Australia’s Hidden Divide | Geography of South Eastern Australia Part 2
#geography #australia #victoria Explore the geography of South Eastern Australia in Part 2 of this documentary series on Victoria, one of Australia’s smallest but most geographically diverse states. In this episode, we leave Melbourne and Port Phillip Bay behind and travel inland into the landscapes west and north of the city, where the bay-and-plain geography of Melbourne gives way to gorges, uplands, dry forests, river valleys, volcanic soils, goldfields and the great northern plains of the Murray Basin. This journey begins at the gateway to inland Victoria, around Bacchus Marsh, Werribee Gorge and the Lerderderg region. Here, rivers have carved deep passages through older rock, creating rugged gorges, steep slopes, fertile valley floors and one of the most dramatic geographic transitions west of Melbourne. The landscape around Bacchus Marsh also preserves evidence of ancient glacial environments from when Australia was part of Gondwana, revealing how Victoria’s modern geography was shaped by inherited landscapes, ancient ice, rivers, uplift, erosion and later volcanism. From there, the episode continues toward Mount Macedon, the Central Uplands and the Victorian Goldfields. Rather than looking at the goldfields only as mining history or geology, this video explores them as a geographic landscape. The Victorian Goldfields were shaped by elevation, drainage, erosion, gullies, ridges, forests, volcanic cover, buried river systems and water supply. These physical features helped determine where gold was exposed, where alluvial gold accumulated, where towns developed, and how places like Ballarat, Bendigo, Castlemaine, Daylesford, Maldon, Clunes and Creswick became some of the most important inland settlements in Australia. The Victorian gold rush was not just a mining event. It transformed Victoria and helped reshape colonial Australia. But the gold rush unfolded across a very specific landscape: old uplands cut by creeks and gullies, crossed by drainage divides, partly covered by basalt, and connected by roads, railways, farms, reservoirs and inland towns. This episode explains how the geography of central Victoria helped create one of Australia’s most famous gold-bearing regions. Part 2 also follows the land north into the great northern plains of Victoria. Beyond the Central Uplands and goldfields, the hills begin to soften, the valleys widen, and rivers flow toward the Murray Basin. This region includes the Murray River, the Goulburn River, the Campaspe River, the Loddon River, the Avoca River and the broad floodplains, wetlands, irrigation districts and river red gum forests that shape northern Victoria. Towns such as Shepparton, Echuca, Swan Hill, Kerang, Wangaratta and Mildura are part of this wider riverine landscape. The great northern plains show a different side of Victoria’s geography. Here, water moves slowly across low country, spreading through floodplains, wetlands, ancient lake systems and agricultural districts. The Murray Basin connects Victoria to one of Australia’s most important river systems, and its plains have shaped farming, settlement, irrigation, ecology and the relationship between the state’s uplands and the inland lowlands. This documentary is for viewers interested in Australian geography, physical geography, geology, landscape evolution, Victorian history, the Victorian Goldfields, the Murray River, the Murray Basin, Bacchus Marsh, Werribee Gorge, Lerderderg Gorge, Mount Macedon, Ballarat, Bendigo, Castlemaine, river systems, floodplains, gold rush landscapes and the natural history of south eastern Australia. In Part 1, we explored eastern Victoria, including the Australian Alps, the Great Dividing Range, Gippsland, the Gippsland Lakes, Ninety Mile Beach, Port Phillip Bay and Melbourne. In Part 2, the journey moves inland, from the edge of Melbourne into the gorges, uplands, goldfields and river plains that helped shape Victoria’s interior. In Part 3, the series continues into the volcanic plains and the sandstone mountains of Gariwerd, also known as the Grampians. Link to Part 1 of the Series: • The Geography of South Eastern Australia Check out the OzGeology website: https://ozgeology.com 🎥 If you would like to support this channel, consider joining our Patreon: / ozgeology 🌏 About OzGeology The core mission of OzGeology is to make geology exciting, accessible, and inspiring for everyone. Instead of presenting rocks and earth science as dry or overly academic, OzGeology brings stories of the planet to life, revealing how every mountain, mineral, and landscape tells part of Earth’s grand adventure. 00:00-01:59 Introduction 02:00-03:25 - Chapter 4: The Gateway To The Interior 03:26-07:03 - Bacchus Marsh, Gorges & The Lerderderg Ranges 07:04-09:09 - Mount Macedon 09:10-16:57 - The Central Highlands & The Goldfields 16:58-21:46 - Chapter 5: The Great Northern Plains 21:47-25:26 - Part 3 & 4 & Conclusion

The Geography of South Eastern Australia

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