Earth:Pilbara

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Short description: Region of Western Australia

Short description: Region in Western Australia
Pilbara
Western Australia
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LGA(s)
  • Shire of Ashburton
  • Shire of East Pilbara
  • City of Karratha
  • Town of Port Hedland
State electorate(s)
  • Kimberley
  • Pilbara
Federal Division(s)Durack

The Pilbara (/ˈpɪlbərə/) is a large, dry, thinly populated region in the north of Western Australia. It is known for its Aboriginal peoples; its ancient landscapes; the red earth; and its vast mineral deposits, in particular iron ore. It is also a global biodiversity hotspot for subterranean fauna.[1]

Definitions of the Pilbara region

North of the Pilbara looking south at the range

At least two important but differing definitions of "the Pilbara" region exist. Administratively it is one of the nine regions of Western Australia defined by the Regional Development Commissions Act 1993; the term also refers to the Pilbara shrublands bioregion (which differs in extent) under the Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation for Australia (IBRA).[2][3]

IBRA regions and subregions: IBRA7
IBRA region / subregion IBRA code Area States Location in Australia
Pilbara shrublands PIL 17,823,126 hectares (44,041,900 acres) WA IBRA 6.1 Pilbara.png
Chichester PIL01 8,374,728 hectares (20,694,400 acres)
Fortescue PIL02 1,951,435 hectares (4,822,100 acres)
Hamersley PIL03 5,634,727 hectares (13,923,710 acres)
Roebourne PIL04 1,862,236 hectares (4,601,690 acres)

General

Map of Pilbara

The Pilbara region, as defined by the Regional Development Commissions Act 1993 and administered for economic development purposes by the Pilbara Development Commission,[4] has an estimated population of 61,688 (As of June 2018),[5][6] and covers an area of 507,896 square kilometres (196,100 sq mi).[7] It contains some of Earth's oldest rock formations, and includes landscapes of coastal plains and mountain ranges with cliffs and gorges. The major settlements of the region are Port Hedland, Karratha and Newman. The three main ports in this region are Port Hedland, Dampier and Port Walcott.[8]

The area is known for its petroleum, natural gas and iron ore deposits, which contribute significantly to Australia's economy. Other than mining, pastoral activities as well as fishing and tourism are the main industries.[9]

Urban centres and localities

Rank UCL LGA Population
Ref. Ref. Ref. 2016 census Ref. 2021 census Ref.
1 Karratha Karratha 10,730 Template:Census 2001 AUS 11,728 Template:Census 2006 AUS 16,475 Template:Census 2011 AUS 15,828 [1] 17,013 Template:Census 2021 AUS
2 Port Hedland Port Hedland 12,695 Template:Census 2001 AUS 11,557 Template:Census 2006 AUS 13,772 Template:Census 2011 AUS 13,828 [2] 15,298 Template:Census 2021 AUS
3 Newman East Pilbara 3,516 Template:Census 2001 AUS 4,245 Template:Census 2006 AUS 5,478 Template:Census 2011 AUS 4,567 [3] 4,239 Template:Census 2021 AUS
4 Tom Price Ashburton 3,095 Template:Census 2001 AUS 2,721 Template:Census 2006 AUS 3,134 Template:Census 2011 AUS 2,956 [4] 2,874 Template:Census 2021 AUS
5 Wickham Karratha 1,724 Template:Census 2001 AUS 1,825 Template:Census 2006 AUS 1,651 Template:Census 2011 AUS 1,572 [5] 2,016 Template:Census 2021 AUS
6 Paraburdoo Ashburton 1,202 Template:Census 2001 AUS 1,607 Template:Census 2006 AUS 1,509 Template:Census 2011 AUS 1,359 [6] 1,319 Template:Census 2021 AUS
7 Dampier Karratha 1,469 Template:Census 2001 AUS 1,370 Template:Census 2006 AUS 1,341 Template:Census 2011 AUS 1,104 [7] 1,282 Template:Census 2021 AUS
8 Onslow Ashburton 802 Template:Census 2001 AUS 576 Template:Census 2006 AUS 667 Template:Census 2011 AUS 848 [8] 813 Template:Census 2021 AUS
9 Roebourne Karratha 950 Template:Census 2001 AUS 857 Template:Census 2006 AUS 813 Template:Census 2011 AUS 627 [9] 700 Template:Census 2021 AUS
10 Pannawonica Ashburton 618 Template:Census 2001 AUS 686 Template:Census 2006 AUS 651 Template:Census 2011 AUS 695 [10] 685 Template:Census 2021 AUS
11 Jigalong East Pilbara 300 Template:Census 2001 AUS 273 Template:Census 2006 AUS 357 Template:Census 2011 AUS 333 [11] 289 Template:Census 2021 AUS
12 Point Samson Karratha 322 Template:Census 2001 AUS 274 Template:Census 2006 AUS 298 Template:Census 2011 AUS 211 [12] 235 Template:Census 2021 AUS
13 Kiwirrkurra East Pilbara N/A N/A 216 Template:Census 2001 AUS 165 [13] 180 Template:Census 2021 AUS
14 Marble Bar East Pilbara 234 Template:Census 2001 AUS 194 Template:Census 2006 AUS 208 Template:Census 2011 AUS 174 [14] 153 Template:Census 2021 AUS
15 Nullagine East Pilbara N/A N/A 178 Template:Census 2011 AUS 194 [15] 147 Template:Census 2021 AUS

