Introduction
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Mount Field National ParkIUCN category II (national park)Russell FallsMount Field National ParkInteractive map of Mount Field National ParkLocationTasmaniaNearest cityMaydenaCoordinates42°39′19″S 146°35′15″E / 42.65528°S 146.58750°E / -42.65528; 146.58750Area162.65 km2 (62.80 sq mi)Established1916Governing bodyTasmania Parks and Wildlife ServiceWebsiteOfficial websiteUNESCO World Heritage Site
UNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaCultural: iii, iv, vi, vii; natural: viii, ix, xReference181Inscription1982 (6th Session)
Robert Tarn, Mackenzie Tarn, and Johnston Tarn (foreground to background), Tarn Shelf
Russell Falls
Mount Field National Park is a national park in Tasmania, Australia, 64 km northwest of Hobart. The landscape ranges from eucalyptus temperate rainforest to alpine moorland, rising to 1,434 metres (4,705 ft) at the summit of Mount Field West.
History
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Mount Field National Park was founded in 1916, making it, along with Freycinet National Park, Tasmania's oldest national park.
The area around Russell Falls has been protected for its natural beauty since 1885, when it was set aside as Tasmania's first nature reserve. The last known wild thylacine was captured in the region in 1933. The reserve was called "National Park" before 1946, but was officially renamed to its present name in 1947.
Etymology
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Mount Field National Park was named for Judge Barron Field, who visited Tasmania as an itinerant judge in 1819 and 1821.
Geology
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During the Pleistocene epoch, a snowfield covered the top of the Mount Field plateau and fed glaciers in the surrounding valleys. A large, 12 km long glacier formed the broad river valley and the cirque walls above Lake Seal. Twisted Tarn, Twilight Tarn, and the tarns on the Tarn Shelf were formed by glacial scouring. A glacier flowed south from the Rodway Range, forming lakes Belcher and Belton, and north to form the Hayes Valley and Lake Hayes.
Lake Seal, Mount Field National Park. The remains of a cirque glacier are visible in the walls around Lake Seal.
In alpine areas podzolic, humus, and leached soils are most common. The podzols often occur on deep periglacial solifluction deposits down to 450 m. Alluvial floodplains have developed in the lower park on deposits of Quaternary alluvium.