National Park]
Kakadu National Park is in the Northern Territory of Australia, 171 km east of Darwin.

Yellow Water Billabong in July
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Yellow Water Billabong in July

The name 'Kakadu' comes from an aboriginal floodplain language called Kakadu or Gaagudju, which was one of the languages spoken in the north of the park at the beginning of the twentieth century. Gagudju is no longer regularly spoken but descendants of this language group still live in Kakadu.

The park has two seasons, 'wet' and 'dry'. In the wet (October to April) many of the attractions are impossible to get to, so the dry season (May to September) is the peak period for visitors. The local Bininj/Mungguy Aboriginal people recognize six seasons in the Kakadu region:

Mamukala
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Mamukala

The attractions include the opportunity to learn about the people, geology, plants and animals which make Kakadu a unique and precious resource, not only for Australians but for all the people in the world. The Bowali Visitor Centre contains a wealth of information about Kakadu. The Warradjan Aboriginal Cultural Centre presents the culture of the local Aboriginal people in an accessible way.

However, the wetlands provide the greatest visual pleasure. The freshwater and estuarine (saltwater) crocodiles sleep on the banks of the Alligator Rivers or the many billabongs for most of the day but can also be seen floating or swimming in the water. Birdlife abounds from the stately Jabiru to the amusing "Jesus" bird (Jacana) as it steps from lily pad to lily pad. At dusk on the Yellow Water billabong (Ngurrungurrudjba), hundred of herons circle overhead landing and taking off from half-submerged trees. Ospreys sit on termite mounds or soar on high looking for prey beneath the still waters. The billabongs of the Kakadu national park are anything but "stagnant pools of water" (see Waltzing Matilda).

Rock painting of a sailing ship
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Rock painting of a sailing ship

Aboriginal paintings can be studied in overhangs in the Nourlangie area and there are waterfalls and plunge pools in various parts of the park.

See also

External links


 


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