I doubt that i will see it in my lifetime. But I could see it being a good thing if they can get around the fact that a lot of the top of the escarpment is water
http://www.illawarramercury.com.au/stor ... ck/?cs=300
Swampy
Hallu wrote:What's laughable is the World Heritage proposal for Royal NP... It's basically a man-made park, with introduced flora and fauna... even though the fast regenerating native vegetation masks that. It's been heavily logged, foxes rabbits and deers have been introduced for sport hunting... Mudflats and mangroves have been replaced by grass parkland... Totally the opposite of what's needed to get World Heritage status... Yeah in some areas it looks good and wild, and yeah it's hugely popular, but that doesn't make it World Heritage... Otherwise we could also declare Mortington Peninsula WH, or even Phillip Island... That's totally wrong. World Heritage is something like Croajingolong, or Shark Bay. It should be vast and unspoiled. Not tiny and riddled with human activity and nefast influence...
GPSGuided wrote:What's red?
icefest wrote:Hallu wrote:What's laughable is the World Heritage proposal for Royal NP... It's basically a man-made park, with introduced flora and fauna... even though the fast regenerating native vegetation masks that. It's been heavily logged, foxes rabbits and deers have been introduced for sport hunting... Mudflats and mangroves have been replaced by grass parkland... Totally the opposite of what's needed to get World Heritage status... Yeah in some areas it looks good and wild, and yeah it's hugely popular, but that doesn't make it World Heritage... Otherwise we could also declare Mortington Peninsula WH, or even Phillip Island... That's totally wrong. World Heritage is something like Croajingolong, or Shark Bay. It should be vast and unspoiled. Not tiny and riddled with human activity and nefast influence...
Less than a third of all World heritage sites are 'vast and unspoiled'. (759 cultural Cultural site, 193 natural Natural site and 29 mixed Mixed site properties)
Even the Sydney opera house is World Heritage.
Read the criteria: http://whc.unesco.org/en/criteria/
This is a map of all world heritage areas. Yellow is Cultural, Green is Natural, half each is mixed.
EDIT: Red are the places at risk of being removed from the list.
2. to exhibit an important interchange of human values, over a span of time or within a cultural area of the world, on developments in architecture or technology, monumental arts, town-planning or landscape design;
Hallu wrote:Other parks all over Australia deserve the WH status much more than Royal, they just don't have the same popularity and political backup.
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