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Gippsland

Gippsland

FieldValue
typeregion
nameGippsland Region
statevic
image{{multiple image
borderinfobox
total_width280
perrow1/1
caption_aligncenter
image1Australia Victoria Gippsland region.svg
image2Gippsland, Sunday night, February 20th, 1898.jpg
caption2John Longstaff's Gippsland, Sunday night, 20 February 1898, depicting the "Red Tuesday" bushfires that ravaged Gippsland
coordinates
pushpin_map_captionThe location of , a town in Gippsland
reliefyes
pop
pop_year
pop_footnotesPopulation figure is the combined population of all LGAs in the region
area41556
timezoneAEST
utc+10
timezone-dstAEDT
utc-dst+11
dist1120
dir1E
location1Melbourne
lga{{plainlist
stategov{{plainlist
fedgov{{plainlist
near-nHume
near-neNew South Wales
near-eTasman Sea
near-seBass Strait
near-sBass Strait
near-swBass Strait
near-wGreater Melbourne
near-nwHume

the rural region

| timezone-dst = AEDT | utc-dst = +11

  • (by population)
  • Latrobe
  • Baw Baw
  • East Gippsland
  • Wellington
  • Bass Coast
  • South Gippsland
  • Bass
  • Gippsland East
  • Gippsland South
  • Morwell
  • Narracan
  • Flinders (part)
  • Gippsland
  • Monash | near-n = Hume | near-ne = New South Wales | near-e = Tasman Sea | near-se = Bass Strait | near-s = Bass Strait | near-sw = Bass Strait | near-w = Greater Melbourne | near-nw = Hume Gippsland () is a rural region in the southeastern part of Victoria, Australia, mostly comprising the coastal plains south of the Victorian Alps (the southernmost section of the Great Dividing Range). It covers an elongated area of 41556 km2 east of the Shire of Cardinia (Melbourne's outermost southeastern suburbs) between Dandenong Ranges and Mornington Peninsula, and is bounded to the north by the mountain ranges and plateaus/highlands of the High Country (which separate it from Hume region in Victoria's northeast), to the southwest by the Western Port Bay, to the south and east by the Bass Strait and the Tasman Sea, and to the east and northeast by the Black–Allan Line (the easternmost section of the Victoria/New South Wales state border).

Gippsland is divided by the Strzelecki Ranges and tributaries of the Gippsland Lakes into West Gippsland, South Gippsland, Latrobe Valley, Central Gippsland and East Gippsland. At the 2016 Australian census, Gippsland had a population of , with the principal centres , Warragul, Drouin, Bairnsdale, , Sale, , Wonthaggi, , and Phillip Island. Gippsland is known for mining, power generation and farming as well as its tourist destinations — Phillip Island, Wilsons Promontory, the Gippsland Lakes, Walhalla, the Baw Baw Plateau, and the Strzelecki Ranges. It also includes around a hundred islands, mostly between the mainland and Tasmania.

History

The traditional owners are Indigenous Australians of the Gunai nation and in part of West Gippsland the Bunurong nation. Before permanent European colonisation, the area was visited by sealers and wattle bark gatherers who did not settle. Samuel Anderson (1803–1863), a Scottish immigrant from Kirkcudbright, agriculturist and explorer, arrived in Hobart, Tasmania, in 1830, and in 1835 established a squatter agricultural settlement on the Bass River in Gippsland, the third permanent colonial settlement in Victoria (then called the Port Phillip District). His business partner Robert Massie joined him in 1837. Both had worked for the Van Diemen's Land Company at Circular Head, Tasmania. Samuel's brothers Hugh (1808–1898) and Thomas (1814–1903) arrived at Bass shortly after, where they established a successful farming venture.

Further European colonisation followed two separate expeditions to the area.

During his expedition to the South (December 1839 – May 1840) in March 1840, Polish explorer Paweł Edmund Strzelecki led an expedition across Gunai country, and gave his own names to many of their natural landmarks and places. Following these expeditions, the name "Gippsland" stuck, a name chosen by Strzelecki in honour of the New South Wales Governor, George Gipps, his sponsor.

Angus McMillan led the second European expedition between 1840, naming Gunai country "Caledonia Australis". The naming of this geographical region, however, remained the name given by P. E. Strzelecki – Gippsland.

The township of Bass was surveyed and colonised in the early 1860s.

The intensive colonisation of south Gippsland began late in the 1870s. A story of that process is told in, The land of the Lyre Bird (1920).

Before the cancellation of the 2026 Commonwealth Games, Gippsland was set to serve as one of its hosts in regional Victoria.

Geography

Old growth forests in [[East Gippsland

Gippsland is traditionally subdivided into four or five main subregions or districts:

  • West Gippsland (roughly equivalent to the Baw Baw Shire)
  • South Gippsland (Bass Coast and South Gippsland Shires)
  • the Latrobe Valley (Latrobe City and areas of Baw Baw to the north)
  • East Gippsland (Shires of Wellington and East Gippsland).
  • Sometimes a fifth region, Central Gippsland (corresponding approximately to the Shire of Wellington), is added to refer to the drier zone between the Gippsland Lakes and Yarram.

Gippsland Plains Grassy Woodland is an endangered vegetation community within the region.

Climate

Stratford

The climate of Gippsland is temperate and generally humid, except in the central region around Sale, where annual rainfall averages around 600 mm. In the Strzelecki Ranges annual rainfall can be as high as 1500 mm, while on the high mountains of East Gippsland it probably reaches similar levels – much of it falling as snow. In lower levels east of the Snowy River, mean annual rainfall is typically about 900 – and less variable than in the coastal districts of New South Wales. Mean maximum temperatures in lower areas range from 24 °C in January to 15 °C in July. In the highlands of the Baw Baw Plateau and the remote Errinundra Plateau, temperatures range from a maximum of 18 °C to a minimum of 8 °C. However, in winter, mean minima in these areas can be as low as -4 °C, leading to heavy snowfalls that often isolate the Errinundra Plateau between June and October.