Local government

The Pilbara region, under the Pilbara Development Commission, contains four local government areas:

Ashburton – Shire of Ashburton
East Pilbara – Shire of East Pilbara
Karratha – City of Karratha
Port Hedland – Town of Port Hedland

Etymology

The Pilbara Aboriginal Language Centre Wangka Maya says that the name for the Pilbara region derives from the Aboriginal word bilybara, meaning "dry" in the Nyamal and Banyjima languages.[10]

Alternatively, the Western Australia Gas Industry claims that the region takes its name from pilbarra, an Aboriginal word for the mullet that is available in local waters.[11] The Pilbara Creek (originally spelt "Pilbarra") is a tributary of the Yule River, a significant river in the region. Sea mullet and barramundi can still be caught in the Yule River today.[12] Pilbara Goldfield, discovered in 1885, was named after the creek, and the name later became associated with the region.[11]

History

Nuclear test mushroom cloud
The mushroom cloud resulting from the Operation Hurricane detonation

Radiocarbon dating estimates in evidence show that rock art and standing stones at Murujuga in Dampier Archipelago, Australia's earliest known stone structures, believably dating from 6046 to 5338 BC, are of contextualization by thousands of years of unique cultural traditions and folklore. These sites have lived up as part of survival in present times.

The first European to explore the area was Francis Thomas Gregory in 1861. Within two years, European settlers had begun arriving. The region was regarded as part of the North West at first – a larger area that included the modern Kimberley and Gascoyne regions.

Settlements along the coast at Tien Tsin Harbour (later Cossack), Roebourne and Condon (officially Shellborough; later abandoned) were established over ensuing decades, mainly as centres of the rangeland livestock (grazing/pastoral) industry or pearling ports. However, as natural mother of pearl beds around Cossack were fished out, the pearling fleet began to move northward, and by 1883 it was based at Broome, in the Kimberley region. From c. 1900, pastoralism went into decline with the growth of other, more productive agricultural areas of the state.

Mining in the region started on 1 October 1888, when the Pilbara Goldfield was officially declared – named after a local creek, the goldfield would later give its name to the region as a whole. It was later divided into the Nullagine Goldfield and Marble Bar Goldfield. However, gold mining began to decline in the Pilbara in the mid-1890s, after alluvial ore had been exhausted. In 1937, mining of asbestos commenced at Wittenoom Gorge. While the presence of abundant iron ore had been known for about a century, it was not until the 1960s and the discovery of high-grade ore in the Hamersley Ranges that the area became pivotal to the state's economy, and towns built to accommodate mining and allied services boomed.[13]

In the 1950s, three British nuclear weapons tests were carried out in the Montebello Islands, 130 km (81 mi) off the Pilbara coast.

