DARWIN


Meaning of DARWIN in English

capital and chief port of Northern Territory, Australia. It is situated on a low peninsula northeast of the entrance to its harbour, Port Darwin, a deep inlet of Clarence Strait of the Timor Sea. The harbour was found in 1839 by John Stokes, surveyor aboard the ship HMS Beagle, and it was named after the British naturalist Charles Darwin. The site was not settled until 1869 and was known as Palmerston until it was renamed after the harbour in 1911, when the territory went from South Australian to Australian Commonwealth administration. Darwin received a stimulus from the development of air services during the 1930s and from its use as a fueling and military base in World War II. It was severely bombed by the Japanese in 1942 but was extensively rebuilt. It was gazetted a city in 1959. A cyclone in 1974 damaged or destroyed nearly all of the city; two-thirds of the residents were evacuated. With government assistance Darwin was rebuilt a second time, and it is now one of the most modern cities in Australia. The city is a service centre for a developing pastoral and mining hinterland; its economy is also dependent on government business, tile and brickmaking, fruit canning, meat-packing, sawmilling, and the export of cattle, rice, uranium ore, and some pearl shell. Darwin is also the terminus of east- and west-coast shipping routes, of the railway to Birdum (316 road miles southeast), of the Stuart Highway to Alice Springs (954 miles southeast), of the overland telegraph to Adelaide, S. Aus., and of a submarine cable linked to Great Britain. Pop. (1991 prelim.) 69,809.

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