Flora and fauna

Gippsland is home to many species of flora and fauna. Animals that live there include the swamp wallaby, koala, echidna and wombat.

Native plants and trees include grass trees (Xanthorrhoea australis), which provide a valuable food source of nectar, pollen, larvae and seeds for birds, insects and mammals.

Natural resources

Thorpdale]] region

The soils in Gippsland are generally very infertile, being profoundly deficient in nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium and calcium. Apart from frequently flooded areas, they are classed as Spodosols, Psamments and Ultisols. Consequently, heavy fertilisation is required for agriculture or pastoral development. Despite this, parts of Gippsland have become highly productive dairying and vegetable-growing regions: the region supplies Melbourne with most of its needs in these commodities. A few alluvial soils (chiefly near the Snowy) have much better native fertility, and these have always been intensively cultivated. In the extreme northeast is a small section of the Monaro Tableland used for grazing beef cattle.

Gippsland possesses very few deposits of metallic minerals (gold rushes in the nineteenth century around Foster, Buchan petered out quickly). However, the deep underground gold mines operated at Walhalla for a fifty-year period between 1863 and 1913. Gippsland has no deposits of major industrial nonmetallic minerals, but it does feature the world's largest brown coal deposits and, around Sale and offshore in the Bass Strait, some of the largest deposits of oil and natural gas in Australia.

Like the rest of Australia, the seas around Gippsland are of very low productivity as there is no upwelling due to the warm currents in the Tasman Sea. Nonetheless, towns such as Marlo and Mallacoota depended for a long time on the fishing of abalone, whose shells could fetch very high prices because of their use for pearls and pearl inlays.

Administration

Political representation

For Australian federal elections for the House of Representatives, the electoral divisions of Flinders, Monash, and Gippsland lay entirely or partly in the Gippsland region. Flinders and McMillan are currently held by the Liberal Party, while Gippsland is held by the Nationals.

For elections for the Victorian Legislative Assembly, the electoral districts of Bass, Narracan, Morwell, Gippsland South and Gippsland East lay entirely or partly in the Gippsland region. Bass is held by Labor, Narracan is held by the Liberals, while Gippsland East, Gippsland South and Morwell are held by the Nationals.

Local government areas

Gippsland contains six local government areas:

Local government areaAreaPopulation
(2011 census)Source(s)Population
(2016 census)Source(s)km2sq mi
Bass Coast Shire864 km2
Shire of Baw Baw4031 km2
Shire of East Gippsland20941 km2
Latrobe City1426 km2
South Gippsland Shire3305 km2
Shire of Wellington10989 km2
Totals41556 km2********

Environmental protection

The Gippsland region contains the Alfred National Park, Baw Baw National Park, Coopracambra National Park, Croajingolong National Park, Errinundra National Park, Gippsland Lakes Coastal Park, Lind National Park, Mitchell River National Park, Morwell National Park, Snowy River National Park, Tarra-Bulga National Park, The Lakes National Park, and Wilsons Promontory National Park.

There are also large areas of State forest that contribute towards conservation objectives.

Notable people

  • Ricky Megee (born 1970/1971), outback survivor
  • Lionel Rose (born 1948), professional boxer from Warragul
  • Dale Thomas (born 1987), former AFL player for Collingwood and Carlton from Drouin
  • Josiah Brooks (born 1989), artist and YouTuber of ‘Draw with Jazza’
  • Beau Miles (born 1979), outdoor educator and YouTuber

Notes

References

References

  1. Feagins, Lucy. (28 June 2021). "A Perfect Day in South Gippsland". Visit Melbourne in partnership with The Design Files.
  2. (2011). "Meaning of Regional Victoria". State Government of Victoria.
  3. (3 June 2014). "Victoria's Gippsland Region". State Government of Victoria.
  4. The Andersons of Westernport "Horton and Morris" 1983
  5. Niel Gunson. (1966). "Anderson, Samuel (1803–1863)". National Centre of Biography, [[Australian National University]].
  6. Wells, J. (2003), "Colourful Tales of Old Gippsland", p. 92.
  7. Glowrey, Cheryl. (2003). "Angus McMillan (1810–1865)". National Centre of Biography at the [[Australian National University]].
  8. ''The land of the Lyre Bird: a story of early settlement in the Great South Forest of South Gippsland; being a description of the big scrub in its virgin state with its birds and animals, and of the adventures and hardships of its early explorers and prospectors also accounts by the settlers of clearing, settlement and development of the country'', Gordon & Gotch for the Committee of the South Gippsland Pioneers Association, Melbourne, 1920 (reprinted 1966).
  9. Australia, Bureau of Meteorology, Summary statistics EAST SALE, http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/tables/cw_085072.shtml, retrieved 02/07/2020
  10. (24 December 2010). "Profile of the electoral division of Flinders (Vic)". [[Australian Electoral Commission]].
  11. "Profile of the electoral division of Monash (Vic)".
  12. (24 December 2010). "Profile of the electoral division of Gippsland (Vic)". [[Australian Electoral Commission]].
  13. {{Census 2011 AUS
  14. {{Census 2016 AUS
  15. {{Census 2011 AUS
  16. {{Census 2016 AUS
  17. {{Census 2011 AUS
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  20. {{Census 2016 AUS
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  22. {{Census 2016 AUS
  23. {{Census 2011 AUS
  24. {{Census 2016 AUS
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