the banks of New-Year’s Creek as suddenly as
they had disappeared after we left the marshes, and
grew along the line of the Darling to unusual size.
But it is remarkable, that, even in the midst of the
marshes, the blue-gum trees were strictly confined
to the immediate flooded spaces on which the reeds
prevailed, or to the very beds of the water-courses.
Where the ground was elevated, or out of the reach
of flood, the box (unnamed) alone occupied it; and,
though the branches of these trees might be interwoven
together, the one never left its wet and reedy bed,
the other never descended from its more elevated position.
The same singular distinction marked the acacia pendula,
when it ceased to cover the interior plains of light
earth, and was succeeded by another shrub of the same
species. It continued to the banks of New-Year’s
Creek, a part of which it thickly lined. To the
westward of the creek, another species of acacia was
remarked for the first time. Both shrubs, like
the blue-gum and the box, mixed their branches together,
but the creek formed the line of separation between
them. The acacia pendula was not afterwards seen,
but that which had taken its place, as it were, was
found to cover large tracts of country and to form
extensive brushes. Many other peculiarities in
the vegetation of the interior are noticed in the body
of this work, but I have thought that these more striking
ones deserved to be particularly remarked upon.
Geological features.
If we strike a line to the N.W. from Sydney to Wellington
Valley, we shall find that little change takes place
in the geological features of the country. The
sand-stone of which the first of the barrier ranges
is composed, terminates a little beyond Mount York,
and at Cox’s River is succeeded by grey granite.
The secondary ranges to the N.W. of Bathurst, are
wholly of that primitive rock; for although there are
partial changes of strata between Bathurst and Moulong
Plains, granite is undoubtedly the rock upon which
the whole are based: but at Moulong Plains, a
military station intermediate between Bathurst and
Wellington Valley, limestone appears in the bed of
a small clear stream, and with little interruption
continues to some distance below the last-mentioned
place. The accidental discovery of some caves
at Moulong Plains, led to the more critical examination
of the whole formation, and cavities of considerable
size were subsequently found in various parts of it,
but more particularly in the neighbourhood of Wellington
Valley. The local interest which has of late
years been taken in the prosecution of geological investigations,
led many gentlemen to examine the contents of these
caverns; and among the most forward, Major Mitchell,
the Surveyor-General, must justly be considered, to
whose indefatigable perseverance the scientific world
is already so much indebted.