Discover the most magical spots to pitch your tent or park your rig on your next Mungo National Park adventure.
Uncover a wealth of ancient history in the sand dunes of Mungo National Park in western NSW.
Mungo National Park is at the centre of one of Australia’s first World Heritage sites. Known as the Willandra Lakes, the vast, flat plain seen today was once a huge lake teeming with giant wombats and other megafauna. The world’s oldest cremated human remains, somewhere between 45,000 and 60,000 years old, were also found here in 1968. Since then, more skeletal and fossil remains, both human and marsupial, have been uncovered, including a set of 20,000-year-old human footprints. Other park highlights include Mungo Woolshed and other historic station and farm buildings. Accessible only by guided tour, the 22-kilometre-long, crescent-shaped dune, called a lunette but nicknamed the Walls of China, eroded into weird and fantastic formations by the weather.
Mungo National Park is open all year, but searing summer temperatures—and an overabundance of flies—mean Mungo can be unpleasant, if not dangerous, in the heat of summer.Winter is the best time to go, when days are sunny and mild with fewer flies, but be prepared for very cold nights when temperatures can drop well below zero. Rain is rare, but when it does come, roads become boggy and sometimes impassable. Check the forecast before you travel so you don’t end up stranded.