GVD Facts and Figures
The Great Victoria Desert (GVD) is not even near Victoria. It was, however, named after the same old queen by the explorer Ernest Giles in 1875.
The GVD is the largest dune desert in Australia, covering 424,400 square kilometres (that's over 42 million hectares). It straddles the South Australia / Western Australia border, stretching more than 700 kilometres from west to east. It experiences low rainfall which averages around 200 mm to 250 mm per year, but the rains vary greatly from year to year. The desert is surrounded by arid areas - the Gibson Desert to the north, the Tirari and Sturt's Stony Desert to the east, the Nullarbor Plain to the south and Western Australian mallee scrub to the west. The GVD is very sparsely populated and it supports virtually no farming. It's central area has never been grazed and is infested by almost no weed plants at all. Some mining activity is encroaching from the east.
Dry as it is, the GVD includes some remarkably diverse areas. Its Mamungari Conservation Park is one of twelve World Biosphere Reserves in Australia. This means that, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), the Mamungari park has both high biodiversity and legal protection from exploitation. In 2007, UNESCO had identified 529 biosphere reserves in 107 countries. Travellers familiar with the Simpson and other sandy Australian deserts will find an almost bewildering variety of plant life in the GVD. The trees are particularly spectacular - see our Plants web page. For animals, the GVD acts as a corridor which connects the mallee areas of eastern and western Australia.
Aboriginal people have used the Great Victoria Desert area for at least 24,000 years. A number of Aboriginal groups in the GVD and surrounding central Australian areas form the 'Western Desert Cultural Bloc' which has a common base language and an agreed social structure of long standing. Extended usage of the GVD proper was generally restricted to post-rainfall periods and the groups moved frequently to take advantage of what the land had to offer. Highly specialised water finding, collecting and storage systems were developed. The development of tracks and the availability of vehicles and supplies have now allowed several permanent Aboriginal communities to be established in the desert.
Fast Facts
Area: 42,000,000 hectares (about 100,000,000 acres).
Rainfall: Erratic and unpredictable. Thought to average 150 mm in the south to 200 mm in the north per year, but there are no weather stations within the desert proper. The summer rains are generally heaviest as they come from the intrusion of tropical systems from the north. Evaporation Rates, on the other hand, vary from 3 metres in the south to 4 in the north!
Temperatures: Daily maxima are from 30 to 45 degrees Celsius in the summer (15 to 25 in the winter). At night, the winter temperature can drop below zero as any field trip participant will tell you. Winter is nevertheless highly recommended as the season to travel.
Birds: 123 species have been recorded in the eastern GVD. See our Animals web page
Visitors: Entries in the Visitors' Book at Voakes Hill Corner indicate that, between 1987 and 1993, visitor numbers trebled and vehicle numbers doubled.
Mamungari Conservation Park: Most of the Friends' work to date has taken place in Mamungari. In 2004 the park, formerly known as the Unnamed Conservation Park, was handed back to the Maralinga Tjarutja people of Oak Valley. The Park was renamed Mamungari Conservation Park on November 30, 2006. The park is now managed by a co-management board. In general terms, the meaning of Mamungari is 'a place of harmful spirits'. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has released a Draft Management Plan (1 MB .pdf file from DENR) for Mamungari.
Atomic Bomb Tests: Between 1953 and 1957, the British exploded nine atomic bombs in the GVD - two at Emu and seven at Maralinga. The largest was the 26.6 kiloton Taranaki test at Maralinga on 9 October 1957. Up to 600 additional 'minor' tests involved the explosive scattering of highly toxic 'dirty' materials like plutonium, uranium and beryllium. Several local Aboriginal families were severely affected by the tests and the true extent of the health problems associated with contamination over a much wider area is difficult to quantify. Service personnel who were deliberately exposed to the tests have died. Massive cleaup operations have been undertaken with varying degrees of success. The Friends have travelled to some of the 'ground zero' test markers during field trips, but camping in the area is not recommended.
More Information
Mark Shephard's excellent book, The Great Victoria Desert, is a mine of information on the Desert's natural history, traditional Aboriginal usage, European exploration, atomic tests, tracks and more. Unfortunately, the book is now out of print, but you may be able to get it from your library.
The Department for Environment and Natural Resources has web pages for the Mamungari, Tallaringa, Yumbarra and Yellabinna parks in South Australia.
Travel Information
The Great Victoria Desert area, showing the South Australian parks in which we work. Please don't try to get there using this rough map. There is a better one in the DENR Parks of the Far West brochure (700 KB .pdf file), but travellers should buy good quality, up-to-date paper or digital maps. The Mamungari Conservation Park is shown here as the "Unnamed" Conservation Park, which indeed it was.
A trip to the Great Victoria Desert is not to be undertaken lightly. Thorough vehicle preparation is essential. Several permits are required to cross the South Australian section of the desert. There are no services. Visitors and their vehicles must be properly prepared and carry sufficient equipment, and spares in case of emergencies. All food, water and fuel must be carried making allowance for high fuel usage, detours and delays. All vehicles should be fitted with a UHF radio. At least one vehicle within each group should be fitted with an HF radio or satellite telephone. Reduce tyre pressures and engage 4WD to prevent damage to both vehicles and desert tracks.
ExplorOz maintains a regularly updated website on road conditions Australia-wide. The Anne Beadell Highway and the Voakes Hill Track are included.
Numerous websites have information on vehicle preparation, 4WD skills, training, recovery gear and the like. You might like to start at one of the ExplorOz pages.
The Tracks - Click on an image to enlarge it
The Corrugated Anne Beadell Highway. The Anne Beadell is rarely, if ever, graded. It has become a rough track with frequent wash-aways and fearsome corrugations which have broken many 4WD springs. Photo: Bill Dowling
Near Serpentine Lakes. At Serpentine Lakes, on the South Australia / Western Australia border, the track is broken up by gypsum outcrops. Photo: Arlene Dowling