The Kata Tjuṯa Domes (“The Olgas”)

Like its counterpart Ularu, the Kata Tjuṯa domes are both culturally significant and physically impressive.

In the late 1800s these domes were named the Olgas after a German benefactor who sponsored colonial exploration in this area, which is a ridiculous name when you learn a little about the reclaimed name Kata Tjuta. Kata (heads) and Tjuta (many) literally means many heads. Look at it! Do you see any Olgas?

Kata Tjuṯa with desert oak trees in the foreground. These trees send a single root deep into the earth in search of water, sometimes over a kilometre down!

Located at Walpa (wind) Gorge, the 36 conglomerate domes that make up this space represent a sacred location for Anangu men. In fact the cultural sensitivity is such that local guides do not share details- it is not their story to tell. This certainly speaks to a spirit of reconciliation that is at work in this particular place.

Kata Tjuṯa from 70km distance at dawn

Kata Tjuṯa is massive. Like Uluru it is the product of seismic tectonic shifts as the continents shifted and moved over hundreds of millions of years. The conglomerate rock that makes up the domes is of harder stuff than the sandstone at Uluru. In terms of scale, Kata Tjuṯa has a circumference of 44km, over four times that of Uluru, and it’s highest point is 550 meters, significantly higher than Uluru. The two landmarks are separated by 75km, a distance that appears much shorter in the flat semi arid desert that is the Outback.

View of Uluru from Kata Tjuṯa, 75 km away
One of 36 domes
Walpa Gorge

We visited late afternoon as the temperature was reaching 38 degrees. With the heat radiating from the rocks we were easily into the 40s. It was hot. Hot hot. We only explored the area for about 45 minutes and went through almost two litres of water between us.

Remember to drink your water!
Beautiful colours
Like Uluru, the hollows, fissures and colours of the rocks tell both geologic and cultural stories.
Braving the flies for a photo!
Bug mesh selfie!

The flies were pretty ferocious as well. If we ever come back we will do this hike in the early morning!

The boulder illustrates the makeup of conglomerate rock
Kata Tjuṯa at sunset

4 responses to “The Kata Tjuṯa Domes (“The Olgas”)”

  1. Michael Green Avatar
    Michael Green

    I am glad you are staying hydrated! 😮

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Enjoying your blog Rich.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Never liked the name Olga! But what an interesting place! I’m not sure I would have handled 45 min, in that heat and with all the flies. You are both very brave people! Remember details! I love stories.

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  4. Spectacular pics. The scale and texture are amazing. Colours remind me a little of The Tablelands in NL – red Mars-like moonscape, where the earth’s crust got inverted.

    Did you break out the factor-100 sunscreen? Summer heat and sun in the Central Aussie dessert looks to be seriously toasty.

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