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  1. One of Australia's most remarkable outback landscapes, the massive Wolfe Creek Crater National Park lies on the edge of the Great Sandy Desert in the Kimberley. Wolfe Creek Crater is the second largest crater in the world, measuring 880 metres across and to a depth about 60 metres.

  2. One of Australia's most remarkable outback landscapes, the massive Wolfe Creek Crater National Park lies on the edge of the Great Sandy Desert in the Kimberley. Wolfe Creek Crater is the second-largest crater in the world from which fragments of a meteorite have been collected, measuring 880m across and to a depth of about 60m.

  3. Wolfe Creek Crater is a well-preserved meteorite impact crater ( astrobleme) in Western Australia. [1] [2] Description. It is accessed via the Tanami Road 150 km (93 mi) south of the town of Halls Creek. The crater is central to the Wolfe Creek Meteorite Crater National Park. [3]

  4. Dec 14, 2022 · The Wolfe Creek Crater is the second largest meteorite crater on earth. You’ll probably have to go a fair distance out of your way to see it, though – this impact crater is a long way from anywhere in the Western Australian outback. Where is the Wolfe Creek Crater? The Wolfe Creek Crater is in Wolfe Creek Crater National Park, Western Australia.

  5. Website. Wolfe Creek Crater National Park lies approximately 150 kilometres from Halls Creek via the Tanami Road and access road, a two to three hour drive. All access within the national park is on foot. The best time to visit the park is from May to October, when the weather is fine and temperatures are moderate.

  6. Wolfe Creek Crater National Park is a national park in Western Australia, 1,854 kilometres (1,152 mi) northeast of Perth. It contains Wolfe Creek Crater . The park lies about 145 kilometres (90 mi) South from Halls Creek and can be accessed via the Tanami Road.

  7. Wolfe Creek Meteorite Crater is the second largest meteorite crater in the world. It was formed by a massive meteorite smashing to earth around 300,000 years ago. Travelling at 15km a second, the huge chunk of space rock could have crossed Australia in five minutes. Mind boggling!