Flinders Peak Group
The Flinders Peak Group is an unnamed range of hills located on the northern edge of the Scenic Rim Region, south west of Logan City and south east of the City of Ipswich in South East Queensland, Australia. The summit in the Range is Flinders Peak reaching above sea level.
The first Europeans to cross the range were Patrick Logan and his exploration party in June 1827. Most of the range remains naturally vegetated within a series of protected areas. Both the Flinders-Goolman Conservation Estate and the Flinders Peak Conservation Park are located along this range.
Other mountains include Mount Joyce, Mount Blaine, Mount Goolman, Mount Elliott, Mount Flintoff, Mount Welcome, Ivorys Rock, and Mount Perry. The range is visible from many locations around the Scenic Rim.
Landforms
The southernmost mountain of the range is Mount Joyce, which is separated from the Dugandan Range by Teviot Brook.History
The local Ugarapul people call Flinder's Peak, Booroong'pah or Booroongapah or Booroongpah. It is a sacred site because they believe that the powerful spirit, "Yurrangpul", lives there, and guards their traditions and sacred places. His name is similar to the local word for green tree frog: "Yurrang". The green tree frog is the totem of the Ugarapul people. Mount Blaine is known to the Ugarapul people as Ginginbaar, and the Ugarapul meaning for Goolman, used in Mount Goolman, is ''Axe.''Naming
The peaks of the range derived their names as follows:- Flinders Peak was originally named High Peak in July 1799 by Lieutenant Matthew Flinders RN navigator, hydrographer and scientist, HM Colonial Sloop Norfolk. The name Flinders Peak was first used by John Oxley Surveyor General during his explorations in 1824, as a change from High Peak of Flinders.
- Mount Joyce, formerly known as Kents Peak, so marked on a map of the Moreton Bay District published in 1842 by Robert Dixon surveyor.
- Mount Blaine is probably named after John Blaine who took up land near Peak Crossing in 1869 as the owner of Portion 89, Parish of Goolman.
- Mount Goolman, formerly named by John Oxley as Murdoch Peak, is derived from the Yuggera language indicating stone axe. Murdoch Peak was probably named after Peter Murdoch, superintendent of the agricultural establishment at Emu Plains.
- Mount Elliott is reportedly named after Robert Elliott who took up land in 1868.
- Ivorys Rock is named after James Ivory grazier, who held freehold land in the Bundamba and around this range.
Water catchment
Land ownership and control
The Flinders-Goolman Conservation Estate is a collection of freehold and public land that is either owned or controlled by Ipswich City Council. The estate is not a protected area under the Nature Conservation Act 1992.The Flinders Peak Conservation Park is entirely surrounded by the Flinders-Coolman Conservation Estate. The Conservation Park is controlled by the Queensland Department of Environment and Resource Management with the trustee being Ipswich City Council.
Mount Perry Conservation Park is located near Mount Perry in the Logan City Council local government area. The conservation Park was formerly managed by the Beaudesert shire council. Today it is controlled by the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service, with the trustee being the Logan City Council.