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Glass House Mountains: Ancient Volcanoes on the Hinterland Horizon
The distinctive peaks visible from across the Sunshine Coast are a spiritual landscape for the Jinibara and Kabi Kabi peoples.
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The distinctive peaks visible from across the Sunshine Coast are a spiritual landscape for the Jinibara and Kabi Kabi peoples.

The Glass House Mountains, the cluster of volcanic plugs rising dramatically from the Sunshine Coast hinterland, are visible from most of the coastal strip as a distinctive skyline of conical peaks that provides the Sunshine Coast with a geographic identity as clear as any coastal headland. The mountains' formation, as the eroded remnants of ancient volcanoes whose lava flows and intruded rock have proved more resistant to erosion than the surrounding country, produces the isolated peaks that the Jinibara and Kabi Kabi peoples have maintained connection to for thousands of years.
The national parks within the Glass House Mountains group provide walking tracks to the base and, for experienced climbers, routes to the summits of several peaks. Mount Tibrogargan, Mount Beerwah, and Mount Coonowrin provide the most recognised silhouettes and the most popular climbing and walking destinations, with the summit views extending across the Sunshine Coast lowlands to the ocean and west to the main range escarpment.
The Glass House Mountains township and the surrounding villages provide the rural lifestyle environment that has attracted creative residents seeking the combination of hinterland character and Sunshine Coast proximity. The local markets, farm gates, and the tourism infrastructure that serves visitors to the national parks have created a small economy that sustains the community while the primary agricultural land of the lowlands around the mountains maintains the farming character that the landscape retains.
Aboriginal cultural significance of the Glass House Mountains is deep and well documented, with the Kabi Kabi people maintaining connections to the landscape that the mountains' national park status now protects from development but does not fully recognise in the management frameworks that govern visitor access and land use. The ongoing relationship between Aboriginal traditional owners and the national parks' management is an active dialogue that the Queensland parks system is progressively developing more formal recognition of.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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Published by The Daily Sunshine Coast
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