KAPUNDA NORTH Clare Rd Cemetery 2Km Kapunda  Directions & Information NA Hospital Pines Reserve 8Km TILBROOK SH a Tarlee 16Km RD  Things to See and Do

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

KAPUNDA NORTH Clare Rd Cemetery 2Km Kapunda  Directions & Information NA Hospital Pines Reserve 8Km TILBROOK SH a Tarlee 16Km RD  Things to See and Do T S Allendale North 5km Y A Hamilton 15km D T S Burra 83km Gundry’s Hill Broken Hill 444km ASK A FRIENDLY LOCAL Lookout KAPUNDA NORTH Clare Rd Cemetery 2km Kapunda Directions & information NA Hospital Pines Reserve 8km TILBROOK SH A Tarlee 16km RD Things to see and do Clare 71km K MAXWELL A P ST U What’s on in the region ST N D ST NEW A S ST T Accommodation & attractions. Souvenirs. MOYLE ST WHEATLEY ST TCE Planning, booking & referral services. Kapunda TCE See the ‘Taste of the Region’ interpretive display and the High FULLER ‘Sir Sidney Kidman Exhibition’ at the School ST ST N O N Kapunda Visitor Information Centre. TRUSCOTT N C HAWKE LA WEST HIGH A R GREENOUGH ST H E SLIGHT ST S 51-53 Main Street, Kapunda. SA. ST CROSS ST ST RD railway Ph. (08) 8566 2902 or 1300 770 301 E B R dismantled NORTH ST A [email protected] SIMMONS ST H Q FREDERICK MAXWELL UIN TR EL www.lightsouthaustralia.com GAWLER L ST COURT SOLOMON ST ST REES ST KIDMAN TRIPLETT ST ST H RD AV CR EL ST POINTS OF INTEREST Kapunda Hospital .............A 5 Mine Chimney Lookout.....E 4 OC K Cameron Street Lookout ..E 4 Kapunda Library................D 4 Old Courthouse.................D 4 CAREY Kapunda ST AL ST ST F R D ST ST Davidson Reserve .............C 3 Kapunda Lions Skate Park.........................C 2 Football/Cricket ST E E Clubs Kapunda S (walking & cycling) JOHN ST Dutton Park Childrens Park..................C 3 Swan Bike and U H Indoor BAKER HO IG Sporting Complex............C 2 Kapunda Museum.............C 3 Walking Trail.....................C 3 R MILDRED H E E ST Kapunda Dutton Park Bowling R T A STIRLING CLIFFORD Gundry's Hill Lookout........A 3 Kapunda Tourist Park........B 2 Swimming Pool .................C 3 IO W LANE CATHERINE Primary Sporting Complex Club F E Historic Copper Mine........E 4 Kapunda Trotting Track.....C 1 Town Square .....................D 4 TYOUNG School ROWETT Netball N ST O Kapunda Kapunda Vistor skate ST ST ST Tennis M BECK park MILL ST Community Art Gallery.....D 3 Information Centre ...........D 4 H ST JEFFS ST C IN Path ST DM ST Eudunda 29km Kapunda Golfcourse.........C 1 Map The Miner..................F 2 AR Unit. SH ST Morgan 85km Kapunda Swann SO ST CHURCH ST UT STREET INDEX HARE ST........................... B 3 OLD ADELAIDE RD........... F 2 Golf Club ST ROBE Childrens H DR H BLYTH E GREY I KapundaSMEDLEY ST N ADELAIDE RD ................... F 2 HARRIET ST...................... D 3 OLDHAM ST...................... D 4 Kapunda C Park LL A OG ST ST Museum CR ALBERT ST........................ D 2 HAVELOCK ST.................. B 4 PERRY RD......................... E 4 Trotting HI The JORDAN STST LL LIGHT ST BROWN ST ALFRED ST....................... C 4 HAWKE ST........................ B 2 QUEEN ST........................ D 2 Track ST Davidson ST (THIELE HWY) TCE AMELIA AMELIA ST........................ C 5 TOD CRASE HIGH ST....................... B3;C4 QUINTRELL COURT......... B 3 Reserve ST ST STOCK ST BAGOT ST......................... D 4 HILL ST.............................. C 3 RAILWAY PDE ................... D 2 HANCOCK WILLOW Kapunda Community Town Square ST ST BAKER ST......................... C 2 HINDMARSH ST............... C 2 RAILWAY RD ..................... D 2 ST LUCAS H Fuel WAY R Art Gallery ST Luth. BET BECK ST........................... C 3 HOGAN ST........................ E 5 REES CR ........................... B 5 A IZA FRANCIS I ALBERT ST EL L ST ST ST ST BETHEL RD....................... F 1 JACKSON ST.................... E 3 ROBE ST........................... C 3 JAMES W Council Recharge A FORD BLACKWELL ST................ D 4 JAMES ST......................... D 2 ROWETT ST...................... C 5 Y QUEEN Office CHRISTCHURCH Station CAMBRIA ST ST WHITTAKER WHITE S BLYTH ST.......................... C 3 JEFFS ST.......................... C 4 SHANNON ST................... B 4 RD ST CH CR ST OU RAILWAY MAIN AP McCORMACK TH EL BRANSON CR................... D 4 JOHNSON RD................... E 3 SIMMONS ST.................... B 3 Parking Police N D ST Old OLDHAM O BROWN ST....................... C 3 JOHN ST........................... C 4 SLIGHT ST........................ B 3 S Ang. PDE LEWIS N STRICKLAND CourthouseST BLACKWELLA ST CAMBRIA ST..................... D 3 JORDAN ST...................... C 5 SMEDLEY ST.................... C 4 Free ST R Cath. Wi-Fi B CAMERON ST................... E 4 KAPUNDA ST.................... A 4 SOLOMON ST................... B 3 TERMINUS ST CARRINGTONNOTTINGHAM ST TCE ST BAGOT CAREY ST......................... C 4 KERNOW PL ..................... F 2 SOUTH TCE ...................... C 4 M MARY RD I Church N ST RD ST T E T CARRINGTON ST............. D 2 KIDMAN RD....................... B 1 SOUTH TCE ...................... D 5 I E S R R CATHERINE ST................. C 4 KLEMM RD........................ E 1 STIRLING ST..................... C 5 A Mine H MUGG ST CHAPEL ST....................... D 4 LEWIS ST.......................... D 2 STOCK ST......................... D 3 Vistor Information Centre JA Chimney Cameron CK S Lookout ST Street CHRISTCHURCH ST......... D 5 LIGHT ST........................... C 5 STRICKLAND ST............... D 5 Point of Interest ON Horse & Lookout CHURCH ST...................... C 4 LUCAS ST......................... D 4 TERMINUS ST................... D 2 Whim CAMERON CLARE RD......................... B 2 MAIN ST............................ D 3 TILBROOK ST................... A 2 KLEMM Lookout ST silos HOGAN CLIFFORD ST................... C 5 MARY McKILLOP WLK...... F 5 TOD ST.............................. D 3 RD COGHILL ST..................... C 2 MARY ST........................... D 5 TRIPLETT ST..................... B 3 Picnic Area Walking Trail CRANE ST......................... C 4 MAXWELL ST.................... A 3 TRUSCOTT ST.................. B 2 RD CRASE ST......................... D 4 McCORMACK ST.............. D 5 WATERHOUSE ST............ C 3 Toilets Historic E CROSS ST........................ B 3 MELLOR PL....................... F 3 WAY ST..............................D 2 Copper ST TCE Christ Church DAY ST.............................. A 4 MILDRED ST..................... C 4 WEST TCE ........................ B 3 Mine Cemetery EAST TCE ......................... F 5 MILL LANE ........................ C 3 WHEATLEY ST.................. A 4 Playground (THIELE HWY) RD P ELIZABETH ST.................. D 5 MINE ST............................ D 4 WHITE ST.......................... D 4 ER RY FORD ST........................... D 3 MONTEFIORE ST..............C 2 WHITTAKER ST................. D 4 Swimming Pool railway B81 ADELAIDE FRANCIS ST...................... D 2 MOYLE RD ........................ A 1 WILLOW DR ...................... D 3 JOHNSON MELLOR FREDERICK ST................. B 3 MUGG ST.......................... D 4 YOUNG ST........................ C 2 Hospital RD FULLER ST........................ B 2 NASH ST........................... A 4 PL GAWLER ST...................... B 2 NEW ST............................. A 3 D L Post Office O GREENOUGH ST.............. B 3 NORTH ST........................ B 3 ADELAIDE GREY ST........................... C 2 NORTH TCE ...................... A 5 HANCOCK RD................... D 1 NOTTINGHAM ST............. D 3 Caravan Park dismantled 0 200 400 600 EAST Produced by RV Dump Point metres MARY Visitor Centre F M Lat: -34˚ 20’ 26” Long: 138˚ 54’ 55” c Library L K I P L L Produced by Carto Graphics O P www.cartographics.com.au for Light Regional Council,© 2019 W Map The Miner O W N Gawler 35km A R L 1 E 2 3 4 5K 6 BETHEL RD K Adelaide 80km.
