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Francois Peron National Park is a stunning natural park located on the Peron Peninsula in Western Australia.
Quoin Bluff South, also known as Quoin Bluff, is a limestone headland on Dirk Hartog Island in Shark Bay, Western Australia.
Welcome to Shark Bay Marine Park, a protected marine park located within the UNESCO World Heritage-recognised Shark Bay.
When the swell is running, surf is forced through fissures in the rocks below the cliffs to produce the eerie sound of the Blowholes, sometimes shooting spray up to 10 metres in the air.
Enjoy stunning views of the beach and rocky headland at the most northerly point of Dirk Hartog Island National Park, which is also arguably the most historically significant site in Australia.
View marine animals from atop plunging red sea cliffs, and photograph a coastal landscape with striking colour contrasts.
Cape Ransonnet is the arrival point on Dirk Hartog Island for boats leaving from the Edel Land Peninsula.
Attractive sandy bay great for beachwalking and shore fishing.
Massive waves that have built up over vast unbroken stretches of ocean break against spectacular 150-metre-high limestone cliffs on the western side of Dirk Hartog Island.
Dirk Hartog Island National Park, in the Shark Bay World Heritage Area, has immense historical significance and offers great fishing, steep cliffs and secluded beaches.
Best known for Steep Point, the most westerly part of the Australian mainland, this proposed park has massive sand dunes, secluded beaches and windswept limestone cliffs.
Francois Peron National Park is known for its contrasting red cliffs, white beaches and blue waters. It has a fascinating pastoral history, and offers a wilderness experience to four-wheel-drivers.
Hamelin Pool boasts the most diverse and abundant examples of living marine stromatolites, or ‘living fossils’, in the world, monuments to life on Earth over 3500 million years ago.
A day use site on the beach of a large shallow embayment on the east coast of Dirk Hartog Island.
Just off the main Peron track, this small site has information about some of the pastoral history of the area.
Wild bottlenose dolphins visit the shore at Monkey Mia Reserve, creating one of Australia's best known wildlife experiences.
Otherwise beautiful beach whose shape and orientation is such that it traps amazing quantities of jetsam and flotsam from the world's oceans.
While it has no facilities, Quoin Bluff South is a historic site where you can see the remains of an army outpost, a stone jetty and other relics.
Shark Bay Marine Park is known for its large marine animals, such as the famous Monkey Mia dolphins, turtles, dugongs and sharks. The park and its vast seagrass banks form an important part of the Shark Bay World Heritage Area.
Countless tiny white shells have formed the amazing Shell Beach, which stretches for 60km. Some deposits are as much as ten metres deep.
See spectacular marine wildlife from two viewing platforms perched on the cliff edge with views over Shark Bay Marine Park.
Surf Point has stunning coastal scenery and offers good snorkelling and diving. You can often see turtles, sharks and other large marine animals from the shore.
In heavy seas, blowholes shoot water 20m into the air
This lookout point allows visitors to view the wildlife and coastline at the largest Loggerhead turtle breeding colony in Australia.