Henbury Meteorite Craters

Photo: W & S Roddom / CC BY 2.0

About 145 kilometres south-west of Alice Springs, along the red-dirt Lasseter Highway, a cluster of 13 craters pockmarks the desert floor like a celestial fingerprint. Henbury Meteorite Craters is one of the best-preserved meteorite impact sites on Earth, formed some 4,700 years ago when an iron-nickel meteorite exploded before impact, scattering fragments over a wide area. This is a place of raw, haunting beauty — the ochre earth, the stark spinifex, and the profound silence broken only by the wind. For travellers with a fascination for geology, astronomy, or simply the immense forces that shape our planet, Henbury offers a rare and humbling encounter with deep time.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

Two hours is ample for the 1.5-kilometre loop trail that circles the main craters, allowing time to read the signage, soak in the landscape, and scan for meteorite fragments. If you’re a keen photographer or astronomy buff, budget three hours to capture the changing light or to stay after sunset. The site is easily combined with a half-day drive from Alice Springs or as a quick detour on the way to Uluru.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

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