Recommended publications
  • Registered Nurse (Kapunda)
    SA Health Job Pack Job Title Registered Nurse (Kapunda) Eligibility Open to Everyone Job Number 733824 Applications Closing Date 9 October 2020 Region / Division Barossa Hills Fleurieu Local Health Network Health Service Kapunda Homes Aged Care Location Kapunda/Eudunda Classification RN/M1 Permanent Part-time position (working 24 hours per week), over a Job Status 7 day roster Total Indicative Remuneration $75,661 - $103,935 p.a. (Pro-rata) Contact Details Full name Lisa Fidock Phone number 8566 2260 Email address [email protected] Criminal History Assessment Applicants will be required to demonstrate that they have undergone an appropriate criminal and relevant history screening assessment/ criminal history check. Depending on the role, this may be a Department of Communities and Social Inclusion (DCSI) Criminal History Check and/or a South Australian Police (SAPOL) National Police Check (NPC). The following checks will be required for this role: Working with Children Check - DHS Unsupervised Contact with Vulnerable Groups Employment Screening - NPC Disability Services Employment Screening - DHS General Employment Probity Check - NPC Further information is available on the SA Health careers website at www.sahealth.sa.gov.au/careers - see Career Information, or by referring to the nominated contact person below. Immunisation Risk Category A (direct contact with blood or body substances) This role carries specific immunisation requirements. To be eligible for appointment in this role you will be required to meet the immunisation requirements associated with Category A (direct contact with blood or body substances). Please click here for further information on these requirements. For Official Use Only – I1-A1 Page 1 of 2 Guide to submitting an application Thank you for considering applying for a position within SA Health.
    [Show full text]
  • Shas of SA: Burra Smelts Historic Site
    Burra Smelts Historic Site Smelts Road, Burra SAHR 10989 – confirmed as a State Heritage Pl ace 8 November 1984 The Burra Smelts Historic Site is a distinct region within the Burra State Heritage Area, and is a State Heritage Place entered in the South Australian Heritage Register. It is located adjacent to, but across the creek from, the Burra Mines Historic Site, and encompasses structures, buildings and ruins of the Burra Smelting Works. It is historically significant, representing an industry that was integral to Burra's copper mining past, and one of the earliest major smelting works established in South Australia. The smelting works was established in 1849 when the South siSmelts te from mine lookout Australian Mining Association leased an area, on the eastern side of Burra Creek, to the Patent Copper Company (later the English and Australian Copper Company). Initially the copper ore had been transported to Swansea, Wales, for smelting, and later to Yatala in South Australia, but neither of these situations solved the problem of carting the unprocessed ore over long distances on unmarked roads and dirt tracks. During 1848, before the smelter was established at Burra, it is estimated that at least 1 200 bullock carts were on the road, each carrying two-and-a-half tons of ore. By mid-June of 1849 the smelting works was completed, and six large furnaces were ready to fire. Welsh and German smelters were brought in to work the smelting works and added a multi• cultural mix to Burra's predominantly Cornish mining population. By 1851 more than 1 000 men were employed at the smelting works, which had 16 furnaces in operation, using about 150 tons of wood daily, cut from the Murray scrub to the east of town.