Aboriginal peoples

Prehistory

The Aboriginal population of the Pilbara considerably predates, by 30–40,000 years, the European colonisation of the region. Archaeological evidence indicates that people were living in the Pilbara even during the harsh climatic conditions of the Last Glacial Maximum.[14] The early history of the first peoples is held within an oral tradition, archeological evidence and petroglyphs. Near the town of Dampier is a peninsula known as Murujuga, which contains a large collection of World Heritage-listed petroglyphs, dating back thousands of years. Rock art in the Pilbara appears to have been primarily etched into the hard rock surfaces, compared to predominantly paintings on the softer sandstone in the Kimberley. This does not preclude that painting was and is not performed in the Pilbara.

Burrup rock art

20th century

Working conditions in the pearling and pastoral industries for Aboriginal people in the Pilbara region around 1900 have been described as slavery, with no wages paid, kidnapping as well as severe and cruel punishments for misbehaviour and absconding all common practices.[15] Some incidents, such as the Bendu Atrocity of 1897, attracted international condemnation. The first strike by Indigenous people in Australia took place in 1946 in the Pilbara, known as the Pilbara strike or Pilbara Aboriginal strike, when Aboriginal pastoral workers walked off the stations in protest at low pay and bad working conditions, a strike that lasted for over three years.[16]

Family clans in the Pilbara who were supported by mining prospector, Don McLeod,[17] developed skills for mining and the concentration of rare metals. For a short period money accumulated, which according to Aboriginal law was to be used for traditional ways. Eventually the funds were used to establish an independent Aboriginal-controlled school.[18] The concept has expanded into a movement with around 20 similar schools established in northern Western Australia by the mid 1990s.[citation needed] Jan Richardson, wife of Victorian Aboriginal activist Stan Davey, wrote a biography of McLeod as a doctoral thesis.[19][20]

21st century

In 2006, it was estimated that 15% of the population of the Pilbara identify as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people, approximately 6,000 people.[21]

Many Pilbara communities face the many complex effects of colonisation, and lack adequate access to housing, health and education.[22][23] A 1971 survey of 1,000 Aboriginal people conducted by Pat McPherson found that most had one or more serious diseases.[24] At the McClelland Royal Commission into British nuclear testing, Aboriginals from the Pilbara provided evidence regarding the explosion on the Montebello Islands.[25]

Aboriginal communities are sited over a number of different places.[26] Many have poor infrastructure,[27][28] and relations between police and Aboriginal people are often tense.[29]

Location and description

Hamersley Range

Under the Regional Development Commissions Act Pilbara is situated south of the Kimberley, and is made up of the local government areas of Shire of Ashburton, Shire of East Pilbara, City of Karratha and Town of Port Hedland.

The Pilbara region covers an area of 507,896 km2 (193,826 mi2) (including offshore islands), roughly the combined land area of the United States States of California and Indiana .[citation needed] It has a population of more than 45,000,[30] most of whom live in the western third of the region, in towns such as Port Hedland, Karratha, Wickham, Newman and Marble Bar. A substantial number of people also work in the region on a fly-in/fly-out basis. There are approximately 10 major/medium population centres and more than 25 smaller ones

Weano Gorge in Karijini National Park

The Pilbara consists of three distinct geographic areas. The western third is the Roebourne coastal sandplain, which supports most of the region's population in towns and much of its industry and commerce. The eastern third is almost entirely desert, and is sparsely populated by a small number of Aboriginal peoples. These are separated by the inland uplands of the Pilbara Craton, including the predominant Hamersley Range which has a considerable number of mining towns, the Chichester Range and others. These uplands have a number of gorges and other natural attractions.

