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Visitors Guide to Tasmania's National Parks - Lake St Clair

Introduction

Mt OlympusLake St Clair is at the southern end of the world famous Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park and is part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area.

Carved out by ice during several glaciations over the last two million years, this is the deepest lake in Australia and the headwaters of the Derwent River, upon which the capital city of Tasmania is located.

The area around Lake St Clair offers a wealth of walks, ranging from leisurely strolls to overnight bushwalks, as well as beautiful forests to explore. Lake St Clair is also the end point of the famous Overland Track, a long-distance walk which runs from Cradle Mountain in the north to Cynthia Bay on the southern shore of Lake St Clair.

The Cradle Mountain - Lake St Clair National Park shares a "Twin Parks" agreement with the World Heriatge listed Jiuzhaigou Nature Reserve in the People's Republic of China.

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This page produced by the Parks & Wildlife Service,
a unit of the Department of Tourism, Arts and the Environment.

The URL of this page is http://www.parks.tas.gov.au/natparks/stclair/index.html. This page last updated on Wednesday, 05 March, 2008