Title: Uluru: Fact and Fiction
1UluruFact and Fiction
- Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
2Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
- The 'Aboriginal Dreamtime' is that part of
aboriginal culture which explains the origins and
culture of the land and its people. - Aborigines have the longest continuous cultural
history of any group of people on Earth - dating
back - by some estimates - 65,000 years.
Dreamtime is Aboriginal Religion and Culture. - The Dreamtime contains many parts It is the
story of things that have happened, how the
universe came to be, how human beings were
created and how the Creator intended for humans
to function within the cosmos.
3Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
- The expression 'Dreamtime' is most often used to
refer to the 'time before time', or 'the time of
the creation of all things', What is certain is
that 'Ancestor Spirits' came to Earth in human
and other forms and the land, the plants and
animals were given their form as we know them
today. - These Spirits also established relationships
between groups and individuals, (whether people
or animals) and where they travelled across the
land, or came to a halt, they created rivers,
hills, etc., and there are often stories attached
to these places. - Once their work was done, the Ancestor Spirits
changed again into animals or stars or hills or
other objects. For Indigenous Australians, the
past is still alive and vital today and will
remain so into the future. The Ancestor Spirits
and their powers have not gone, they are present
in the forms into which they changed at the end
of the 'Dreamtime' or 'Dreaming', as the stories
tell.
4Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
- Australian Aboriginal people know that the area
around Ayers Rock (Mount Uluru) is inhabited by
dozens of ancestral beings whose activities are
recorded at many separate sites. At each site,
the events that took place can be recounted,
whether those events were of significance or
whether the ancestral being just rested at a
certain place before going on. - Around Ayers Rock (Uluru) there are many examples
of ancestral sites. The Anangu explanations of
these sites and of the formation of Ayers Rock
(Mount Uluru) itself derive from the Tjukurpa. On
the next slide are some of these stories
5Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
- Uluru and the Anangu People
- Many Aboriginal elders tell stories about special
places around Uluru and animals that made them.
Here is one of those stories from the Dreamtime. - Long, long ago in the Dreamtime the animals gave
shape to some of the Rock. At that time a young
Woma Python, called Kuniya was surprised by a
group of Liru, which are venomous snakes. The
Liru threw spears at the python and killed him.
So hard did they throw their spears, that the
points made holes in The Rock. The boy's aunt,
called Kuniya, was so angry that she killed one
of the Liru with her stick. They made holes in
the rock when the points of Kuniya's stick hit
it. You can still see these holes today. Kuniya,
the Woma Python can still be seen as a dark wavy
line on Uluru.
6Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
- Tjati tries to retrieve his kali
- In the creation period, Tatji, the small Red
Lizard, who lived on the mulgi flats, came to
Uluru. He threw his kali, a curved throwing
stick, and it became embedded in the surface. He
used his hands to scoop it out in his efforts to
retrieve his kali, leaving a series of
bowl-shaped hollows.
7Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
- The cave where Tjati died at Kantju
- Unable to recover his kali, he finally died in
this cave. His implements and bodily remains
survive as large boulders on the cave floor.
8Ayers Rock - Dreamtime Story
- In several caves in Uluru, rock represents many
stories of the Dreamtime. The paintings are
regularly renewed, with layer upon layer of
paint, dating back many thousands of years.
9Ayers Rock - Geology Fact and Fiction
- Ayers Rock - A product of Noahs Flood?
10Ayers Rock - Geology Fact and Fiction
- Figure 1 shows water currents bringing in sand,
supposedly from the Musgrave Ranges to the south.
The sand pours into a very deep water-filled
basin whose floor consists of heavily folded and
eroded older rocks (age of deposition and erosion
unspecified). - Figure 2 shows how a "catastrophic flood" filled
in this basin by dumping - some 6000 metres (approx. 20, 000 feet) of sand,
probably in only a matter of hours, after having
carried this sand some 100 kilometres (63 miles).
- The clear implication here is that the basin seen
in Fig 2 was at least 6000 metres deep! Since
the beds are now standing vertically, it is also
obvious that the sand, after being washed into
the depression, and while still being compressed
and hardened, was pushed up and tilted by earth
movements.