The Pilbara contains some of the world's oldest surface rocks, including the ancient fossilised remains known as stromatolites and rocks such as granites that are more than three billion years old. In 2007, some of the oldest evidence of life on Earth was found in 3.4 billion-year-old sandstones at Strelley Pool, which preserve fossils of sulfur-processing bacteria.[31] The mineralized spheres, which were found on an ancient beach and have a cell-like morphology, were chemically analysed, revealing that they used sulfur for fuel.[32]

Climate

The Terra satellite captured this image of Cyclone Fay, over the Western Australian coast on 27 March 2004.
300m of North West Coastal Highway approaches to the Maitland River bridge were destroyed during Cyclone Monty in 2004

The climate of the Pilbara is arid and tropical.[6] It experiences high temperatures and low irregular rainfall that follows the summer cyclones. During the summer months, maximum temperatures exceed 32 °C (90 °F) almost every day, and temperatures in excess of 45 °C (113 °F) are not uncommon. Winter temperatures rarely drop below 10 °C (50 °F) on the coast; however, inland temperatures as low as 0 °C (32 °F) are occasionally recorded.

The Pilbara town of Marble Bar set a world record of most consecutive days of maximum temperatures of 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 degrees Celsius) or more, during a period of 160 such days from 31 October 1923 to 7 April 1924.[33]

The average annual rainfall in the region is between 200 and 350 millimetres (7.9 and 13.8 in).[6] Almost all of the Pilbara's rainfall occurs between December and May, usually with occasional heavy downpours in thunderstorms or tropical cyclones. The period from June to November is usually completely rainless, with warm to very hot and sunny conditions. Like most of the north coast of Australia, the coastal areas of the Pilbara experience occasional tropical cyclones. The frequency of cyclones crossing the Pilbara coast is about 7 every 10 years.[6][34] Due to the low population density in the Pilbara region, cyclones rarely cause large scale destruction or loss of life.

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Economy

The Pilbara's economy is dominated by mining exports and petroleum export industries.[37]

During the 1970s the area was known for union militancy with many strikes and some mines operating as fully unionised 'closed shops.' This was challenged by employers from the mid-1980s onwards and the region now has a very low level of union membership compared to other parts of Australia.[38]

Iron ore

Paraburdoo mine aerial
Plant, Brockman 4 mine
Jaspillite (banded iron formation) specimen from the Ord-Ridley Ranges, Pardoo, Pilbara

Most of Australia 's iron ore is mined in the Pilbara, with mines mostly centred around Tom Price and Newman. The iron ore industry employs 9,000 people from the Pilbara area. The Pilbara also has one of the world's major manganese mines, Woodie Woodie, situated 400 kilometres (250 mi) southeast of Port Hedland.

Iron ore deposits were first discovered by prospector Stan Hilditch, who in 1957 found a large iron ore deposit in the southern Ophthalmia Range, at what was to become the Mount Whaleback mine.[39]

In the 1960s, it was reportedly called "one of the most massive ore bodies in the world" by Thomas Price, then vice president of US-based steel company Kaiser Steel. Geoscience Australia calculated that the country's "economic demonstrated resources" of iron amounted to 24 gigatonnes, or 24 billion tonnes. According to the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics, (As of 2010), that resource is being used up at a rate of 324 million tonnes a year, with rates expected to increase over coming years. Experts Gavin Mudd (Monash University) and Jonathon Law (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) expect it to be gone within 30 to 50 years (Mudd) and 56 years (Law).[40]

(As of 2010), active iron ore mines in the Pilbara are:

Liquified natural gas

A significant part of Pilbara's economy is based on liquified natural gas (LNG) through the North West Shelf Venture and Pluto LNG plant, both operated by Woodside.

Agriculture

Millstream Homestead in Millstream-Chichester National Park

The region also has a number of cattle-grazing stations, and a substantial tourist sector, with popular natural attractions including the Karijini and Millstream-Chichester national parks and the Dampier Archipelago.

Transport

BHP iron ore train arriving at Port Hedland
Main page: Railways in the Pilbara

The first railway in the Pilbara region was the narrow-gauge Marble Bar Railway between Port Hedland and Marble Bar. The Marble Bar Railway opened in July 1911 and closed in October 1951. The Roebourne-Cossack Tramway opened in 1897 and many industrial railways have been built to serve the mines.[42]

Five heavy-duty railways are associated with the various iron-ore mines. They are all standard gauge and built to the heaviest North American standards. Rio Tinto runs driverless trains on its railways.[43]

Ports

The ports of the Pilbara are:

  • Port Hedland
  • Dampier (operated by Rio Tinto)
  • Cape Lambert (operated by Rio Tinto)
  • Anketell Port (under development)

