Pilbara Heavy Haul Railways - Dampier -Engineering Heritage Marker Dampier, Western Australia, Australia
By
Albida on 25-May-18. Waypoint GA12350
Cache Details
Difficulty: | |
Terrain: | |
Type: | Virtual |
Container: | Virtual |
Coordinates: | S20° 39.831' E116° 43.146' (WGS 84) |
50K 470741E 7715028N (UTM) | |
Elevation: | 31 m |
Local Government Area: | Karratha |
Description
The Pilbara Heavy Haul Railways have become one of the world’s largest and most significant railway systems. The railways are an integral part of a major industry involving the mining, processing, railing and shipping of iron ore. Starting from scratch in the 1960s, the Pilbara region of Western Australia has become one of the world’s highest-producing iron ore mining provinces. This required the development of new mines, railways, roads, towns, ports, power and communication systems and processing plants in a region that was then largely occupied by Aboriginal groups and the pastoral industry.
Remote from Perth and other centres of population, this development needed the provision or upgrading of all the facilities normally associated with industrial areas and their supporting communities. From the pioneering days of the 1960s there has been continual expansion and new development activity in the region. Many new mines have been established along with the necessary infrastructure. With the region’s still very extensive iron ore reserves and a continuing demand for the product, this development is likely to go on at some level for many years to come.
This heritage nomination is intended to recognise the significance of the whole of the Pilbara railway system, but concentrates on the four original heavy haul railways. These are the Mt Goldsworthy-Port Hedland (Goldsworthy Railway), Paraburdoo-Tom Price-Dampier (Hamersley Railway), Newman-Port Hedland (Mt Newman Railway), and Pannawonica-Cape Lambert (Robe River Railway) lines. These railways are still operating, having been upgraded and added to over the last 50 years.
Ownership of the railways, mines and associated infrastructure has gone through various permutations over the years. These have included direct ownership, joint ventures and separate companies formed to operate the developments. The Goldsworthy and Mt Newman railways are now controlled by BHP-Billiton or related companies, while the Hamersley and Robe River railways are controlled by Rio Tinto Iron Ore or related companies.
Rio Tinto supports the nomination for heritage recognition of their railways, and these are the subject of this formal nomination. In 2016 the company will be celebrating 50 years since its first shipment of iron ore from the Pilbara. It has asked if the placing and unveiling of the proposed heritage markers can be carried out that year, in conjunction with other commemorative activities relating to the original development of the overall mining project.
Whilst only two of the four earliest railways are being nominated for heritage recognition at this stage, it is considered most appropriate to include descriptions of all four. This is in order to recognise and illustrate the overall pioneering development of the railways serving the Pilbara iron ore mining industry and their significance to Australia. It is also relevant that significant collaboration took place between the companies developing the early railways in establishing engineering standards and practices. It is intended that at a later date the original BHP-Billiton railways will be nominated for formal heritage recognition. Mention is also made of subsequent development of the original heavy haul railways, together with the more recent railways built or under construction by Fortescue Metals Group to the Solomon and Chichester hubs, and by Hancock Prospecting to the Roy Hill mine.
More information about this cache can be found at:
https://www.engineersaustralia.org.au/portal/heritage/pilbara-heavy-haul-railways
To log a find at this cache you must take a photo of yourself or your gps with the plaque.
Logs
A quick park n grab. TFTC
Thanks Albida33.
Cheers
MajuraHathi
I am currently visiting Wickham/Roebourne on a geocaching trip
Today I am having a RDO and set off early in the morning to Dampier
I was scanning the GCA page and noticed to my great excitement that there was a Virtual cache in Dampier
I was lucky enough to see two trains passing in opposite directions at the same time
One was fully loaded and the other was empty