About 375-350 million years ago during the Devonian period, sandstone and conglomerates were deposited in the Ord Basin to create a plateau. Over the last 20 million years the plateau has been eroded to by water runoffs, wind, sand movent and plants and animals on and around the Bungle Bungle Range to form the dome shaped formations that are around today.
Location of the Purnululu National Park
The Bungle Bungles look a bit like bees with orange and dark grey banding on them. The dark grey banding on them is caused by sandstone with lots of clay that has a protective layer of cyanobacteria which is blue-green algae which can survive the heat in the areas. The orange banding is caused by sandstone with not much clay and has a protective layer of iron oxide that is only a few millimetres thick. They both protect the soft clay based sandstone underneath and also slow weathering and erosion.
man, what. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bungle_Bungle_Range
The Bungle Bungle Range was "discovered" in 1983 by a film crew from Perth who flew over it on their day off. The film they shot became a documentary, screened internationally, opening the tourist door and causing the Western Australian government to establish the Purnululu National Park in 1987. The Purnululu National Park as inscribed as a World Heritage area in 2003.
The horizontal stripes of the Bungle Bungles are produced by layers of black lichen and orange silica.
the Bungles Bungle are up to 350 thousand years old and were originally under water
Yes. The Bungle Bungles lie within the world heritage-listed Purnululu National Park, and contain many sacred aboriginal sites.
The Bungle Bungle range is in the Purnululu National Park, in far northwest Western Australia.
The Bungle Bungle range is in the Purnululu National Park, in far northwest Western Australia.
man, what. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bungle_Bungle_Range
The Bungle Bungle range, in the Purnululu National Park in far northwest Western Australia, was - remarkably - only really "discovered" in the mid 1980s. The Aborigines knew about the range for thousands of years beforehand, but very few men had actually ventured into the area.
Yes. The Bungle Bungles are a series of striped, dome-shaped rock formations in the Bungle Bungles, or the Bungle Bungle (Purnululu) National Park.
The Bungle Bungle ranges in northwest Western Australia were discovered only as recently as 1983.
Mr. Bungle was created in 1985.
Mr. Bungle ended in 2004.
Paul Cullinan played the part of bungle.
The Bungle Bungle Range was "discovered" in 1983 by a film crew from Perth who flew over it on their day off. The film they shot became a documentary, screened internationally, opening the tourist door and causing the Western Australian government to establish the Purnululu National Park in 1987. The Purnululu National Park as inscribed as a World Heritage area in 2003.
Bungle Bungles are visited by 43,000 people each year. Bungle Bungles are located in the Purnululu National Park in Australia.
Bungle Shama Rao Dwarakanath was born in 1942.