Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

The Dingo Fence

Posted by James, Wednesday, 4th April 2007

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars

It’s probably as long as the Great Wall of China, but up until recently I had never heard of what could be the longest man made object ever - The Great Dingo Fence of Australia!

Erected in the 1885 to keep Dingos and other wild dogs out of the South eastern Australia, the fence stretches right across Australia and is at least 5,000km long. The fertile land in the south is used for sheep breeding, but the Dingos had a habit of eating the sheep so had to be kept out.

Although it is only 6 feet tall, you can make out the path of the fence across Australia due to the presence of maintenance tracks which run along both sides. In our thumbnail shot we see Cameron’s corner, where the Dingo fence joins the tri-border of Queensland, New South Wales and South Australia.

Despite the fence’s age it has never been officially surveyed, so an exact path is hard to pin down. Google Earth Forum user A185F has created a placemark file which gives you a rough idea of the fence’s route and its enormous scale.

Updated: It’s not clear exactly how long the fence is, and how it compares to the great wall. So, for now, we’ll just say it’s really, really long.

Wikipedia: Dingo Fence

Thanks: WynRichards & A185F

18 Responses to 'The Dingo Fence'

  1. 1. Ocean says:

    According to Wikipedia, the Great Wall of China is 6,352 km long. So the Dingo Fence is actually a bit shorter (and not twice as long).

  2. 2. Sneakytoes says:

    This was originally designed to keep out rabbits, and was featured in a wonderful movie a few years ago called Rabbit-Proof Fence. See it if you can.

  3. 3. Patrick says:

    Rabbitprooffence…EXCELLENT but incredibly sad movie.

  4. Google Sightseeing Admin
    4. James says:

    @Ocean: Hmm, good point, but I can’t find any conclusive statement on it’s length. I’ve updated the post.

  5. 5. Brune says:

    @ocean
    all of wikipedias stuff is submitted by average joes. its not regulated so how can u say that according to wikipedia some one else is wrong when wikipedia could be wrong?
    ….just go look up elephants some time and tell me how many colbert saved
    well….im off to make the fence longer….

  6. 6. Bruce says:

    Bear in mind that the people whose lives Rabbit Proof Fence are supposed to be based on have rejected it as a fictionalised distortion. Aboriginal children were taken out of abusive situations where they would not otherwise have survived, often placed in the care of churches where they experienced charity previously unknown.

  7. 7. Wilson says:

    Also keep in mind that the rabbit-proof fence is a different fence, in a different area of the country. Also slightly shorter, at “just” a bit over 3,200 km.

  8. 8. Jack says:

    No matter what is said… it’s a really long fence… bet it was real fun to put up then too..

  9. 9. Ben says:

    Though I take great pleasure roaming around vast tracts of the australian outback in GM - it makes me wonder why I can’t do the same for most of Tuscany, for example, or Kent, both still low resolution. There’s not really that much to see in this area.

  10. 10. Myquealer says:

    What about the Trans-Siberian Railroad “from Moscow to Vladivostok, is over 9288 kilometers”. That is the first thing that came to mind. There may be a longer manmade object.

  11. 11. Tim says:

    bloody HELL, a fence that long is bound to screw with the ecosystem!

  12. 12. Malcolm says:

    one godam long fence, would be good if scotland had a fence like this to keep the english out. :p

  13. 13. Michael Wheatland says:

    Hi there, I would just like to add, that I have ridden my motorbike along there a few times, and It is definatly I fence to keep the rabbits out. The dingos are not a threat. They tend to be very tame, and more scavengers than hunters.

    Maybe you can do some quick research next time you post a picture, rather than just posting a nice picture and some words that might not be true at all.

    Thanks for future accuracy,
    Mike.

  14. 14. Peter says:

    The “fence” between England and Scotland was in place once. Hadrian’s wall I believe it was called…

  15. 15. Amanda says:

    @Malcolm - if only we’d had the good sense to keep up Hadrian’s Wall. Then they’d still be out of Scotland. It was those blasted Middle Ages when everything went into disrepair, except the castles… ;)

  16. 16. paul canning says:

    What Bruce says about Aboriginal Children is wrong and a myth - they were forcibly taken. You can read the stories and the history here http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/special/rsjproject/rsjlibrary/hreoc/stolen/stolen16.html

    This is all very well-documented. Denial or justification of this is very strong however in Australia.

    Rabbit Proof Fence came as news to most Australians.

    There isn’t one memorial in the whole country.

  17. 17. Mathew says:

    Just clear up a few things. The Great Wall of China is not a complete wall, it’s more of a series of watch towers to keep out the Mongol hordes. The Dingo fence and Rabbit fence are complete fences, designed to keep out plague proportions of rabbits, and are constantly maintained year round by lone fencers each operating over about 500KM of fence each. It’s because of this completeness it is the longest wall in the world.

    And, yes, it does mess with the ecosystem. Emus and kangaroos try to jump it and trip or get caught in the wire and die. But which is worse? A few dead emus, or a few billion rabbits turning our relatively fragile ecosystem into swiss cheese.

    Oh yeah, wild dogs = tame, lol.

  18. 18. jeanon says:

    they say that the dingo fence is approximatley 5,600km….. when i search on google its says that it starts a Yalata and finishes near brisbane.if i’m wrong well please email me at jeanonlui@yahoo.com.au .

Leave a Reply

This form will auto-link URLs or you can use simple HTML, <a href="http://googlesightseeing.com">Like this</a>.

Link to specific places either as a Google Maps page or a decimal latitude and longitude written like this: lat/lng:55.949400,-3.200000.

If you've found an unrelated sight that you think should be posted in its own entry then use the suggestion form!