Yudnamutana, South Australia

Yudnamutana (/jədnəˌmˈtɑːnə/ yəd-nə-moo-TAH-nə) is a historic mining valley in the Northern Flinders Ranges, located at Mount Freeling, North West of Arkaroola on the edge of the wilderness sanctuary. It is accessible by four-wheel drive from the south. Ancient mining sites give the opportunity for ecologically responsible bush camping, but no supplies are available. Walks across the crests of the mountains deliver splendid views over the Flinders Ranges into the plains of the outback. The northern pass hosts black rocks of magnetite.

Yudnamutana
South Australia
Copper smelters of Yudnamutana in 1910
Yudnamutana is located in South Australia
Yudnamutana
Yudnamutana
Coordinates30°10′0″S 139°17′0″E / 30.16667°S 139.28333°E / -30.16667; 139.28333
Established1862-1865 and 1903-1912[1][2]
Location
Exotic outback vegetation on the crests east of Yudnamutana.

History edit

Indigenous people edit

This area was inhabited by the Adnyamathanha tribe of Indigenous Australians for millennia before the arrival of Europeans. They were Stone Age hunter-gatherers and inhabited much of the area to the south.[citation needed]

European settlement edit

This area was first settled by pastoralists in the 1850s. Prospectors followed shortly after, hoping for another Burra style deposit.

Mining edit

A copper deposit was found, in 1859, by A. Frost and H. Gleeson.[3] [4] Yudnamutana was the site of an early South Australia copper mine. First mined in 1862, it reached fame in Adelaide shortly afterwards when a block of ore weighing 4 tonnes (3.9 long tons) was paraded through the streets. Copper concentrates were hauled to Port Augusta in drays by animals along rough tracks – a distance of about 300 kilometres (190 miles). This limiting factor affected the company's profitability. A drought in 1869 forced the closure of the mine because not enough water was available for animals that worked at the mine.[2]

Another attempt was made at mining the site at the start of the 20th century. Transport was less costly this time – by dray for only 100 kilometres (62 miles) to the Central Australia Railway at Farina, then by train. The mine's proprietors tried to further reduce the cost of transport by instigating a road train to Farina railway station in 1909. However, the rough terrain and mechanical breakdowns soon ended the scheme.

A small smelter was constructed at Farina in 1909 or 1910, but it closed after only a few experiments and was demolished in 1938.[5] The mine itself closed again by 1912. All that remains of this settlement are two large boilers, some mine shafts, some dugouts and the cemetery.[2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sprigg, R.C., 1984: Arkaroola-Mount Painter in the Northern Flinders Ranges, S.A: The Last Billion Years. Lutheran Publishing House, Adelaide
  2. ^ a b c The Flinders Ranges – Glovebox Guide, Australian Geographic, 2000, p. 147, ISBN 1-86276-044-6
  3. ^ Yudnamutana, South Australia Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Journal of the Mineralogical Society of South Australia, Accessed 16 November 2007
  4. ^ Record of the mines of South Australia Internet Archive, Canadian Libraries
  5. ^ Donovan & Associates/Austral Archaeology (1995). Flinders Ranges Heritage Survey. Adelaide: Department of Environment and Natural Resources South Australia. p. 1‑27.

External links edit