Ecology

Terrestrial

Main page: Earth:Pilbara shrublands
The vibrant colours of the outback in Karijini National Park

The dominant flora of the Pilbara is acacia trees and shrubs and drought-resistant Triodia spinifex grasses. Several species of acacia (wattle) trees are endemic to the Pilbara and are the focus of conservation programs, along with wildflowers and other local specialities.[citation needed]

"Fairy circles" (known as "linyji" in the Manyjilyjarra language and "mingkirri" in the Warlpiri language) which are circular patches of land barren of plants, varying between 2 and 12 metres (7 and 39 ft) in diameter and often encircled by a ring of stimulated growth of grass, are found in the western part of the Great Sandy Desert in the Pilbara. It has not yet been proven what causes these formations, but one theory suggests that they have been built and inhabited by Australian harvester termites since the Pleistocene.[44][45]

The Pilbara is home to a wide variety of endemic species adapted to this tough environment. There is a high diversity of invertebrates, including hundreds of species of subterranean fauna (both stygofauna and troglofauna), which are microscopic invertebrates that live in caves, vugs or groundwater aquifers of the region, and terrestrial fauna (see short-range endemic invertebrates). The Pilbara olive python, the western pebble-mound mouse, and the Pilbara ningaui of the Hamersley Range are among the many species of animals within the fragile ecosystems of this desert ecoregion. Birds include the Australian hobby, nankeen kestrel, spotted harrier, mulga parrot and budgerigars.

Wildlife has been damaged by the extraction of iron, natural gas and asbestos, but the protection of culturally and environmentally sensitive areas of the Pilbara is now enhanced by the delineation of several protected areas, including the Millstream-Chichester and the Karijini National Parks.[citation needed]

Freshwater

The western Pilbara is part of the Pilbara freshwater ecoregion, also known as the Pilbara-Gascoyne or Indian Ocean drainage basin. The freshwater region is characterized by intermittent rivers which form deep gorges, and brackish-water caves that host endemic species. The region includes the drainages of the Murchison, Gascoyne, Ashburton, Fortescue, and De Grey rivers. The Great Sandy Desert, which covers the eastern Pilbara, has little freshwater habitat.[46]

