Gordon Splits

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Gordon Splits is a notable section of the Gordon River in South West Tasmania.

It is world heritage listed[1], and is part of the Franklin-Gordon Wild Rivers National Park. It has also been an important location of focus within the larger environmental campaign for wilderness preservation in South West Tasmania.[2]

Described

The earlier works of Charles Whitham and others suggested that the river went underground at some point. It was not until in 1928 that three piners (J.Hadmar Sticht, G.W. Harrison and Charles Abel) were described as having passed through them in March of that year.

It was reported in the Mercury newspaper of 12th April 1928 under the title The Gordon River - Exploration of the Splits - Showplace of Tasmania - Sprent Falls alone worth the trip. [3]

Later access

The section of river is very difficult to access and apart from Olegas Truchanas, Les Southwell and Peter Dombrovskis - few others are known to have successfully traversed the section in the time of European presence in Tasmania.

Following the initial journey by Truchanas in 1954 and the complete journey in 1958 [4] through the splits, the photographs taken by Truchanas were destroyed in the 1967 Tasmanian fires

Les Southwell and others in the 1970s tended to lilo through the splits to alleviate some of the issues arising from using fixed structure boats travelling through.

Photographs

Photographs by Truchanas [5], Les Southwell ,[6] and Dombrovskis [7]show the steep narrow nature of the splits dramatically in their photographs. More recent aerial photographs can be found like Joe Shemish's in the Huon Pine book of Kerr and McDermott. [8]

Later description

Geraldine Brooks wrote a piece in the National Times of 24-30 May 1981 which Peter Thompson quoted in his Power in Tasmania as an evocative overview of the splits and their context.

The Splits are a geological phenomenon. Six hundred million years ago, the powerful waters of the Gordon River wore a deep erosion slot through a rugged spine of quartzite. The river runs across the grain of the countryside, instead of following it. The result is rare and spectacular.

From the air, the Splits seem to grasp the Gordon River like giant rocky pincers, squeezing its wide flow into narrow strips of deep water about 100 metres long.

From the river bank below them, they appear like pieces of a giant's unsolved jigsaw, crggy masses and voids of sparkling quartzite, frozen a few metres apart, never quite meshing in the first Split, the rock rises vertically for about 100 metres before it merges with the gentler mountainside [9]

See also

Films

  • (1982) Gordon Splits [videorecording] produced for the Tasmanian Wilderness Society. Melbourne : The Wilderness Society. Director, photographer, editor, Michael Cordell ; photographers, Chris Noone, Peter Dombrovskis.

References

  1. ^ Wilderness Resources
  2. ^ The Wilderness Society - History of the Franklin River Campaign 1976-83
  3. ^ Kerr, Garry and McDermott, Harry (1999) The Huon Pine Story Portland, Vic Mainsail Books ISBN 0-95779170-4 - in the chapter The Gordon River and its Tributaries 1896-1942 - section on pages 67-70 - Above the Gordon Splits - including a long quote from the Mercury article: as well as air photos of the first and second split
  4. ^ Gee, H.M. (1978) The Wild Rivers pp161-171 in The South West Book
  5. ^ Gordon Splits, 1958 picture by Truchanas - see http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3790531
  6. ^ Australian Heritage Photographic Database search results (Detail)
  7. ^ Gordon Splits, World Heritage Area, southwest Tasmania, ca. 1981 [picture] - Peter Dombrovskis - see http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3915741
  8. ^ Kerr, Garry and McDermott, Harry (1999) The Huon Pine Story Portland, Vic Mainsail Books ISBN 0-95779170-4 - in the chapter The Gordon River and its Tributaries 1896-1942 - air photos of the first (page 70) and second split (page 67)
  9. ^ Thompson, Peter (1981) Power in Tasmania Hawthorn, Victoria Australian Conservation Foundation. ISBN 0-85802-064-5 page 64