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Visitors Guide to Tasmania's National Parks - Tasman National Park

Introduction

Cape Pillar Area
Cape Pillar Area
Tasman National Park protects diverse forest and spectacular coastline from Cape Surville to Waterfall Bay and Fortescue Bay; and from Cape Hauy to Cape Pillar and Cape Raoul. The park incorporates several off-shore islands, including Fossil Island, Hippolyte Rocks and Tasman Island.

It is an area of great beauty and natural diversity, including some of the most stunning coastal scenery anywhere in Australia. Not suprisingly, the park offers some of the best coastal walks in the country. Many interesting rock formations can be found along the coastline, while the southern end of the park has some of the highest and most spectacular sea cliffs in Australia. The park is also home to a wide range of land and marine animals, and several species of rare plant.

The Tasman National Park was proclaimed under the Regional Forest Agreement (RFA) in April 1999. The RFA identified the area for reservation for a number of reasons, including its high conservation and scenic values.

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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/tasman/index.html. This page last updated on Wednesday, 05 March, 2008