White Cliffs Opal field and township is located approximately 95 kilometres North North West of the township of Wilcannia in NSW. Wilcannia is located on the Darling River and Barrier Highway some 192 kilometres east of Broken Hill or 980 kilometres west of Sydney in Parish of Kirk, County of Yungnulgra.
Read MoreThe township of Lightning Ridge NSW, originally named Wallangulla, is located 750 kilometres North West of Sydney and just off the Castlereagh Highway in the Counties of Finch and Narran.
Read MoreThe Queensland boulder opal fields occupy the largest or most geographically disperse opal occurrences throughout Western Queensland. The area goes from the Yowah opal district near to the NSW border and 70 kilometres west of Cunnamulla (some 1250 kilometres west of Brisbane), to as far north as Winton in Central Western Queensland, 180 kilometres north west of Longreach or 900 kilometres west of Rockhampton. As mentioned earlier, the first discovery of opal occurred at Listowel Downs on Blackall Station in 1869. In 1870 opal was discovered 100km to the east in “Barcoo” country not far west from Charleville, by Rev WB Clark, reported to the Royal Society of NSW in 1872 and displayed in an exhibition in the Vienna Museum of Natural History. In 1879 Herbert William Bond successfully floated an opal mining Company in London based on the ownership or leasing arrangements of several of the central Queensland opal mines.
Read MoreAndamooka township is located 640 kilometres by road north of Adelaide and approximately 110 kilometres north east from Woomera on the road to Roxby Downs and almost on the western shore of Lake Torrens in South Australia. The opal was discovered in “floaters” after an outback thunderstorm at what is known as one-tree hill or Treloars Hill by Sam Brooks and Roy Shepherd. They took the stones to the station owner at Andamooka Homestead, a Mr Foulis. The first miners were Treloar and Evans who in 1933 produced about ₤962 worth of stones.
Read MoreThe township of Coober Pedy is situated on the edge of the Stuart Range in South Australia, 838 kilometres by road north of Adelaide. The historical literature records that Jim Hutchinson was leading a prospecting party looking for gold on behalf of the New Colorado Prospecting syndicate and investigating quartz reefs near Lake Phillipson. On their return journey, camping at the foot of the Stuart Range at Carrygallama Creek, the men were out searching for water. Young Willie Hutchinson, at the age of fifteen years was reported to have found opal on the 1st February 1915. The syndicate pegged the first claim on the 9th February. It has been suggested that the name “Coober Pedy” was derived from the Aboriginal “Kupa” (or Goober) meaning “uninitiated person or white man” and “piti” meaning waterhole or hole. Hence “kupa piti” a “white man’s hole” or “burrow” which could have referred to miners living underground in dugouts.
Read MoreMintabie township is located 40 kilometres by road west of Marla on the Stuart Highway, some 160 kilometres south of the South Australian border with the Northern Territory. It is 270 kilometres north of Coober Pedy or 1100 kilometres north of Adelaide.
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