The three sisters facts Australia
The Three Sisters is a rock configuration in the Blue hills of south Wales, Australia, on the north escarpment of the Jamison Valley. They are located on proximity of Katoomba and are one of the Blue Mountains' best popular places, seeing above the Jamison Valley and their names are Meehni (922 m), Wimlah (918 m), and Gunnedoo (906 m).
Indigenous fable
The usually told fable of the Three Sisters is that Meehni, Wimlah and Gunnedoo, enjoy their life in the Jamison Valley as teams of the Katoomba ethnic group. They loved with 3 men from the close Nepean ethnic group, but marriage was prohibited by ethnic law. The brothers were not pleased to get this law and so planned to use power to detain the three sisters. A main ethnic fight results, and the sisters were changed to mineral by an elder to defend them, but he was killed in the battle and no one else could twist them return. This fable is maintained to be a native Australian Dreamtime fable.
Though, Dr Martin Thomas said in his work "The home-made prospect: dreaming the Blue Mountains", plainly displays that the "indigenous" fable is a manufacture made by non-original Katoomba local, Mel Ward, most probably to put in interest to a restricted familiar sight. The story created in the late 1920s or near the beginning of 1930s and is unidentified previous to that date.
The indigenous customary owners, the Gundungurra, have a fable that contains the Sisters rock configuration.
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The Giant Stairway
From close to Echo Point, a bushwalking follow guide to the Three Sisters and downward to the valley ground by means of over 800 well-managed steel and stone ladders known "The Giant Stairway". Then take a short walk on The Federal routes takes to the bottom of Katoomba Falls and the Katoomba picturesque Railway. Trekkers who don't want to climb back to the high can enjoy the Scenic Railway back to the flat terrain for a price.
From close to Echo Point, a bushwalking follow guide to the Three Sisters and downward to the valley ground by means of over 800 well-managed steel and stone ladders known "The Giant Stairway". Then take a short walk on The Federal routes takes to the bottom of Katoomba Falls and the Katoomba picturesque Railway. Trekkers who don't want to climb back to the high can enjoy the Scenic Railway back to the flat terrain for a price.