Snowy River is a national
park in Victoria
(Australia), 323 km east
of Melbourne
.
Much of the park is classified as wilderness area, where vehicles
are unable to visit. The park provides one of the last natural
habitats at the Little River Gorge for the endangered
Brush-tailed Rock Wallaby. Numbers
for this species are estimated as extremely small, with the rugged
terrain making it difficult to accurately monitor the species
population. Over 250 native species have been recorded in the park,
29 of which are considered rare or threatened in Victoria,
including the
Long-footed
Potoroo,
Spotted Quoll (Tiger
Quoll), Giant Burrowing Frog and
Eastern She-oak Skink.
Little
River gorge is Victoria's deepest gorge, with the Little River
dropping 610 metres off the Wulgulmerang plateau over 14 km to the
Snowy
River
at an elevation of 122 metres above sea
level.
McKillops
Road is the northern park boundary, with the Alpine National
Park
to the north of the road. The road is
designated unsuitable for caravans, trailers and semi-trailers due
to its long, narrow, and steep descent down to McKillops Bridge
which crosses the Snowy River near its juncture with the Deddick
River. A camping site near McKillops Bridge provides an excellent
site for swimming, launching canoes and rafting through the rugged
gorges downstream, or the start for the 18km Silver Mine Walking
Track and the short Snowy River Trail.
See also
References

Little River Gorge is the deepest
gorge in Victoria