Blowhole at Clear Place Point
A blowhole that shoots up from a fissure in the ceiling of sea cave.
Blowholes at Mutton Bird Point
Group of at least five small blowholes that have formed in basalt.
Frazer Blowhole
Collapsed sea cave – former blowhole. At high tide, certain wind directions and wave height here still is observed a vertical fountain but this is rare.
Dudley Beach blowholes
Blowholes in granite fissures and also smaller caves. At correct wind direction the fountains and splashes are up to 10 m high.
Kiama Little blowhole
Smaller blowhole if compared to the better known Kiama Blowhole further north. This blowhole though is more reliable – it has a narrower nozzle and thus needs less powerful waves to create a fountain.
The Temple Fig
Giant white fig (Ficus virens) that has a circumference of 19 m and is 36 m tall. If measured at the height of 1.4 m, the circumference is even 30.7 m! Crown of the tree is 45 m wide.
Blackbutt “Benaroon”
Stoutest blackbutt (Eucalyptus pilularis Sm.). 60 m high, girth 15.1 m.
Old Bottle Butt
Stoutest known red bloodwood (Corymbia gummifera), circumference 17.5 m (16.3 m?), height 52 m.
Moreton Bay Fig in Bellingen
Giant fig tree – Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla Desf. ex Pers.) with a girth of 18 m, 50 m high. In fact these are two trees together – if their trunks are measured together, circumference is 29 m, but 18 m is the circumference of the largest tree.
White Cliffs Pineapple Opal Fields
Find of unique opalised fossils and crystals of other minerals replaced with opal. Often these opal stones look like clusters or balls of radiating crystals.