See also

References

  1. S.A. Halse; M.D. Scanlon; J.S. Cocking; H.J. Barron; J.B. Richardson; S.M. Eberhard (2014). "Pilbara stygofauna: deep groundwater of an arid landscape contains globally significant radiation of biodiversity". Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 78 (2): 443–483. doi:10.18195/issn.0313-122x.78(2).2014.443-483. http://museum.wa.gov.au/sites/default/files/WAM_Supp78(B)_HALSEetal%20pp443-483.pdf. 
  2. Environment Australia. Revision of the Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation for Australia (IBRA) and Development of Version 5.1 – Summary Report. Department of the Environment and Water Resources, Australian Government. http://www.deh.gov.au/parks/nrs/ibra/version5-1/summary-report/index.html. Retrieved 31 January 2007. 
  3. "Australia's Biogeographical Regions - IBRA Version 6.1". http://www.deh.gov.au/parks/nrs/ibra/version6-1/index.html. 
  4. "Pilbara Development Commission". https://www.pdc.wa.gov.au/. 
  5. Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 March 2011). "Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2009–10 – Western Australia". http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Products/3218.0~2009-10~Main+Features~Western+Australia?OpenDocument. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 "Rangelands – Overview – Pilbara". Australian Natural Resources Atlas. Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities. 27 June 2009. http://www.anra.gov.au/topics/rangelands/overview/wa/ibra-pil.html. 
  7. "Regional Development Australia Pilbara". http://www.rdapilbara.org.au/the-pilbara.aspx. 
  8. Annual report 2015 – Pilbara ports authority. Port Hedland: PPA (Pilbara ports authority). 1 May 2016. https://www.pilbaraports.com.au/. Retrieved 1 June 2017. 
  9. "Department of Health: Pilbara". Government of Western Australia. 19 January 2011. http://www.health.wa.gov.au/services/detail.cfm?Unit_ID=52. 
  10. Sharp, Janet; Thieberger, Nick (28 June 1992). Bilybara: The Aboriginal Languages of the Pilbara Region of Western Australia. Wangka Maya Pilbara Aboriginal Language Centre. ISBN 9780646107110. https://books.google.com/books?id=6YdkAAAAMAAJ. Retrieved 28 June 2022. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 "WA Gas Industry: Interesting Facts". http://www.nwsg.com.au/industry/pilbaraplaces.html. 
  12. "Fishes in groundwater dependent pools of the Fortescue and Yule rivers, Pilbara, Western Australia". http://www.water.wa.gov.au/PublicationStore/first/90031.pdf. 
  13. Hema Maps (1997). Discover Australia's National Parks. Milsons Point, New South Wales: Random House Australia. p. 274. ISBN 1-875-99247-2. 
  14. Marwick, Ben (2002). "Milly's Cave: Evidence for Human Occupation of the Inland Pilbara during the Last Glacial Maximum" (in en). Tempus 7: 21–33. ISSN 1323-6040. http://research-repository.uwa.edu.au/en/publications/millys-cave-evidence-for-human-occupation-of-the-inland-pilbara-during-the-last-glacial-maximum(886b6c03-39c1-4f44-9961-094e4381b86a).html. 
  15. Olive, Noel (2007). Enough is Enough: A History of the Pilbara Mob. Fremantle Press. pp. 57–59. ISBN 978-1-921-06445-6. https://books.google.com/books?id=K1zeMUAPoM4C. Retrieved 1 December 2011. 
  16. "Articles About Pilbara Aboriginal History". http://www.wangkamaya.org.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=164&Itemid=386. 
  17. "Don McLeod – radical activist for Aboriginal justice in the Pilbara, Western Australia". 1 May 2018. https://www.anu.edu.au/about/campuses-facilities/events/don-mcleod-%E2%80%93-radical-activist-for-aboriginal-justice-in-the-pilbara. 
  18. Coombs, H.C. (1994). Smith, Diane. ed. Aboriginal Autonomy: Issues and Strategies. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. pp. 191–192. ISBN 0-521-44097-1. https://books.google.com/books?id=k46wgmaB9YcC. Retrieved 1 December 2011. 
  19. "Biography of an Australian hero: interview with PhD alum Jan Richardson". 19 February 2018. https://www.monash.edu/arts/monash-indigenous-studies/news-and-events/articles/biography-of-an-australian-hero-interview-with-phd-alum-jan-richardson. 
  20. Richardson, Jan (2017). 'They couldn't break me': Don McLeod, champion for Aboriginal justice in the Pilbara (PhD). Monash University. doi:10.4225/03/58c77be1332a6.
  21. Water and Indigenous People in the Pilbara CSIRO study, published: September 2011, accessed: 1 December 2011
  22. "Centre for Responsible Citizenship and Sustainability (CRCS) | Research Capabilities | Murdoch University in Perth Australia". http://www.murdoch.edu.au/Research-capabilities/CRCS/. 
