The long, contentious debate in Australia over the future of the sacred Uluru is over. Climbing the famed Northern Territory site will be banned from October 2019 following a unanimous decision by the ...
Ghastly Void. Dead Heart. Red Centre. Outback. Australians have all sorts of cheery nicknames for the thousands of miles of hot, hard continent that lie beyond the coastal crust where anybody with an ...
If you ban it, they will come. That was the case at Uluru, the sacred red rock in Australia’s Northern Territory, where tourists flocked to make a final ascent before a permanent ban on climbing came ...
Aboriginal theories about the creation of the Uluru rock formation vary and are rarely shared with outsiders, but the Anangu people are clear about its hallowed place in their heritage. It’s where the ...
Climbing Australia's renowned Uluru will be banned come October 2019. According to CNN, the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park Board voted unanimously Wednesday to end the polarizing debate and issue a ...
It's a milestone vote in the national park's history... Get daily headlines and breaking news alerts for FREE by signing up to our newsletter We have more newsletters Get daily headlines and breaking ...
ULURU, Australia (AP) — Nature seemed to be siding with indigenous Australians’ demand for Uluru to be respected as a sacred site on Friday when high winds threatened to prematurely end the ...
Uluru, a World Heritage site in northern Australia, is renowned for its color-changing ability due to its sandstone composition. The rock shifts colors from red, purple to orange based on the sun's ...
The climb ban goes into effect after repeated requests for people not to climb. Australia's landmark sandstone, considered a site of "great spiritual significance," has been turned into something of a ...
Warren Mundine has defended strict rules around photographing sacred Aboriginal sites, but claimed fining visitors was unnecessary. The Indigenous leader weighed in on the topic after Aussie travel ...
You have reached your maximum number of saved items. Remove items from your saved list to add more. In 2015, Tasmanian Walking Company co-owner Brett Godfrey walked 150 kilometres from the South ...
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