Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Willandra Lakes Region' has mentioned 'Lake' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Willandra Lakes RegionUNESCO World Heritage SitePart of the Willandra Lakes system: Lake Mulurulu Willandra Creek Garnpung Lake Lake Leaghur Lake Mungo Lake Arumpo Chibnalwood Lakes LocationFar West, New South Wales, AustraliaCriteriaCulturalxc2xa0and Natural:xc2xa0(iii)(viii)Reference167Inscription1981 (5th session)Area240,000xc2xa0ha (590,000 acres)Coordinates34xc2xb0S 143xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf34xc2xb0S 143xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / -34; 143Coordinates: 34xc2xb0S 143xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf34xc2xb0S 143xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / -34; 143Location of Willandra Lakes Region in New South WalesShow map of New South WalesWillandra Lakes Region (Australia)Show map of Australia
Albert Barnes started the Mungo Gymkhana which after three years was laid out on the southern rim of the lake on Joulni Station.
The lakes system, a remnant of the Lachlan River drainage pattern, is approximately 150xc2xa0km long by 40xc2xa0km wide and runs generally in a north-south direction from Lake Mulurulu in the north to Lake Prungle in the south.
Parallel to the eastern shores, white sand and clay dunes rise 40 metres above the plain, while deep gullies have been cut through the lake shore deposits.
The dry lake beds support mallee eucalypt and saltbush communities, while the sand dunes are occasionally bare of vegetation, or support mallee and spinifex communities.
The area is representative of south-east Australian lunettes or dry lake beds with wind blown dunes on their eastern margins and flat floors, formerly lake bottoms.
A lunette is a crescentic dune ridge commonly found on the eastern (lee) margin of shallow lake basins in eastern Australia, developed under the influence of dominant westerly winds.
The area contains a relict lake system whose sediments, geomorphology and soils contain an outstanding record of low-altitude, non-glaciated Pleistocene landscape.
The area contains a relict lake system whose sediments, geomorphology and soils contain an outstanding record of low-altitude, non-glaciated Pleistocene landscape.
The area is representative of south-east Australian lunettes or dry lake beds with wind blown dunes on their eastern margins and flat floors.
The Willandra Lakes Region, in the semi-arid zone in southwest New South Wales (NSW), contains a relict lake system whose sediments, geomorphology and soils contain an outstanding record of a low-altitude, non-glaciated Pleistocene landscape.
Ceasing to function as a lake ecosystem some 18,500 years ago, Willandra Lakes provides excellent conditions to document life in the Pleistocene epoch, the period when humans evolved into their present form.
The property as nominated covered some 3,700 km2, following cadastral boundaries and including the entire Pleistocene lake and river systems from Lake Mulurulu in the north to the Prungle Lakes in the south, thereby including all elements contributing to its Outstanding Universal Value.
The revised boundary follows topographic features, with an appropriate buffer within the boundary, to more closely delineate the entire lake and river system but exclude extraneous pastoral areas.