    [Show full text]
  • Shipwrecks: Images and Perceptions of Nineteenth Century Maritime Disasters
    4 Shipwrecks: Images and Perceptions of Nineteenth Century Maritime Disasters Mark Staniforth In the nineteenth century the long sea voyage across thousands of miles of open ocean to Australia was a step into the unknown. International migration at this time usually involved travel by sea, as it had in previous centuries. Ships were the primary long distance transportation method and the movement of passengers was one of their most important functions. It has been estimated that more than 1.6 million immigrants travelled to Australia by ship between 1788 and 1900, nearly half of these people were assisted immigrants of one type or another and they came primarily from Great Britain with smaller numbers from Europe (Barrie 1989:121). In the popular imagination the ocean represented hazard and uncertainty - an alien environment in which the possibility of shipwreck loomed large. Passengers felt themselves to be at the mercy of the elements and being directly exposed to the extremes of the weather in a moving structure was a new and disconcerting experience. This fear of shipwreck can be seen in a letter from P. Harnett to his brother from Cape Town in 1832 who writes that: 'you and the family must have been frequently tormented by anxious hopes and fears of my safety or probably have heard that the vessel was wrecked and as a matter of course that I was lost' (Harnett 1832). In most respects shipwrecks, like other tragedies involving transportation, are civil or 'man made' disasters yet they also exhibit some of the 45 46 Disasters: Images and Contexts characteristics of natural disasters.l These include evoking in the victims feelings of powerlessness in the face of overwhelming natural forces and a timeframe which sometimes extends over a period of hours or even days.
    [Show full text]
  • South Australia & the Cornish Transnational Identity Philip Payton
    Regional Migration in SA: How Early Migrants Shaped Our Culture – A Cornish Case Study Philip Payton Summary • South Australia has long enjoyed a prominent place in both the historiography and ‘mythology’ of the Cornish transnational identity, from the ‘coppermania’ of Kapunda and Burra Burra in the 1840s to the rise of ‘Australia’s Little Cornwall’ at Moonta and environs in the 1860s and subsequently. This talk examines the enduring cultural impact of these early Cornish migrants in SA, and seeks to place South Australia’s Cornish connection within the broader contextual framework of ethno-cultural diversity and heterogeneity in Colonial and pre-WW2 Australia as a whole. It also locates the SA experience within the expansion of the nineteenth-century hard-rock mining frontier and the emergence with the Cornish transnational identity. Here the 1840s and 1860s are seen to be pivotal decades in the development of both the frontier and the transnational identity, establishing among other things a symbiotic relationship between Cornwall and South Australia at moments of rapid and profound change. This symbiosis was responsible, it is argued, for the privileged place of South Australia within ‘imaginings’ of the Cornish diaspora but also for the diverse nature of the cultural impact – economic, technological, religious, political, and so on – of those early migrants in SA itself. Cousin Jack comes of age? SA and a Transnational Identity • The ‘Myth’ of Cousin Jack • South Australia as ‘Paradise of Dissent’ • Expansion of the international copper frontier: • Michigan; Kapunda, Burra Burra and the Adelaide Hills Wallaroo & Moonta: on the cusp of change? • 1860s - a decade of change • Making Moonta’s Myth The Cult of Captain Hancock: Intellectual Cultural Transfer Technology Transfer: Material & Intellectual Culture • Machinery • Terminology • Organization Personnel: Moonta Mines Personnel: Wallaroo mines ‘Australia’s Little Cornwall’ Institutions: Cultural Institutions: Religious Institutions: Industrial/Political Cornwall & South Australia: An Enduring Relationship? .
    [Show full text]
  • South Australia's Cornish Mining Landscapes
    Place, Community And Identity: South Australia’s Cornish Mining Landscapes Philip Payton Proceedings of: Place, Community and Identity: South Australia’s Cornish Mining Landscapes The copper-mining landscapes of South Australia – principally those of Burra Burra in the mid-North and Moonta and environs on northern Yorke Peninsula – are today striking reminders of the State’s significant role in the mid-nineteenth century in the expansion of the international mining frontier and the attendant Cornish transnational identity. They are best understood against the background of the nineteenth-century Cornish diaspora (Payton: 2005). The economic marginalisation that progressively overtook Cornwall as the nineteenth century wore on precipitated a widespread exodus, spurred on by the political discontent of the ‘Reforming Thirties’ and the near-starvation of the ‘Hungry Forties’, and complementing the strong demand that existed already for Cornish agriculturalists and (especially) skilled Cornish miners on the rapidly expanding frontiers of America, Australia and South Africa. This was the ‘Great Emigration’, a sustained movement of people (miners and others) that was to characterise the Cornish experience until the years before the outbreak of the Great War in 1914. A.C. Todd considered that it ‘seems reasonable to suppose that Cornwall lost at least a third of its population’ (Todd: 1967, 19) in the nineteenth century, while Dudley Baines offers some frightening statistics. Between 1861 and 1900, he says, Cornwall lost no less than 10.5 percent of its male population overseas and 7.0 percent to other counties (far and away the greatest percentage loss of any county), with a corresponding loss of 5.3 percent of the female population overseas and 7.1 percent to other counties.
