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Karlu Karlu, The Devils Marbles: Australia’s Sacred Landscape

The Devils Marbles in the Northern Territory of Australia are a geological marvel.

The Karlu Karlu, Devils Marbles Conservation Reserve features one of Australia‘s most striking and sacred landscapes. A collection of red boulders that look as though they were carefully sculpted and intentionally positioned have been the source of endless wonder and speculation since the first humans roamed the Australian Outback over 50,000 years ago.

The Devils Marbles in the Northern Territory of Australia are a geological marvel.

The Devils Marbles in the Northern Territory of Australia are a geological marvel.
Photo by depositphotos.com

In 1870, explorer John Ross commented that Australian Outback was so desolate that it appeared that the devil himself had passed through and dropped his marbles. Long before anyone of European descent set foot in Australia, a handful of Aboriginal communities considered Karlu Karlu— or “round boulders,” as they called the area—to be sacred land.

Most Aboriginal stories about the origin and significance of Karlu Karlu are only shared among people who consider the landscape sacred. However, there is a widely told story about a Devil Man named Arrange who was wandering the Outback weaving a hair string belt. Arrange dropped clumps of hair as he traveled. Arrange’s discarded hair morphed into a series of red boulders.

Devil's Marbles is a famous formation of round rocks in the Australian Outback and visited by many tourists on their way to the red centre. In the morning the rocks turn into beautiful orange colour.

Devil’s Marbles is a famous formation of round rocks in the Australian Outback and visited by many tourists on their way to the red centre. In the morning the rocks turn into beautiful orange colour.
Photo by depositphotos.com

Geologists state that the distinctive granite boulders of Karlu Karlu The Devils Marbles formed when tectonic activity and hardening magma caused rock from the Earth’s interior to rise to the surface. The temperature extremes of Australia’s Outback—heat in the day and cold at night—cause the boulders to continually change. Some boulders are even split cleanly in half as though they were cleaved by a giant’s axe.

Full moon in australian outback of Devils Marbles rock formations at twilight sunlight sky. Granite boulders of Karlu Karlu Devils Marbles Conservation Reserve Northern Territory, Central Australia.
Photo by depositphotos.com

Visitors from around the world flock to Australia‘s remote Northern Territory to see Karlu Karlu/The Devils Marbles with their own eyes. Visitors can walk among the boulders, snap photos, picnic, and camp in a sacred space which is currently co-managed by the Australian Parks and Wildlife Service and a group of dedicated Aboriginal traditional owners. Few places on Earth leave visitors with a…

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