Mount Nardi
Mount Nardi is a mountain in the Nightcap Range in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, Australia. The peak of Mount Nardi has an elevation of above sea level, approximately northeast of.
Geology
The mountain fomrs part of the Nightcap Range, a spur of the Great Dividing Range. This range forms the southern rim of the Mount Warning shield volcano. The range was formed over 23 million years ago as a result of successive lava flows, and today it consists of 3 rock types: Lismore Basalt, Nimbin Rhyolite and Blue Knob Basalt.History
Mount Nardi sits within the traditional lands of the indigenous peoples of the Bundjalung Nation. Traditionally the Bundjalung traversed it via walking trails, and maintained a few grassed clearings for camping and hunting within the rainforest. Europeans first settled in the Nightcap region for logging purposes in the 1842, due to an abundance of red cedar.The area around Mount Nardi was a part of a region called the Big Scrub, a large area of lowland subtropical rainforest, which was intensively cleared for agricultural purposes during the 19th century. The historic Nightcap Track has its roots in a path used by postal workers to travel between Lismore and Murwillumbah.
Before the 1950s, the mountain was considered a portion of nearby Mount Matheson. After the two peaks were designated separate mountains, Mt Nardi was named for Terania Shire Councillor Angelo Nardi who served from 1956 to 1961.
In 1962, a communications tower, RTN-8, was constructed on the summit of Mount Nardi for analogue television. A bitumen road, Newton Drive, was also constructed in 1962 between Nimbin and the summit of Mt Nardi to serve as an access road for the tower.
This was followed by the construction of 2 more masts; The ABRN-6 tower in 1964, which today provides digital TV and ABC North Coast radio for the Tweed and Gold Coast regions of New South Wales and Queensland respectively, and Telstra-1, constructed in 1975 by newly-founded Australian telecommunications company Telecom,. The original Telstra-1 tower was demolished and replaced by a new tower, Telstra-2, in the early 2010s, which provides mobile phone coverage, including 4G and 5G from internet provider Telstra, to the Lismore and Byron Bay area. Rival provider Vodafone uses transmitters on the neighbouring ABRN-6 tower, and Optus operates its own site in Tuntable Falls, near Nimbin. The enitre Mt Nardi site is operated by BAI Communications.
The ABRN-6 tower, built in 1964 by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, initially broadcast on the Brisbane network, but switched to the Sydney network in December 1967. The ABRN-6 tower began broadcasting digital channels in the early 2000s. Digital channels available from the ABRN-6 tower include ABC, Channel 7, Channel 9 and Channel 10.
The mountain was devastated by bushfires in early November 2019, part of the catastrophic Black Summer fires, which destroyed the habitats of many native plant species.