Undara

 20 October: Undara Volcanic National Park and Lava Tubes

(Joe hated the place so she is not completing this story, sorry if you prefer her๐Ÿ˜Š)

Undara: Aboriginal for, A long way, meaning the lava flowed a long way!

We got to Undara, set up camp, went in the pool, created a mess with mud and went to bed. The next day we had our tour but it was at one o clock so we then waited and waited and waited some more. While we waited we did some blogging and paper planing (I did not make up this word, it is in the dictionary) but finally the time came and we rushed onto the bus and went on the bumpy track over massive pink granite and saw heaps of basalt, that's fancy talk for rock that came out of the Undara volcano.

The park protects one of the longest lava tube cave systems in the world. About 190,000 years ago, a large volcano erupted violently, spewing molten lava over the surrounding landscape. The lava flowed rapidly down a dry riverbed. The top, outer-layer cooled and formed a crust, while the molten lava below drained outwards, leaving behind a series of hollow lava tubes.

Told you they got messy...

Digging holes
Mining away with their mini miner shirts.


The pub full of trains 


Archway experience- looking into the tubes









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