“…The Southeastern Highlands to the north, initially uplifted in the mid-Cretaceous, were further uplifted by the Kosciuszko Uplift in the middle Late Miocene-Early Pliocene (Joyce et al, 2003;Holdgate et al, 2008), and the increased gradients there caused a pulse of high energy sedimentation across the Latrobe Valley Depression, depositing an extensive apron of alluvial fan and braided stream sediments, the Middle-Late Pliocene Haunted Hill Formation (Jenkin, 1968;Bolger, 1991). Only a thin apron of Haunted Hill Formation was deposited around the Hoddle Ranges, because the ranges are composed largely of quartz-poor volcanogenic sediments that weather to clay, providing little coarse sediment.…”