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What is the Aboriginal name for Mount Warning?

Author

Zoe Patterson

Updated on March 28, 2026

What is the Aboriginal name for Mount Warning?

Captain Cook named the peak Mount Warning in 1770. Visible from the ocean, the peak warned mariners of the treacherous offshore reefs along this stretch of coastline. Its Aboriginal name, Wollumbin, was added in 2009.

Is Mount Warning still active?

Wollumbin (Mount Warning) summit track remains closed until the end of March 2022 due to public safety risks, and to allow further consultation with the Aboriginal community and other key stakeholders about the future management of the site.

What is Mt Warning made of?

In its prime, the crater rim stood 2 km tall with lava flows sprawled across more than 7000 sq. km. Erosion has stripped away almost a kilometre of softer material from Wollumbin’s crown to expose the tough, crystalline rocks – trachy-andesite, rhyolite and syenite – that plugged the volcano’s magma chamber.

Is Mt Warning in NSW or QLD?

Mount Warning is a mountain 14 kilometres from Murwillumbah, near the border of Queensland on the North Coast of New South Wales, Australia.

Is Mount Warning in Queensland?

The mountain is located 14 kilometres (9 mi) west-south-west of Murwillumbah, near the border between New South Wales and Queensland. …

Why is it called Mount Warning?

The mountain is located 14 kilometres (9 mi) west-south-west of Murwillumbah, near the border between New South Wales and Queensland. Lieutenant James Cook saw the mountain from the sea and named it Mount Warning.

Is Mount Warning Open 2021?

LONG-TERM CLOSURE: As of July 2021 this track is closed due to safety concerns and continued consultation with the Aboriginal community about future management.

Why is it called Mt Warning?

What type of mountain is Mt Warning?

Mount Warning
Geology
Age of rockOver 23 million years
Mountain typeVolcanic plug
Last eruption~23 Ma

Is Mount Warning extinct?

So, with our own extinct volcano right on our doorstep it might be a good time to take a closer look at Mt Warning. Before we go too far and you start to flee the area, our volcano last erupted 23 million years ago, is extinct and is in no danger of waking up and erupting everywhere any time soon.

Where is Mount Warning?

Wollumbin (Mount Warning) summit track is located 12km south-west of Murwillumbah, in Wollumbin National Park. Wollumbin, which means ‘cloud catcher’ to some Aboriginal People, is a traditional place of cultural law, initiation and spiritual education for the people of the Bundjalung Nation.

What type of volcano is Mount Warning?

Mount Warning is the central volcanic remnant of an ancient shield volcano, the Tweed Volcano, which would have been about 1,900 m (6,200 ft) above sea level or just under twice the height of the current mountain.

Is Mount Warning the same as Mount Wollumbin?

This mountain is also referred to as Mount Ivy and Mount Dum Dum and was believed to be named Mount Wollumbin in error. In 2006 the Geographical Names Board assigned dual naming to Mount Warning, to also be known by its indigenous name of Wollumbin. The name Wollumbin refers the whole of the central vent and its surrounding ring dykes.

Where did the rock walls on Mount Warning come from?

If you notice lots of rock walls in some of the local areas, they were built by farmers cleaning up the land and trying to find a use for all those darn rocks. Mount Warning is the centre of the volcano that stretched from Mount Tamborine in the North to Lismore in the south over 20 million – yes 20 million – years ago.