Kalkajaka National Park (CYPAL)

Cooktown, Cook Area

Attractions

An imposing mountain range of massive granite boulders is home to unique wildlife and rich in Aboriginal culture. The Aboriginal Traditional Owners of Kalkajaka National Park (CYPAL) are the Eastern Kuku Yalanji Aboriginal people.

At the northern end of the Wet Tropics World Heritage Area, Kalkajaka National Park (CYPAL) contains an imposing mountain range of black granite boulders. These formidable boulders, some the size of houses, stack precariously on one another—appearing to defy both gravity and logic.

The wet tropics and drier savanna/woodland regions meet in this park, making it a refuge for wildlife. The extraordinary combination of flora and geomorphology provides a habitat for an unusual range of wildlife, including species that are endemic (entirely confined) to this boulder-jumbled mountain.

Kalkajaka (meaning 'place of spear'), is an important meeting place for the Eastern Kuku Yalanji Aboriginal people and is the source of many Dreaming stories.

Granite boulders of Black Mountain

Kalkajaka National Park (CYPAL)

Mulligan Highway,
Cooktown, Cook Area
Queensland 4895

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Content Provided By Department of Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation (DESI)

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澳洲昆士蘭旅遊暨活動推廣局向领地傳統所有者致敬,感謝並認可领地所有者持續對這片土地、水域、文化及社區緊密的連接。我們對原住民長老對過去、現在及未來致誠執的尊重。

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