Proposed site for whaling station, Tangalooma, 1952

Tangalooma, QLD
Australia
27° 10' 39.9792" S, 153° 22' 29.5752" E
24 January 1952
20 May 2011
20 May 2011

Location

Tangalooma, QLD
Australia
27° 10' 39.9792" S, 153° 22' 29.5752" E
Department of Harbours and Marine

Collection of the Queensland State Archives

500 feet to one inch

Proposed site for whaling station, Tangalooma, 1952. This map shows the location of the proposed Tangalooma whaling station to be built on Moreton Island. At a closer scale of 50 feet to one inch, the inset in the top right corner shows the proposed jetty. Surveyed by A.H. Krummel, it shows the water depths which extend out into Moreton Bay. These were measured in feet taken at low water datum. Chosen by the Australian Company Whale Products Pty Ltd, Tangalooma became the site of the largest whaling station in the southern hemisphere. It was selected for four main reasons: the site was sheltered from the ocean, it had a large supply of fresh water, it was on the migratory path of the Humpback whale and it was close to Brisbane. The first two humpback whales were killed in June 1952, but within ten years the whale population had been severely depleted and the station closed. In June 1963, the station was bought by property developers and turned into a resort where tourists now leave from the jetty on whale watching tours. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Mount Coot-tha dial, 1901

Mount Coot-tha, QLD
Australia
27° 29' 6.5832" S, 152° 57' 33.0876" E
1 January 1901
4 May 2011
4 May 2011

Location

Mount Coot-tha, QLD
Australia
27° 29' 6.5832" S, 152° 57' 33.0876" E
Queensland geographical journal

Collection of the University of Queensland Library

Mount Coot-tha dial, 1901. This copy of an engraved dial on the top of Mount Coot-tha appeared in the 1901-02 edition of the Queensland geographical journal. Prepared by W.H. Traill for the trustees of the of the Mount Coot-tha reserve, the paper was read before a meeting of the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia, Queensland, by the president Sir Hugh M. Nelson on 30 October 1901. The article states: ‘The lines radiating from the centre to the circumference of this plate, direct the eye straight toward the distant objects named on it. Little more than half of a circle is indicated on the dial. The hills, of which Mt Coot-tha is the projecting end of one spur, cut off the view of the other directions.’ Imagining oneself in the position of the dial, the author noted that on a clear day Sandgate and the ‘glimmering waters of Moreton Bay’ were visible. W.H. Trail, ‘Mount Coot-tha reserve,’ Queensland geographical journal, 17, 1901-02

Penal Settlement, St Helena Island, 1986. Slides by Michael Keniger, Collection of the University of Queensland Library.

Copyright © Michael Keniger and the Collection of the University of Queensland Library

Plan of the island of St Helena, HM Penal Establishment, Queensland, 1887

St Helena Island, QLD
Australia
27° 23' 26.088" S, 153° 14' 8.2428" E
1 January 1887
1 September 2010
1 September 2010

Location

St Helena Island, QLD
Australia
27° 23' 26.088" S, 153° 14' 8.2428" E
Brisbane
Government Printer
Collection of the National Library of Australia

A few surviving examples of Queensland colonial prisons have been heritage-listed and are now used for cultural tourism. St Helena Island, 1887. Collection of the National Library of Australia.

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