KALGOORLIE


Meaning of KALGOORLIE in English

town, south central Western Australia. Together with neighbouring Boulder to the south, it forms the principal settlement of the East Coolgardie goldfield, on the western fringe of the Nullarbor Plain and the Great Victoria Desert. Mining began with a rush following Paddy Hannan's discovery of gold in 1893, and the main deposit of deep, rich ores came to be known as the Golden Mile reef. Kalgoorlie developed as Hannan's Find; its present name is a corruption of the Aboriginal word galgurli, an indigenous scrub. Gold production peaked in 1903 and then, with the depletion of surface deposits, declined until 1929. Controlled production and subsequent improvements in mining and processing methods and gold prices brought a degree of stabilization until the early 1970s. By the end of 1978, only one major gold mine was still in operation. Rising prices in the 1980s, however, brought about a revival of gold mining and exploration. Nickel has now taken the place of gold as the region's chief mineral product. After the discovery (1966) of nickel ore at Kambalda (37 miles south), Kalgoorlie became a service centre for this developing field. It has a large nickel smelter, built since 1971. Other industries in the town include ore-treatment plants, foundries, engineering works, and breweries. Kalgoorlie lies on the Great Eastern Highway to Perth (374 miles west). It is served by the state rail system connecting to Esperance (260 miles south), and the Trans-Australian Railway to Port Augusta and Port Pirie in South Australia. Kalgoorlie is in an arid region and has, since 1903, been part of the Goldfield Water Supply System, bringing water from the Mundaring Weir on the Helena River, 15 miles east of Perth. The Western Australia School of Mines moved to Kalgoorlie in 1903. Pop. (1985 est.) town, 10,390; KalgoorlieBoulder urban area, 25,630.

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