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Nattai National Park New South Wales | |
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Nearest town or city | Oakdale |
Coordinates | 34°17′22″S 150°21′37″E / 34.28944°S 150.36028°E |
Established | 13 December 1991[1] |
Area | 489.84 km2 (189.1 sq mi)[1] |
Visitation | 1,000 (in 1997) |
Managing authorities | NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service |
Website | Nattai National Park |
See also | Protected areas of New South Wales |
The Nattai National Park is a protected area located in the Macarthur and Southern Highlands regions of New South Wales, Australia.[2] The 48,984-hectare (121,040-acre) area is situated approximately 150 kilometres (93 mi) southwest of the Sydney central business district and primarily encompasses the valley of the Nattai River, which is surrounded by sandstone cliffs. Part of the Southern Highlands Shale Forest and Woodland, the park is covered in dry sclerophyll (hard-leafed) forest – mostly eucalypt, and has frequent forest fires. As of May 2024, the park has no facilities.[3]
The Nattai National Park is one of the eight protected areas that, in 2000, was inscribed to form part of the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Greater Blue Mountains Area.[4] The Nattai National Park is the most southern of the eight protected areas within the World Heritage Site. The national park forms part of the Great Dividing Range.
The national park is bounded to the north by the Nattai State Conservation Area, the Burragorang State Conservation Area, and Lake Burragorang, inclusive of a 3-kilometre (1.9 mi) exclusion zone surrounding the lake; to the east by the Bargo State Conservation Area and the now partly disused Picton – Mittagong loop railway line; to the south by the Wombeyan Caves Road; to the southwest by the Kanangra-Boyd National Park; and to the west by the Yerranderie State Conservation Area. Blue Mountains National Park does not directly adjoin the Nattai National Park, but is located on the northwestern shore of Lake Burragorang.[5]
The Nattai National Park contains much of the course and catchment of the Little, Nattai, Allum and Wollondilly rivers.[5]