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Mount Crawford also refers to the Mount Crawford Forest which is a grouping of several government forest lands in the area, the largest encompassing the area around Mount Crawford - others are to the west at Mount Gawler and south around Cudlee Creek and Kangaroo Creek Dam. The Barossa Valley is directly to the north. The forest headquarters ...
Mount Crawford is the name of several places in the world including: Mount Crawford (Antarctica) Mount Crawford (New Hampshire) in the US White Mountains; Mount Crawford (South Australia) a hill in the Mount Lofty Ranges of Australia Mount Crawford, South Australia, a locality containing the hill
Crawford is an impact crater near Adelaide in South Australia, Australia. The Crawford crater is up to 8.5 km long, and is thought to have been formed by oblique (low angle) impact. Its age is estimated to be greater than 35 million years (probably Eocene). Quartz rocks affected by impact-related pressure are present at the site, which is a ...
Mount Crawford is a locality in the Mount Lofty Ranges of South Australia.It is named after the mountain of the same name in its boundaries, also known as Teetaka. [4]The locality of Mount Crawford is crossed by Warren Road (route B34 between Williamstown and Birdwood) and edged by Route B35 where it branches from that road towards Mount Pleasant.
Mount Crawford is a mountain located in Coos County, New Hampshire, in the United States. The mountain is on a spur of Montalban Ridge within the White Mountains and overlooks Crawford Notch. It is accessible via the Davis Path, which climbs from Crawford Notch near the Notchland Inn. The Davis Path continues north up Montalban Ridge to Mount ...
Mount Crawford, at 560 metres (1,840 ft) Mount Misery, ... Hanging Rock / Mount Diogenes (718 m or 2,356 ft) Mount Dandenong (633 m or 2,077 ft)
Fossicking can be done in remote locations with no facilities, or can be a part of a guided tour. Several small businesses in Australia have set up for the purpose of introducing new people to the activity or providing facilities for fossickers near the areas being searched.
Other towns along the river include Mount Solon, Stokesville, Sangersville, Natural Chimneys, Mount Crawford, and the village of North River. The river is popular among canoeists, rafters and inner tubers. At one point during the 19th century barges shipped goods upstream via a canal/lock system.