enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hill End Historic Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_End_Historic_Site

    Early efforts were focussed on alluvial gold and the towns of Hill End and Tambaroora grew up around the creeks and dams worked for that purpose. In 1859, with the imposition of an urban plan for Hill End, the town grew in a more orderly fashion and by the height of the second, larger rush in 1872, it was the largest inland settlement in the ...

  3. Adelong, New South Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adelong,_New_South_Wales

    In 1852 during the Australian Gold Rush, gold was discovered at Upper Adelong. Records around the time indicated a yield of 198 kg of precious metals. In 1855 Adelong was declared a gold field. The Adelong township, which was first established in 1836, came alive when in 1857 William Willams discovered a gold bearing reef ore on Charcoal Hill.

  4. Yalwal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yalwal

    Yalwal is the site of a former gold mining town of the same name situated 29 km (18 mi) west of Nowra at the confluence of the Danjera and Yarramunmun Creeks which then forms Yalwal Creek which flows into the Shoalhaven River in New South Wales, Australia. [2] It is now the site of a City of Shoalhaven managed picnic area and Danjera Dam.

  5. Canbelego - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canbelego

    The area now known as Canbelego is part of the traditional lands of Wangaaypuwan dialect speakers (also known as Wangaibon) of Ngiyampaa people. [8] [9]The Surveyor-General Thomas Mitchell and his expedition had camped and obtained water, in early 1845, at a place that he called "Canbelego" but that was not the later site of the village; it was a location—on Bogan River, near to the modern ...

  6. Grenfell, New South Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grenfell,_New_South_Wales

    Between 1867 and 1869 over 1,100 kilograms (40,000 oz) of gold were produced each year on the Grenfell goldfields and were the richest gold fields in NSW during this time. Grenfell was a goldmining town first known as Emu Creek and renamed in honour of John Grenfell, Gold Commissioner at Forbes, who had been killed in 1866 when bushrangers ...

  7. Macleay River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macleay_River

    The river flows in a meandering course generally east by south, joined by twenty-six tributaries including the Apsley, Chandler, and Dyke rivers and passing through a number of spectacular gorges and waterfalls in Cunnawarra National Park and Oxley Wild Rivers National Park, through heritage-listed mountain village Bellbrook amidst others ...

  8. Seven Mile Beach National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Mile_Beach_National_Park

    Seven Mile Beach is a national park in New South Wales (Australia), [1] 110 km southwest of Sydney. It consists of tidal flats, islands and a coastal sand barrier built from river silt in the Shoalhaven River delta. It is important areas for migratory waders and sea birds and protects a large littoral rainforest. [2]

  9. Sydney sandstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydney_sandstone

    The Paradise Quarry near Saunders Street, Pyrmont Kurnell sandstone cliffs, view towards Pacific Ocean Sydney sandstone, also known as the Hawkesbury sandstone, [1] yellowblock, and yellow gold, [2] is a sedimentary rock named after Sydney, and the Hawkesbury River north of Sydney, where this sandstone is particularly common.