11Ayers Rock - Geology Fact and Fiction
- Figure 3 thus depicts the "sand layers tilted
late in Noah's Flood" with the waters draining
off and eroding and sculpting the massive
structure as they went. - Following the retreat of these flood waters, and
as the landscape dried, the material in Ayers
Rocks finally hardened. - So how was it that this sludgy material was held
together high above the flood? - According to Dr Snelling it was not until after
the Flood waters finally subsided that - the chemicals in the water between the sand
grains formed a cementing material to bind the
mineral grains together, drying in much the same
way as cement in concrete dries and binds
together the stones and sand mixed with it. With
the final retreat of the waters from off the
land, and the continued drying out of the
continent, present day desert wind erosion has
merely pock-marked the surface of the rock. - Figure 4 shows a cross-section of Ayers Rock
today, with its relationships to the present land
surface and desert sands the underlying folded
and eroded bedrock conveniently disappears from
the scene.
12Ayers Rock - Geology Fact and Fiction
- Uluru (Ayers Rock) is situated in the Uluru
National Park, Northern Territory, Australia, it
is believed to be about 550 million years old.
Uluru rises 348 metres from the desert and has a
girth of 9.4 kilometres is the world's most
famous monolith, yet it is estimated that at
least two-thirds of the Rock lies beneath the
surface. - There is some scientific disagreement about the
origins of Uluru. The most widely held theory is
that both Uluru and Kata Tjuta are remnants of a
vast sedimentary bed which was laid down some 600
million years ago. The bed was spectacularly
tilted so that Uluru now protrudes at an angle of
up to 85. The rock is actually grey but is
covered with a distinctive red iron oxide coating.
13Ayers Rock - Geology Fact and Fiction
- According to Sweet and Crick (1992, Uluru Kata
Tjuta A Geological History), about 550 million
years ago erosion from the Petermann Ranges led
to huge alluvial fans (at least 2.5 km in
vertical thickness) being built up by deposits of
Arkose sands from the eroded materials of the
adjacent ranges. -
- This close-up view gives an general indication of
the coarse-grained nature of this
semi-metamorphosed sandstone, which being more
resistant to erosion, has allowed Uluru to remain
a high point in an otherwise largely levelled
plain.
14Ayers Rock - Geology Fact and Fiction
- Fifty million years later these alluvial fans
were covered by sediments when the region became
a shallow sea (isostatic subsidence due to the
loading caused by these Arkose sand deposits
playing a role in this process). - Then during the period from c. 400 to c. 300
million years BP, another uplift (the Alice
Springs Orogeny, which created the Macdonnell
Ranges to the north of the Uluru area) caused
massive folding and faulting in the region,
causing the formerly horizontal strata of the
Arkose sandstones which comprise Uluru to be
folded - nearly vertically from their former position
(i.e., rotated vertically nearly 90 degrees from
their original bedding planes). - Then subsequent erosion over the past 300 million
years has led to the uncovering of the Arkose
sandstones which comprise Uluru and its gradual
shaping by erosion into the huge 'monolith' which
we can see there today. - The deposits which previously covered the Arkose
sandstones have largely been eroded away, so that
'The Rock' stands high over the surrounding
desert plain because its rock is more resistant
to erosion than were the rocks which formerly
covered it.
15Ayers Rock - Geology Fact and Fiction
- The rocks which form Uluru were probably exposed
to surface erosion about 70 million years ago,
the landscape being progressively worn down since
then. The diagram below illustrates the current
geology of the area. - To Recap Erosion of material from a nearby
mountain range lead to huge fluvial fans (large
river features of deposition) this was covered by
a shallow sea, burying the unsorted sand
material. 100milion years later uplift caused
massive folding and faulting and the rocks were
tilted 89 degrees! The softer material around
Uluru which was not subjected to part
metamorphism and is more unconsolidated has been
eroded, leaving the mass of Arkose Sandstone
which makes up the Uluru monolith today.