Weipa
Isolated mining town on the coast of Cape York.
Located 838 km north of Cairns on a road that varies
from the sublime to the horrendous, Weipa is a mining town with a
population of over 3000 people. Although geographically part of the
Cooktown Shire (a shire which covers 11 330 000 ha from Cooktown to the
Cape) it is run by a Weipa Town Office under a special act of the
Queensland Parliament which gave the town the status of a Special
Bauxite Mining Lease and handed control over to Comalco Aluminium. The
actual lease covers an area of 2590 sq. km.
The Weipa area was the first stretch of the Australian
coastline ever explored by Europeans. The Dutch explorer Willem Jansz,
sailing the Duyfken, first sighted the coast near Weipa in 1606. The
northern point of Albatross Bay is still named Duyfken Point in honour
of the expedition.
Matthew Flinders was the first person to note the
possible mineral potential of the area. In 1802 while circumnavigating
Australia he noted that the cliffs around Albatross Bay had a
distinctive reddish hue.
Missionaries arrived in the area in 1891 and a decade
later the geologist C.F.V. Jackson noted the presence of bauxite. There
was little interest in the mineral at the time - the gold discoveries
at the Wenlock River were attracting much more attention.
In 1947 further research into the mineral potential
of the area was carried out but the samples were poor and generated
little interest. It wasn't until 1955, when geologist Harry Evans,
realised that Matthew Flinders 'reddish cliffs' were, in fact,
virtually pure bauxite that the potential of the area began to be
exploited. The result is that Weipa is now the largest bauxite mine in
the world. The known deposits are likely to last for another 250 years
at the present rate of extraction.
The Weipa township is totally planned. It was
built by Comalco and the state government in the early 1960s and the
port of Weipa was officially opened in 1962. Since then the town has
continued to expand. The town's newest area of Trunding lies south of
the old settlement at Rocky Point.
Today Weipa is a mining town where bauxite is mined,
washed, graded and loaded for shipment to the aluminium processing
plant at Gladstone. In some instances the raw bauxite is shipped
directly overseas. Weipa's secondary production facilities include a
calcination plant which was opened in 1970 and a kaolin plant which was
opened in 1986.
Things to see:
Mine Tours
Tours of the mining operation can be arranged by
contacting (07) 4069 7871.
Weipa Shell Mounds
To the south of the town, on the banks of the Embley,
Hey, Pine and Mission Rivers are the strange phenomenom known as the
Weipa Shell Mounds. These mounds contains something like 200 000 tonnes
of shells which seem to have been placed in the area about 800 years
ago. There are a number of theories of the origin of the mounds (some
of which are up to 9 metres high) but so far no one has offered an
entirely convincing explanation.
| |
Tourist Information
|
| |
| |
Weipa Township Office
Weipa
QLD
4874
Telephone: (07) 4069 9799
Facsimile: (07) 4069 9800
|
| |
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Albatross Hotel/Motel
Trunding Point
Weipa
QLD
4874
Telephone: (07) 4069 7314
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
Caravan Parks
|
| |
| |
Paxhaven Caravan Ground
Nanum Centre
Weipa
QLD
4874
Telephone: (07) 4069 7871
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Travelers Restaurant
Duyfken Cres.
Weipa
QLD
4874
Telephone: (07) 4069 7314
|
| |