    [Show full text]
  • A World of Copper: Globalizing the Industrial Revolution, 1830-70
    LJMU Research Online Evans, C and Saunders, O A world of copper: globalizing the Industrial Revolution, 1830-70 http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/9526/ Article Citation (please note it is advisable to refer to the publisher’s version if you intend to cite from this work) Evans, C and Saunders, O (2015) A world of copper: globalizing the Industrial Revolution, 1830-70. Journal of Global History, 10 (1). pp. 3-26. ISSN 1740-0228 LJMU has developed LJMU Research Online for users to access the research output of the University more effectively. Copyright © and Moral Rights for the papers on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. Users may download and/or print one copy of any article(s) in LJMU Research Online to facilitate their private study or for non-commercial research. You may not engage in further distribution of the material or use it for any profit-making activities or any commercial gain. The version presented here may differ from the published version or from the version of the record. Please see the repository URL above for details on accessing the published version and note that access may require a subscription. For more information please contact [email protected] http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/ Title: A World of Copper: Globalizing the Industrial Revolution, 1830-1870 Authors: Chris Evans and Olivia Saunders Postal address: University of South Wales, FBS, Treforest CF37 1DL, UK Email for correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: For most of human history the smelting of metallic ores has been performed immediately adjacent to the ore body.
    [Show full text]
  • Resident's Welcome Pack
    Welcome Pack 1 Mayor’s Welcome From Mayor Bill O’Brien On behalf of the elected I encourage you to become involved in your new members and the staff of community. Throughout the Light Region, Light Regional Council, I community groups and volunteer organisations extend a warm welcome to play an important role in the well-being of our new residents of our region. towns. There are many opportunities available from sporting and community service clubs, to a Encompassing the wide range of cultural and artistic groups all of townships of Kapunda, which welcome the new ideas and enthusiasm Freeling, Greenock, of incoming members. Roseworthy and Wasleys, and the suburb of Hewett, I also invite you to attend our Council meetings the Light Regional Council is in the Chambers at the principal office in a progressive, growth, Kapunda. The meetings are held on the fourth regional Council. It takes in Tuesday of each month and you are welcome to a diverse and thriving area of be part of the gallery of attending residents. broad acre farming, viticultural areas and These meetings grant you an opportunity to gain appealing rural-urban living options. a greater appreciation of issues being discussed within the broader community. You may also The Council continues to attract important make representation to Council on more viticultural and agricultural development to the specific matters in which you are involved. area, along with associated support industries. Council continues to ensure that residents have Significant industrial growth contributes to many avenues of community engagement in creating additional opportunities for employment dealing with issues relating to Council or general and economic development in the area.
    [Show full text]
  • KAPUNDA (Part)
    District Council of KAPUNDA (Part) HERITAGE SURVEY OF THE LOWER NORTH Y Department of Environment and Planning HERITAGE INVESTIGATIONS HERITAGE SURVEY OF THE LOWER NORTH (REGION 8 - SOUTH AUSTRALIA) PART TWO 8. D.C. KAPUNDA ITEM IDENTIFICATION SHEETS Prepared for the Heritage Conservation Branch of the Department of Environment and Planning by John Dallwitz and Susan Marsden of Heritage Investigations, assisted by Pe nny Baker, Pam Carlton and Paul Stark. Adelaide, 1983. Funded by the South Australian Heritage Committee and the Australian Heritage Commission (National Estate Programme , 1981/2) . PROJECT South HERITAGE SURVEY HERITAGE SURVEY REGION 8 Australian Item Ref. No. 1 Heritage ITEM IDENTIFICATION SHEET Act ITEM NAME: Office Use 1978-80 Steinthal Cemetery ITEM No. Former or other DOCKET No . ·· .. HERITAGE SIGNIFICANCE LOCAT.ION Address During 1856 and 1857 Pastor Christoph Schondorf with 180 Town nr Bethel members of the Moravian Brethren settled at a spot which Postcode they named Bethel . Steinthal Lutheran School was bui lt Section 328 on Peter Doecke ' s propert y 3 kilometres south east of Hundred Light Bethel , owing t o t he overcrowding of Pastor Schondorf' s County school at Bethel . In 1872 the Steinthal School was L.G.A. Kapunda extended and a church congregation was formed . The S . H.P. Reg i on 8 congregation prospered in the 1880s and 1890s but A.M.G. Re f. 6629- II amalgamated with t he Bet hel congregation in 1909. This little cemetery where Peter and George Doecke and t heir wives are buried is the only substantial relic at the SUBJECT complex.
