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Examples of heritage
values
Many places can have both
natural and cultural heritage values. A forested
valley, or a coastal landscape or a wetland remnant
and their ecological processes may be considered
part of our natural heritage. These places may also
contain evidence of past human activity and so they
may also be part of our cultural
heritage.
Different features of a place
may have different types of significance. Various
groups of people may also attach different
importance to the same feature. Here are a few
examples of different heritage values.
Natural heritage places
and values
- Remnant vegetation
communities or areas that contain a variety of
landscape types and ecosystem
elements.
- Places that are the
habitat of a rare or threatened plant or animal
species.
- Undisturbed environments
or environments demonstrating natural processes
at work, for example, wetlands, wilderness
areas, coastal estuaries or dune
systems.
- Geodiversity features
such as fossil sites and geological outcrops,
representative or rare soil types, hydrological
and other earth processes.
Indigenous cultural
heritage places and values
- Places of spiritual
importance to Indigenous people, for example,
landscapes, seascapes and features associated
with the Dreamtime or Ilan Kustom (Torres Strait
Islands), events and places of special
significance to Indigenous people such as
ceremonial places, meeting places and places
where people are buried and
remembered.
- Evidence of use by
Indigenous people for activities such as
extraction of raw materials, manufacture of
stone tools or trading of materials.
- Places associated with
day-to-day living activities such as campsites,
shell middens, hunting grounds or particular
food collecting places.
- Places of contact between
Indigenous and non-Indigenous people, for
example, massacre sites, missions and
reserves.
Historic cultural heritage
places and values
- Archaeological remains of
buildings, for example the remains of First
Government House in Sydney.
- An architecturally and
aesthetically important streetscape containing
many individually important
buildings
- Places demonstrating ways
of life, customs, land use or designs no longer
practiced.
- A landscape with a range
of evidence related to a particular activity,
for example, a mining site that includes miners'
huts, the mine, poppet head, water races, sheds
or Chinese gardens.
- Places important in the
community's history or as a part of local
folklore, or associated with work or knowledge
of country.

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