The volcano itself and the surrounding lava flows are of great historic and cultural significance. The
creation story of the local
Gunditjmara people is based on the eruption of the volcano more than 30,000 years ago. It was via this event that an ancestral creator-being known as Budj Bim was revealed. The discovery of these large-scale farming techniques and manipulation of the landscape, highlighted in
Bruce Pascoe's best-selling book
Dark Emu in 2014, shows that the Indigenous inhabitants were not only
hunter gatherers, but cultivators and farmers. Many Gundjitmara people were moved into
Lake Condah Mission, which later became a government-run
Aboriginal reserve, which separated "
half-caste" children from their parents, who became part of the
Stolen Generations.
Protected areas There are several overlapping
protected or heritage-listed areas, two of which encompass Budj Bim itself and the others the lava flows: •
Indigenous Protected Areas: • The Tyrendarra IPA (), an area of on Darlot Creek, was declared in December 2003. This area comprises the Peters site between the Fitzroy River and Darlot Creek purchased by the
Gunditj Mirring Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation in 2010 and the Kurtonitj wetlands to the north acquired by the Corporation in 2009. • Kurtonitj IPA, dedicated in 2009. • Lake Condah IPA, which includes significant wetlands, was dedicated in 2010. • The Budj Bim National Heritage Landscape, which includes both the Tyrendarra Area (Place ID 105678, about , north of Tyrendarra) and the Mt Eccles Lake Condah Area (Place ID 105673, about , south-west of
Macarthur, comprising Budj Bim National Park, Stones State Faunal Reserve, Muldoons Aboriginal Land, Allambie Aboriginal Land and
Lake Condah Mission) was added to the
National Heritage List on 20 July 2004. (This includes the Tyrendarra and Lake Condah IPAs mentioned above, but not Kurtonitj.) • The Budj Bim Cultural Landscape was added to the
World Heritage List on 6 July 2019. There are three components of this area: the boundaries are those of Budj Bim National Park, Budj Bim Indigenous Protected Area, Tyrendarra Indigenous Protected Area and Lake Condah Mission.
Naming Mount Eccles The mountain was named Mount Eeles in 1836 by Major
Thomas Mitchell after William Eeles of the
95th Regiment of Foot who fought with Mitchell in the
Peninsular War. A
draftsman's error meant that the name was rendered
Eccles from 1845. ==See also==