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Adriana

Bluff Knoll

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Bluff Knoll is the highest peak of the Stirling Range in the Great Southern region of Western Australia (WA). It is 1,099 metres (3,606 ft) above sea level,[1] Although Bluff Knoll is sometimes claimed to be the highest point in Western Australia,[2] the highest peak is actually Mount Meharry in Karijini National Park in the Hamersley Range, which is 1,249 metres (4,098 ft) above sea level.

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Local Aboriginal people, from the Qaaniyan and Koreng groups (or tribes), who wore kangaroo skin cloaks in cold weather, called the mountain Pualaar Miial, meaning “great many-faced hill”[3] or place of “many eyes”. The Noongar people treat it with foreboding and prefer to avoid its rocky ridges, which are woven with tales of malevolent witches.[4] The mountain is often shrouded in a mist which curls around the peaks and floats into the gullies. Local people believed this to be a spirit named Noatch (literally meaning “dead body” or “corpse”).[3]

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Climbing Bluff Knoll, a round trip of about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi), takes three to four hours,[3] and can be achieved by anyone with a reasonable level of fitness.

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