Mount Chambers Gorge

Eastern end of Mount Chambers
The chasm is toward the left end of the upper part of the mountain and is too small to be visible in this photo.
South-eastern end of chasm

Mount Chambers and the beautiful Mount Chambers Gorge (30°57′32″S 139°13′44″E / 30.95896°S 139.22879°E / -30.95896; 139.22879 to 30°23′45″S 139°13′42″E / 30.395868°S 139.22836°E / -30.395868; 139.22836) are about 60 km north-east of Blinman in the Flinders Ranges of South Australia. Although on private land, they are a tourist attraction near to the road between Blinman and Balcanoona, Gammon Ranges National Park. They are part of the Wearing Hills.[1]

Mount Chambers Gorge winds through the Wearing Hills toward Lake Frome. There is usually water in the bed of the creek, although less in recent years than formerly; while it is brackish it can be used by campers (given appropriate treatment). The upper part of the Gorge is accessible to most vehicles while the lower parts are now closed to all but foot traffic and can no longer be accessed by four-wheel-drive. There is signage at the car park indicating the closure of the lower gorge to vehicle traffic.

Mount Chambers Chasm

The upper part of Mount Chambers is composed of a limestone that is resistant to erosion. The resistance of the limestone and the greater erodibility of the underlying rock has resulted in the upper part of the mesa being mostly surrounded by precipitous walls.

The chasm extends about 50 metres across the width of the Mt Chambers mesa near its eastern end. The top of the chasm is about three metres wide at the south-eastern end and two metres at the north-western end.

It seems that the eastern end of the mountain has somehow moved away from the remainder. The top of the chasm is apparently wider than the bottom, indicating some hinging of the end of the mountain.

The bottom of the chasm is covered with rubble and soil that has fallen from above. Some boulders have fallen only a part of the way down and have bridged between the two walls.

The depth of the chasm, from the top to the rubble on the bottom, is around ten to fifteen metres.

It is possible, with great care, but without any special climbing gear, to climb down over some of the bridging boulders to the base of the chasm. There is a section near the centre of the chasm where a V shaped set of fractures comes off the chasm. The bridging boulders in this area seem to provide the only path from top to bottom.

References

  1. Glovebox Guide - The Flinders Ranges, Australian Geographic, 2000, p135, ISBN 1-86276-044-6

External links

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