As a summary of the work undertaken by the Expert Panel, outcomes of Steps A and B for Queensland have been listed in Table 18. The table has been constructed so as to show the sieving approach that the Panel adopted in reaching these outcomes.
Table 18 Summary table showing sieving of themes, sub-themes and forested places in Queensland warranting further investigation.
STEP A |
STEP B |
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AUSTRALIA |
QUEENSLAND |
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All Terrestrial Areas |
Australian Forested Areas |
Queensland Forested Areas |
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Australian Themes of outstanding universal value |
Australian Sub-themes/ Exemplars |
Explanatory Sentence |
Australian Forest Sub-themes/ Exemplars |
Potential forested places in Queensland warranting further investigation |
NATURAL |
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Ancient records of life and landforms |
Ancient landforms and fossils |
Australia has outstanding examples of the earliest known records of life and early physiographic features. |
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Origin and development of biota and landforms as a result of Gondwanan plate tectonics and more recent stability and long isolation. |
Passive continental margins |
Marginal swells are characteristic of all passive continental margins. The Australian marginal swells are outstanding and exceptional in having volcanics to allow the process to be dated. |
Passive continental margins |
|
Palaeoplains |
Australia has outstanding examples of ancient soils, regoliths and landforms in its ancient laterites and duricrusts. |
Palaeoplains |
||
Palaeo-drainage systems |
Australia has outstanding examples of Mesozoic and older river systems extant in its landscapes. |
Palaeo-drainage systems |
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(cont) Origin and development of biota and landforms as a result of Gondwanan plate tectonics and more recent stability and long isolation |
Fossils |
Australia has fossil sites that are outstanding and exceptional in providing evidence of the key stages in the evolution of the Australian biota. |
Fossils |
|
Refugia, Relicts |
Australia has outstanding examples of relict biota reflecting ancient Gondwanan biota. |
Refugia, Relicts |
||
Rainforest |
Australian rainforests are an outstanding example of ecosystems from which modern biota are derived. These rainforests are exceptionally rich in primitive and relict species, many of which are similar to fossils from Gondwana. |
Rainforest |
Possible addition to the Central Eastern Rainforest Reserves WHA: Bunya Mountains National Park, Qld. Possible addition to the Wet Tropics of Queensland WHA: McIlwraith Range rainforest areas, Qld. |
|
Evolution of landforms, species and ecosystems under conditions of stress. |
Scleromorphy |
The Australian flora includes outstanding examples of the evolution of a diverse range of scleromorphic characteristics in response to low nutrient soils and a highly variable climate. |
Scleromorphy |
Best global expression, or Possible addition to the Wet Tropics World Heritage Area: Coastal eastern Cape York Peninsula, Qld. (including: - Shelburne Bay, - Temple Bay, - Jardine National Park, - Starcke National Park, - Dunefields at Cape Flattery). |
(cont) Evolution of landforms, species and ecosystems under conditions of stress. |
Arid landscapes and adaptations |
Australia, as the most arid, non-polar continent on earth, has outstanding examples of arid landforms and arid-adapted biota in its sandy deserts, including the longest, longitudinal dune systems in the world. |
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Eucalyptus-dominated vegetation |
Eucalyptus-dominated vegetation in Australia is an outstanding example on a continental scale of forest and woodland vegetation dominated by a single genus. This vegetation has evolved under stress, including conditions of high climatic variability, nutrient deficiency, and high fire frequency. |
Eucalyptus-dominated vegetation |
Best global expression based on a series of areas: Carnarvon Ranges (including Carnarvon National Park), Qld. Possible addition to the Wet Tropics WHA: Eucalypt forest areas on the inland slopes, and eucalypt and Melaleuca dominated areas on the adjacent coastal plains. Possible addition to the Fraser Island WHA: Cooloola National Park, Qld. Possible addition to the Central Eastern Rainforest Reserves WHA: Eucalypt-dominated areas including Bunya Mountains National Park, Qld. |
|
Alpine |
Australia has outstanding examples of globally unusual vegetation that has developed in response to maritime conditions and poor soils. |
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Climate change and its impacts |
Records of past climates |
Australia has outstanding and globally significant records of past climates, including those preserved in the sediments of a number of its lake systems. |
Records of past climates |
|
CULTURAL |
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Traditional human settlement and land use |
Complex persistence of a hunting- and-gathering society on a single continent |
Australia provides the only example of where the hunting-and-gathering way of life has dominated an entire continent up to modern times. This way of life continues to play a significant role in the occupation of the continent, particularly in its northern and central sections. |
Complex persistence of a hunting- and-gathering society on a single continent |
|
Artistic expression |
Rock art |
Australia has Aboriginal art sites that represent a unique artistic achievement, as well as providing an outstanding record of human interaction with the environment over tens of thousands of years. |
Rock art |
Best global expression based on a series of areas: Carnarvon Gorge rock art sites, Qld. |
Religious expression |
Dreaming sites |
Australia provides an outstanding example of where the religious system of hunting-and-gathering societies is embodied in the landscape. |
Dreaming sites |
Status unknown. Further work is required on all Aboriginal dreaming sites, including: South-east region dreaming sites and bora grounds, Qld. |
Encounter between cultures |
Australia provides examples of the encounter between hunting-and-gathering societies and nineteenth century European societies. |
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European expansion of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries |
Forced migration - a major way in which the expansion took place |
Convict transportation to Australia is an outstanding example of how European powers initiated the colonisation of an entire continent. |
Forced migration - a major way in which the expansion took place |
|
(cont) European expansion of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries |
Land barriers as historical frontiers |
European expansion into the New World was a process of imaginative, as well as economic, appropriation in which explorers, poets, artists and photographers played a part. The first frontier, or land barrier, assumed special importance as the site of this encounter. |
Land barriers as historical frontiers |
|
Integration of an economic system and the resources of a continent into the global economy |
The Australian goldrushes are an outstanding example of the global migrations associated with the nineteenth century goldrushes. |
Integration of an economic system and the resources of a continent into the global economy |
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Masterpiece of human creative genius |
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Outstanding example of a type of building/ technological ensemble of landscape |
This concludes the Record of the Expert Panel's meeting in Canberra, on 14, 15 and 21 October 1997.
It should be noted that the Record and its Attachments also include those parts of the Record of the Expert Panel's meeting of 13 - 14 June 1996 that relate to the Panel's implementation of Step A of the methodology for all terrestrial parts of the Australian continent.