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Tamborine Mountain, also simply known as Mount Tamborine, is a plateau, geographic subregion [2] and locality in the Scenic Rim Region of Queensland, Australia. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] In the 2021 census , Tamborine Mountain had a population of 8,105 people.
Tamborine Mountain Road is a continuous 24.1 kilometres ... All distances are from Google Maps. [1] The entire road is within the Scenic Rim local government area.
Tamborine–Nerang Road is a state-controlled district road (number 2050) rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS). [9] [10] It runs from Tamborine Mountain Road in Tamborine Mountain to Beaudesert–Nerang Road in Clagiraba, a distance of 10.9 kilometres (6.8 mi) by a circuitous route to the east. [11]
Flooded gums, 2010 Cedar Creek Falls, 2011. The Witches Falls section, on the eastern side of Mount Tamborine village, became Queensland's first national park in 1908. [5] The main walk here is the Witches Falls Circuit (3 km (1.9 mi)) which snakes down a steep slope through closed in forest into rainforest with cycad groves, seasonal lagoons, enormous strangler figs and palm groves, en route ...
Tamborine National Park covers 1,160 hectares (2,900 acres) of the Tamborine Mountain, a remnant of the once giant Tweed Volcano. Closer to the coast, although not technically part of the hinterland, is the Currumbin Valley Reserve.
Tamborine Memorial Hall is a public hall at 2760 Waterford Tamborine Road [ 38 ] The Scenic Rim Regional Council operates a mobile library service which visits the corner or Waterford-Tamborine Road & Beenleigh-Beaudesert Road, opposite the Shell service station ( 27°52′49″S 153°07′46″E / 27.8803°S 153.1295°E / -27.8803 ...
Mount Tamborine Post Office had opened by March 1924 (a receiving office had been open from 1881, originally known as Tambourine Mountain), was renamed Mount Tamborine in 1926 and closed in 1977. [4] The name "Tamborine" is taken from the Yugambeh language for "wild lime", after the finger lime trees in the area. Tamborine was sometimes spelt ...
The interior fittings and furnishings were donated to other churches with the chairs going to St George's Anglican Church on Tamborine Mountain, while the altar, cross and organ went to the proposed chapel at the Australian Army's Jungle Training Centre at Canugra. [6] [7]