The Nature Conservancy is proud to announce the planned acquisition and protection of Nilpena West – an internationally significant fossil site and area of high conservation value in outback South Australia.
"The protection of this 60,000 hectare former pastoral property marks a great day for conservation in South Australia," said Dr James Fitzsimons, Director of Conservation for The Nature Conservancy in Australia, speaking from the opening of the 2019 Private Land Conservation Conference in Adelaide this evening. "The property contains significant biodiversity values including two threatened ecological communities and a number of threatened species. Most critically, the property also covers extremely important sites that contain the oldest fossilised animals on Earth."
South Australian Environment and Water Minister David Speirs said Nilpena West will soon be added to the South Australian public protected area estate and managed by the Department for Environment and Water.
"Its inclusion in the conservation estate will link the Ediacara Conservation Park to the Lake Torrens National Park and will support our nomination for the listing of areas of the Flinders Ranges as a World Heritage Site."
Nilpena West, 600 kilometres north of Adelaide, is currently part of Nilpena Pastoral Station. The property includes the Ediacara Fossil Site – Nilpena, listed on the National Heritage List. Nilpena is a research site of international significance with part funding from NASA. It is unique in that palaeontologists have been able to excavate a series of 40 fossiliferous beds that preserve snapshots of the seafloor as animal life first unfolded around 550 million years ago. There is no other place on Earth where this has occurred for fossils of any age.
What is even more extraordinary is that the Nilpena fossil beds preserve marine communities with scores of species. They include evidence of the Earth's first animals, and the earliest movement and sexual reproduction.
Shearers' quarters, a blacksmith's shop and a woolshed on the property will be developed as research and visitor facilities, and an immersive interpretive centre.
The purchase of the property and its transfer to the South Australian Government is being facilitated by The Nature Conservancy with funding provided by an anonymous donor.