Southern Volcanic Plain

Description 

The Southern Volcanic Plain lies primarliy in Victoria, hence it was previously known as the Victorian Volcanic Plain, but it also exends into South Australia around Mt Gambier. It was created by volcanic activity that began 4.5 million years ago and continued until 10 000 years ago. On average, an eruption took place every 10 000 years and over 400 eruption points have been identified. Although there were some explosive eruptions that produced circular craters (maars), which now contain lakes and swamps, most were small volcanoes, active for a few years or decades. These deposited thin broad shields or long lava flows of basalt 2–10 m deep, creating broad plains, but other flows up to 100 m thick filled existing valleys. Native grasslands occur in areas where these flows have experienced long periods of weathering, producing heavy grey, red or black cracking clay soils, which are generally fertile but poorly drained. In contrast, the youngest relatively unweathered lava flows are known as stony rises and have thin soils and support woodland vegetation.

Details

Area 
2,440,340 ha
Climate 
The climate is characterised by hot, dry summers and cold winters with frosts. Mean annual rainfall is 500-700 mm and is higher in the south-west of the bioregion where the winter months receive twice as much rain as the southern months. In the drier eastern areas rainfall is distributed evenly across the year.
Grassland communities 
Natural Temperate Grassland of the Victorian Volcanic Plain; Seasonal Herbaceous Wetlands (Freshwater) of the Temperate Lowland Plains