  23. "Australian Psychological Society : Changing practices, changing paradigms: Working effectively with Indigenous clients". http://www.psychology.org.au/publications/inpsych/changing/. 
  24. Griffiths, Max (2006). Aboriginal Affairs 1967–2005: Seeking a Solution. Dural, New South Wales: Rosenberg Publishing. p. 193. ISBN 1-877058-45-9. https://books.google.com/books?id=8LP3tcGL6ZcC. Retrieved 1 December 2011. 
  25. Information, Reed Business (30 August 1984). "Royal Commission probes British nuclear tests in Australia". New Scientist (1419): 6. https://books.google.com/books?id=TEhjJrEL8BkC. Retrieved 1 December 2011. 
  26. Western Australia Aboriginal Communities. Department of Indigenous Affairs.
  27. "Archived copy". http://www.dia.wa.gov.au/PageFiles/481/Indigenous%20Pilbara%20Dialogue%20Outcomes%2012Sept09.pdf. 
  28. "Centre for Responsible Citizenship and Sustainability (CRCS) – Research Capabilities – Murdoch University in Perth Australia". http://www.istp.murdoch.edu.au/ISTP/casestudies/Pilbara/socio-cultural/Community_Values.html#Reference2. 
  29. Australian Human Rights Commission. "Indigenous Deaths in Custody: Chapter 6 Police Practices". https://humanrights.gov.au/our-work/indigenous-deaths-custody-chapter-6-police-practices. 
  30. "Archived copy". http://www.cmewa.com/UserDir/CMEResources/100517-MPR-Pilbara%20demographic%20projections-April2010-v121.pdf. 
  31. Amos, Jonathan (22 August 2011). "Fossil microbes give sulphur insight on ancient Earth". BBC News. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-14614832. 
  32. Elizabeth Pennisi (21 August 2011). "World's Oldest Fossils Found in Ancient Australian Beach". ScienceNOW (American Association for the Advancement of Science). http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2011/08/worlds-oldest-fossils-found-in-a.html?ref=hp. 
  33. "Marble Bar heatwave, 1923–1924". Australian Climate Extremes. Bureau of Meteorology. http://www.bom.gov.au/lam/climate/levelthree/c20thc/temp1.htm. 
  34. "Australian Climate Averages - Tropical cyclones". http://www.bom.gov.au/jsp/ncc/climate_averages/tropical-cyclones/index.jsp. 
  35. "Climate statistics". http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/tables/cw_004032_All.shtml. 
  36. "BOM". http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/tables/cw_007176_All.shtml. 
  37. "The Pilbara's oil and gas industry is the region's largest export industry earning $5.0 billion in 2004/05 accounting for over 96% of the State's production". http://www.pdc.wa.gov.au/industry/types-of-industries/oil-and-gas.aspx. 
  38. Peoples History of Australia (2020-04-09). "People's History of Australia Podcast. Episode 10 – The epic story of mining unionism in the Pilbara" (in en-AU). https://commonslibrary.org/peoples-history-of-australia-podcast/#Episode_10_-_The_epic_story_of_mining_unionism_in_the_Pilbara. 
  39. "Stan Hilditch". Perth, WA: State Library of Western Australia. http://exhibitions.slwa.wa.gov.au/s/mewa/page/StanHilditch. 
  40. Pincock, Stephen (14 July 2010). "Iron ore country". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2010/07/14/2953402.htm. 
  41. "Mining Journal – Spinifex gets Chinese finance approval". 12 December 2010. http://www.mining-journal.com/finance/spinifex-gets-chinese-finance-approval. 
  42. Joyce, J. and Tilley, Allan, "Railways in the Pilbara," (1979). ISBN:0959969926.
  43. "Iron-ore railway automation project, Western Australia". Mineprocessing.com. 11 July 2008. http://www.mineprocessing.com/News/detail-a135-b2-c0-d0-e0-f.html. 
  44. Walsh, Fiona; Bidu, Gladys Karimarra; Bidu, Ngamaru Karimarra; Evans, Theodore A. et al. (3 April 2023). "First Peoples' knowledge leads scientists to reveal 'fairy circles' and termite linyji are linked in Australia". Nature Ecology & Evolution (Nature Publishing Group) 7 (4): 610–622. doi:10.1038/s41559-023-01994-1. ISSN 2397-334X. PMC 10089917. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-023-01994-1. Retrieved 4 April 2023. 
  45. Angeloni, Alice (4 April 2023). "Indigenous knowledge leads scientists to reveal 'fairy circles', termites linked". https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-04-04/indigenous-knowledge-science-links-termites-fairy-circles/102177938. 
  46. "Archived copy". https://www.feow.org/ecoregions/details/802. 

Further reading

  • Ellem, Braden (2017). The Pilbara: From the Deserts Profits Come. Crawley, WA: UWA Publishing. ISBN 9781742589305. 
  • Sharp, Janet, and Nicholas Thieberger. (1992). Aboriginal languages of the Pilbara Region: Bilybara. Wangka Maya Pilbara Aboriginal Language Centre, Port Hedland, WA.

External links


[ ⚑ ] 21°S 119°E / 21°S 119°E / -21; 119