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Yaamba Queensland | |||||||||||||||
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![]() Worker at the controls at the Yaamba pumping station, 1935 | |||||||||||||||
Coordinates | 23°08′28″S150°22′25″E / 23.1411°S 150.3736°E /-23.1411; 150.3736 (Yaamba (town centre)) | ||||||||||||||
Population | 51 (2021 census)[1] | ||||||||||||||
• Density | 0.772/km2 (1.998/sq mi) | ||||||||||||||
Postcode(s) | 4704 | ||||||||||||||
Area | 66.1 km2 (25.5 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||
Time zone | AEST (UTC+10:00) | ||||||||||||||
Location |
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LGA(s) | Shire of Livingstone | ||||||||||||||
State electorate(s) | Mirani | ||||||||||||||
Federal division(s) | Capricornia | ||||||||||||||
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Yaamba is a rural town andlocality in theLivingstone Shire,Queensland, Australia.[2][3] In the2021 census, the locality of Yaamba had a population of 51 people.[1]
Yaamba is bounded by theFitzroy River to the south and by its tributary Alligator Creek to the east. The town is in the south of the locality beside the river.[4]
TheBruce Highway enters the locality from the east (Milman) where it is locally known as Yaamba Road. It passes to the immediate north of the town, after which it is locally known as Kunwarara Road, and exits to the west (Canoona).[4]
TheNorth Coast railway line also passes through the locality from east to west, roughly parallel and north of the highway.[4] The town is served byYaamba railway station (23°07′55″S150°22′03″E / 23.1319°S 150.3675°E /-23.1319; 150.3675 (Yaamba railway station)).[5]
The land is predominantly used forgrazing. There are two clusters of housing in the town, one cluster is around the highway and railway station; the other is further south nearer the river.[4]
TheDarumbal (Tarumbul, Tharoombool) language region includes the city ofRockhampton extending south towards Raglan Creek and north towards the Styx River and inland along the Broad Sound Ranges.[6]
The area takes its name from the pastoral run taken up in the 1860s by Peter Fitzallan MacDonald. It is believed to be anAboriginal word meaningmain camping ground.[2]
Town lots were sold in Yaamba in November 1860.[7]
In July 1872, a Rockhampton architectJohn William Wilson found a largesalt water crocodile known as Big Ben dying in Alligator Creek (it had been shot). Big Ben had originally inhabited the lower reaches of the Fitzroy River but had been frightened by the shipping in the river and had retreated to Alligator Creek. In October that year, Wilson displayed Big Ben and some other crocodiles in Rockhampton's Theatre Royal. Big Ben was 22 feet3+1⁄2 inches (6.795 m) long and an analysis of his stomach revealed human bones; localAboriginal people had long believed Big Ben had eaten people and held acorroborree to celebrate his death.[8][9][10][11][12]
Yaamba State School opened in 1867. It closed on 12 April 1940.[13] It was located on the north-western corner of Iris Street and Yaamba Siding Road (approx23°07′58″S150°22′01″E / 23.1328°S 150.3670°E /-23.1328; 150.3670 (Yaamba State School (former))).[14]
On Saturday 16 January 1926, theYaamba pumping station was officially opened by theMayor of Rockhampton Theodore William Kingel and Minister of RailwaysJames Larcombe. The purpose of the pumping station was to supply the rapidly-growingCity of Rockhampton with a reliable freshwater supply from the Fitzroy River, as the lower reaches of the Fitzoy River closer to Rockhampton were tidal and the water salty. The water from the Yaamba pumping station was then piped to a filtration plant at Mount Charlton (inThe Caves) before being distributed through the city.[15][16] The cost of the completed project was £400,000,[16] a huge amount at that time, and considerably higher than the estimated cost of £114,000 when the project was approved by the Rockhampton City Council in 1914. Due toWorld War I, the need to raise the funds to build the new supply, and ongoing public opinion that a cheaper solution must be possible, construction did not commence until 24 January 1924 when James Larcombe turned the first sod.[17] After theWorld War II, it became clear that the continued growth of Rockhampton combined with periods of drought would require more water than what was currently being sourced from Yaamba. While there was the possibility of a second pipeline from Yaamba, there had been ongoing problems with the build-up of sediment in the very long first pipeline reducing the volume of water, which were difficult and expensive to fix. Commencing in 1969, a barrage was built across the Fitzroy River in Rockhampton (betweenWandal andPark Avenue) to prevent the salty tidal flows extending further up the river with the new Glenmore pumping station and water treatment works inParkhurst completed in 1971.[18][19] Yaamba pumping station is no longer in use. It is on the western side of Auckland Street (23°08′38″S150°22′06″E / 23.1438°S 150.3682°E /-23.1438; 150.3682 (Yaamba pumping station)).[20]
In the2016 census, the locality of Yaamba had a population of 62 people.[21]
In the2021 census, the locality of Yaamba had a population of 51 people.[1]
There are no schools in Yaamba. The nearest government primary school is Milman State School in neighbouringMilman to the east. The nearest government secondary school is Glenmore State High School inKawana in Rockhampton.[4]
Yaamba Cemetery is on the south-eastern corner of Iris Street and Yaamba Siding Road (23°08′00″S150°22′06″E / 23.1333°S 150.3682°E /-23.1333; 150.3682 (Yaamba Cemetery)).[22] It is managed by theLivingstone Shire Council.[23]