Mount Bauple National Park Queensland | |
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Coordinates | 25°48′49″S 152°34′24″E / 25.81361°S 152.57333°E |
Established | 1935 |
Area | 5 km2 (1.9 sq mi) |
Managing authorities | Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service |
See also | Protected areas of Queensland |
Mount Bauple is a scientific national park in the Fraser Coast Region, Queensland, Australia, 190 km north of Brisbane.[1]
The park's main purpose is to protect the area's exceptional scientific values. Mount Bauple shares its name with the bauple or bopple nut, the local name for the nut from the commercial Queensland nut tree Macadamia integrifolia;[2] both the nut and mountain in turn come from Baphal, the Dreaming caretaker from the Budjilla people indigenous to Fraser Island, Queensland.[3] While the bauple plant is cultivated extensively in Queensland and overseas, its natural distribution is extremely limited, and its status in the wild is listed as vulnerable. The commercial value of the species adds considerably to the importance of protecting the wild population.[2]
Way back in THE FIRST TIME [The Dreamtime] when Yindingie our Messenger God was leaving the Mountain, the Budjilla people had to decide who was to look after our Land...so a man called Baphal said he would go...they called the Mountain, Baphal's Mountain. When our people seen the lizard they called him Baphal's lizard. When our people seen the nuts they call them Baphal's nuts.