- Burra, New South Wales
Burra is an
Australia n district andparish of rural smallholdings lying 20 kilometers to the south ofQueanbeyan, New South Wales inPalerang Council , postcode 2620. The districts bounds have been defined [cite book | last = Moore | first = Bruce | title = Burra, County of Murray | date = 1980 | Page 2 ] as being the area to the south of the intersection of the Burra and Cooma Roads that contains the catchments of the Burra, Urila, Waterholes and Guises Creeks, and bounded to the East by the Queanbeyan River. The Burra Creek, whose headwaters are in theTinderry Nature Reserve , flows through the centre of the Burra Valley to join the waters of theQueanbeyan River at the Googong Reservoir. Nearby small settlements include Royalla, Williamsdale and Michelago to the west and south. Urila Valley is accessed from the Burra Valley and lies to the east. Burra is also a commutable distanceAustralia 's capital cityCanberra .It is also a
parish of the County of Murray. The parish originally consisted of land between Guises Creek in the west, and Burra Creek in the east, encompassing land on both sides of Jerrabomberra Creek. A small part of this land was located to the west of the Queanbeyan-Cooma railway line and thus became part of theAustralian Capital Territory in 1911.The Ngarigo people originally inhabited Burra as part of their wider country lands extending south to the
Australian Alps . [cite web
title =Ngarigo (NSW)
work =Tindale's Catalogue of Australian Aboriginal Tribes
publisher =South Australian Museum
date =2000
url =http://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/orig/tindale/HDMS/tindaletribes/ngarigo.htm
accessdate =2007-05-10 ] The first european camp was called 'The Creek' although it soon became known amongst the early settlers as "The Burra", [cite book | last = Moore | first = Bruce | title = Burra, County of Murray | date = 1980 ] possibly from a local aboriginal word, or a misspelling of 'Borough'. The first grazing and clearing of the area began in the 1830-60s and farms were established at the Warm Corner, KT Park, Burra Station, London Bridge and Lagoon. By the 1920s the local population had become large enough to support two competing cricket clubs, one at the Burra park, the other near Urila. Subdivision into smaller blocks began in the 1960s as Canberra's population expanded and has created the local regions such as those surrounding Candy Road, Badgery Road and Plumbers Road. Today the majority of the area has been subdivided in this way creating a population of over three hundred housesFact|date=June 2008.The Burra Valley lies at the northern tip of the Monaro tablelands, and shares with it some of the cooler climate of that region. Temperatures are on average two or three degrees Celsius below those in Canberra and Queanbeyan. Light falls of snow are not uncommon in the winter months.
Part of the Valley has always been treeless. [cite book | last = Moore | first = Bruce | title = The Warm Corner, A History of the Moore Family and Their Relatives Early Pioneers of the Queanbeyan-Canberra District
date = 1981 | pages = 223 | url = http://www.allbookstores.com/book/9780959464917/Bruce_Moore/Warm_Corner.html
id = ISBN 0959464913 (10) ISBN 9780959464917 (13) ] Elsewhere remnants of uncleared open woodland ofSnow Gum , Candlebark, Yellow Box, Apple Box and Small Leaved Peppermint remain. Black Sally and Manna Gum are found in the cooler gullies and frost hollows. The wooded hills to the east are rocky and dry, sporting primarily Small Leafed Peppermint, Brittle Gum and Scribbly Gum. This area has never been heavily grazed and is in its original natural condition, in 2001 it was protected by the creation of theBurra Creek Nature Reserve . The steeper slopes of the hills to the west of the Burra Valley, including Mts Campbell and Gibralter (and known by some Burrans as the 'Purple Veil' range due to their shaded afternoon colour) are patchily covered by a forest type similar to the wetsclerophyll that occurs further to the west on theMt Clear Range and inNamadgi National Park .Most of the valley is underlain by the Colinton Volcanics, composed of
tuff andlava s deposited in shallow water during theSilurian period. A fault runs parallel and to the east of the Burra Road, beyond which are the ancient deep seaOrdovician sediments of the Pittman formation. A fewlimestone lenses occur in younger rocks near to this faultline, one of which forms the locally famous 'London Bridge' natural arch over the Burra Creek. In the 1920-30s there was some prospecting of Iron, Lead and Silver along this fault but this was never commercially successfulFact|date=June 2008.References
See also
*
Geology of the Australian Capital Territory
*Queanbeyan, New South Wales
*Monaro, New South Wales External links
* [http://www.bungendoremirror.com.au/ The Bungendore Mirror - local press]
* [http://www.bom.gov.au/hydro/flood/nsw/southcoast.shtml Regional Rainfall Measurements - inc Burra Creek]
* [http://www.google.com.au/maps?q=Burra,+NSW,+Australia&sa=X&oi=map&ct=image A Google Map of Burra]
* [http://www.nationalparks.nsw.gov.au/npws.nsf/Content/burra_creek_mgmtplan_draft Burra Creek Nature Reserve Draft Plan of Management]
* [http://www.burra.org.au Burra Community website]
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