Old Bottle Butt

Stoutest known red bloodwood (Corymbia gummifera), circumference 17.5 m (16.3 m?), height 52 m.

Kermandie Queen

Stoutest eucalyptus – a mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans F.Muell.). Circumference 21.65 m, height 60 m. Suffered burns during the fire in January 2019.

Whitelaw Tree

Largest and also stoutest shining gum (Eucalyptus nitens H.Deane & Maiden). 57.5 m high, girth 14.9 m, volume 200 m³.

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.

Styx Valley Alpine Ash

Largest alpine ash (Eucalyptus delegatensis R.T.Baker) with a code name SX19A. Volume 286 m³, diameter 5.41 m, height 72.0 m.

Gothmog

Largest Australian oak (Eucalyptus obliqua L’Hér.). Volume 337 m³. 53 m high, diameter 5.37 m, girth – 17 m. The tree has many branches.

Arve Big Tree

Arve Big Tree, Tasmania, Australia

Second largest eucalypt and the largest mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans F.Muell.) in the world. Volume 360.1 m³, height 87 m, diameter 5.44 m. After the fire in January 2019 it has collapsed.

Gloucester Tree

Climbing the Gloucester Tree

72 m tall karri tree (Eucalyptus diversicolor), the second tallest fire lookout in the world, where visitors can climb up to 58 m high outlook cabin. Girth – 7.8 m.

The Boab Prison Tree, Derby

The Boab Prison Tree, Western Australia. Girth 14.64 m

An unusual boab (Adansonia gregorii), circumference 14.64 m, height just 9.5 m. It was used to lock up indigenous Australians in the 1860s on their way to sentencing.