Gallery: Tasmanian Wilderness

The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area spans nearly a quarter of Tasmania, encompassing some of the world's last great wilderness areas. This vast landscape stretches from Cradle Mountain in the north to the remote Southwest coast, protecting pristine ancient rainforests, wild rivers, rugged mountains, and deep glacial valleys.

The region achieved World Heritage status for meeting seven out of ten criteria, the highest number for any World Heritage property. It protects irreplaceable natural and cultural heritage, including Aboriginal sites dating back over 40,000 years, the world's tallest flowering plants in the form of swamp gums, some of the longest limestone caves in Australia, and unique alpine ecosystems found nowhere else on Earth.

From the iconic peaks of Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park to the untamed Franklin-Gordon Wild Rivers and the remote Southwest wilderness, this extraordinary landscape represents one of the last remaining wild regions in the Southern Hemisphere.

Tasmanian Wilderness