Looking out towards the Stockton beach sand dunes over some ominous deep dark water. Located to the north of the Hunter River the beach has an interesting history and has been the site of numerous shipwrecks and aircraft crash sites. In some areas it is as much as 1 km (0.6 mi) wide and has sand dunes over 30 metres (98 ft) high with slopes up to 60 degrees. Each year the dunes move north by approximately 4 m (13 ft) and are considered the largest continuous mobile sand dunes in the Southern Hemisphere. Shot taken from a sailboat. New South Wales, Australia
Eroded outcrop on the Lake Mungo lunette colloquially called the Walls of China. Mungo National Park, located in South Western New South Wales, is a part of the Willandra Lakes Region World Heritage Area. The landscape at the Walls of China site is extremely fragile and hold numerous archeologically significant artefacts and so public access is now limited to those accompanied by a parks ranger or approved guide. NSW, Australia
Towering dolerite columns at Devils Gullet plunge into the Fisher River valley and the remote Tasmanian central plateau. The storm engulfing Clumner Bluff (1559m) was directly overhead a few minutes earlier with white out conditions and summer snow. The dolerite columns are over 220m high and form part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, on the northern rim of the Great Western Tiers. Tasmania, Australia.