Pinkawillinie Conservation Park
Pinkawillinie Conservation Park | ||
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Location: | South Australia , Australia | |
Specialty: | Bush camping, hiking, weathered granite hill | |
Next city: | Wudinna | |
Surface: | 1320 km² | |
Founding: | 1970 |
The 1,320 square kilometer Pinkawillinie Conservation Park is located in South Australia 20 kilometers from Wudinna and 360 kilometers from Adelaide . The name of the park comes from the Aborigines and means place of nosebug traces .
The Pinkawillinie Conservation Park was founded in 1970 and expanded in 1983. The Gawler Ranges National Park lies on its northern border . It can be traversed on three routes, the Stringer Road , which can be driven by normal road vehicles, the Pinkawillnie Road and the Woolford Track , which can only be driven by four-wheel drive vehicles. The park has no supply station, bush camping, hiking and nature studies can be carried out. Corrobinnie Hill is one of the park's weathered granite mounds and boulders, accessible from Kyancutta . The park is full of birds, animals, and reptiles and plants that are typical of South Australia.