Articles in the K'gari (Fraser Island) category.
K'gari has carried its name for tens of thousands of years. That the wider world only formally acknowledged it in 2023 says less about the island than about the limits of colonial cartography.
For more than a century, K'gari was logged, mined and its people expelled. Understanding that history is not incidental to the island's identity — it is foundational to it.
On 7 June 2023, Queensland restored the name K'gari to the world's largest sand island. The decision was decades in the making — and its meaning runs far deeper than geography.
K'gari holds half the world's perched dune lakes, the only subtropical rainforests grown entirely on sand, and a dune sequence spanning 700,000 years — a living laboratory of geological and biological process.
Half a million visitors a year arrive on the world's largest sand island. The question K'gari now forces is whether access and ecological survival can be reconciled — or whether one must yield.
Hervey Bay did not create its relationship with K'gari — it inherited one that had existed for millennia. Understanding that layered bond is essential to understanding both places.
For millennia before any colonial name was applied, the Butchulla people held K'gari as homeland, law, and living spirit — a connection the land itself encodes.
The wongari of K'gari are among the least hybridised dingoes remaining in Australia — and their survival now depends on resolving a tension that no management strategy has fully tamed.
K'gari is the only place on Earth where subtropical rainforest grows entirely on sand. Understanding how it does so reveals one of ecology's most remarkable nutrient systems.
Across two native title determinations and decades of negotiation, the Butchulla people have rebuilt formal authority over K'gari — a model of co-governance now tested by tourism, climate and the weight of UNESCO obligation.
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