    [Show full text]
  • Kapunda Copper Positive Progress
    C ASX Code: “THR” 24 July 2020 THOR MINING PLC Company Announcements Office ASX Securities Limited, Registered Numbers: 20, Bridge Street, United Kingdom 05276 414 Sydney, N.S.W. 2000 Australia 121 117 673 Registered Office: POSITIVE TEST RESULTS - KAPUNDA COPPER ISR PROJECT 58 Galway Avenue The directors of Thor Mining Plc (“Thor”) (AIM, ASX: THR) are pleased to advise additional MARLESTON, SA, 5035 Australia positive results from the initial hydrogeological drilling program at the Kapunda ISR (Insitu Recovery) copper project carried out by EnviroCopper Limited. Ph: +61 8 7324 1935 Fx: +61 8 8351 5169 EnviroCopper Limited, via subsidiary Environmental Copper Recovery Pty Ltd, holds an agreement to earn, in two stages, up to 75% of the rights over metals which may Email: [email protected] be recovered via in-situ recovery (“ISR”) contained in the Kapunda deposit, from Australian listed company, Terramin Australia Limited (“Terramin” ASX: “TZN”). Thor Website: hold a 25% interest in EnviroCopper Limited with rights to increase that interest to www.thormining.com 30%. Twitter @ThorMining HIGHLIGHTS: • The hydrogeological testing program was successful, with the tracer test showing Enquiries: fluid movement from well to well in a relatively short time period, providing Mick Billing Executive Chairman potential for cost saving through reducing the number of wells for optimum Thor Mining PLC production. +61 8 7324 1935 • Laboratory assays confirm previously reported portable XRF results along with some elevated gold levels. Nominated Advisor • Groundwater is acidic (pH 3.8 – 4.0) with naturally elevated copper levels, Samantha Harrison indicating potentially lower expected pre-conditioning operating costs, and Grant Thornton demonstrating that the copper is highly soluble.
    [Show full text]
  • The South Australian Mining Association and the Marketing Of
    tJ. l f TIIE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MINING ASSOCIATION AND THE MARKETING OF COPPER AND COPPER ORES L845 - LB77 A thesis presented for the degree of Master of Arts Mel Davies BA(Hons.) Kent Department of Economlcs The Universíty of Adel-aide March, 1977 . {t CONTENTS Pages i Summary Statement iv Acknowledgements v 1-51 CHAPTER 1 - FORMATION ORGANISATION GOAL S AND PRODUCTION Economic Mllíeu 1 Copper DiscoverY 4 6 The South Australían Míning AssocíaÈíon ' The Cost-Book and No-Liabílity System L6 Board of Dlrectors 19 27 Aíms and Objectíves . Productíon and DeveloPment 31 Period I, September, 1845 to March, f850 35 Períod II, April, 1850 to March, 1855 38 Period III, Apr1l, 1855 to March, 1861 42 Period IV, April, 1861 to March, 1869 44 Períod v, Apr1l, 1869 to LB74/75 48 Period VI-, L874175 to September, IB77 49 52-101 CHAPTER 2 - FOREIGN MARKXTING Direct Foreign Marketfng 57 Remittances - Banks and Agents 73 87 RemíÈtances - Exchange RaËes . Remíttances - SuPPIY of Goods 91 Private DrafÈs 94 Conclusíon 99 103-116 CHAPTE R3-DOMESTICMARKETING 103 Sales Èo Home Merchants Inter-Co loníal Purchasers 107 Local Manufacturers 109 Methods of Sale LLz LLl-L37 CHAPTER 4 - SMELTING 118 Smeltíng on Otrm Account Contracts and Sales to SmelÈing Companles L23 CHAPTER 5 - LAND TRANSPORT L38-L77 Bullock and Rail Transport 139 Contemporary Comment L4L Road Transport - Returns to Teamsters ].44 General Road Costs . L48 Supply of Road Transport L5l_ Haullers and Conflict 155 Deurand for Cartage L57 1845-1849 L57 1850-1851 158 1852-1856 159 1B5 7-1869 160 Raflway Charges 164 Land Transport Costs - Summary and Cornrnent.
    [Show full text]
  • Disclosure Document F0002643301
    Government of South Australia Department for Environment and Water 81-95 Waymouth Street DEW Reference Number F0002643301 Adelaide SA 5000 GPO Box 1047 Your ref: online form 7500389 Adelaide SA 5001 Australia Ph: +61 8463 6625 www.environment.sa.gov.au Dear I refer to your application pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act 1991 (the Act) received by the Department for Environment and Water (DEW) on 25 July 2019, seeking access to: "1. List of Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat destruction permits for the suburb of Hansborough. 2. List of Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat destruction permits including showing number of wombats for each permit issued for the following physical property addresses: -178 Ben Lomond Road, Hansborough SA 5374 -167 New/ands Road, Hansborough SA 5374 -Lot 155 Daveys Road, Hansborough SA 5374 Timeframe: 01/01/1980 to 25/07/2019" DETERMINATION Records of Destruction permits capable of extraction into a list have been held by the Department since 2000. A List of Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat destruction permits prior to 1 January 2000 was not able to be located through the Department's search process. As part of the search process it was identified that the permits to destroy wildlife are not recorded in the Departmental database by property suburb/town but are recorded by property hundred/s and section/s. It is acknowledged that the suburb/town of Hansborough is located across the Hundred of Julia Creek and the Hundred of Kapunda. As a DEW Accredited FOi Officer, I have determined that a list of all permits issued within the Hundred of Julia Creek and Hundred of Kapunda will meet the criteria of your request.
    [Show full text]
  • 90 Day Change@Sa Project Improving Road Transport for the Agriculture Industry
    90 DAY CHANGE@SA PROJECT IMPROVING ROAD TRANSPORT FOR THE AGRICULTURE INDUSTRY PROJECT 1 STATUS UPDATE DELIVERING OUTCOMES FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA DELIVERING OUTCOMES FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA The 90 Day Change@SA project ‘Improving Road Transport for the Agriculture Industry’ identified opportunities to improve efficiencies in the state’s agriculture sector and is delivering significant benefits to primary producers and transport operators. The project is a joint initiative of Primary Industries and Regions SA, Primary Producers SA and the Department of Planning, Transport and Infrastructure. $56 million IN INDUSTRY ESTIMATED BENEFIT FOR BOTH THE TRANSPORT INDUSTRY AND PRIMARY PRODUCERS AS AT JANUARY 2017 FREIGHT TRANSPORT ROUTE EXTENSIONS BY ADDRESSING THE UPGRADE OF ACCESS ‘MISSING LINKS’ TO A NUMBER OF VITERRA SITES HAS ALLOWED IMPROVED EFFICIENCY FOR PRODUCERS AT HARVEST ALLOWING THE MOVEMENT OF AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY AT NIGHT GIVES FARMING OPERATIONS LOG BOOK EXEMPTION REDUCED GREATER WORKLOAD FLEXIBILITY INTRODUCTION OF TRI-AXLE DOLLIES IN ROAD TRAIN COMBINATIONS PROJECTS 50 COMPLETED PROJECT STAKEHOLDERS Primary Producers SA commodity groups: Livestock and Rural Transporters Association of SA • Grain Producers SA South Australian Road Transport Association • Livestock SA South Australian Wine Industry Association • Horticulture Coalition of South Australia Australian Fodder Industry Association • Wine Grape Council of South Australia South Australian Police • South Australian Dairy Farmers Association The Agricultural Bureau of South Australia National Heavy Vehicle Regulator Regional Development Australia Viterra Local Government Associations Thomas Foods International Regional councils RAA Local Government of SA South Australian Freight Council Pork SA “We have together identified many “The 90 Day Project has been a huge benefit productivity issues for farmers in how they to rural South Australia and the economy transport produce, and together with PIRSA of this State and I strongly support this and DPTI worked towards solutions.
    [Show full text]