
Satellite photo of the Eyre Peninsula bushfires, taken on January 11 2005
'Eyre Peninsula' is a triangular
peninsula in
South Australia. It is bounded on the east by
Spencer Gulf, the west by the
Great Australian Bight, and the north by the
Gawler Ranges. It is named after explorer
Edward John Eyre who explored some of it in
1839-
1841. The coastline was first explored by
Matthew Flinders in
1801-
1802. The west coast was also visited by
Nicolas Baudin at around the same time.
The peninsula was explored by a party led by
John Charles Darke in 1844, who was killed by local aborigines on the return to Port Lincoln.
The main towns are
Port Lincoln on the southern point,
Whyalla and
Port Augusta at the north east, and
Ceduna at the northwest. They are connected by the
Eyre Highway across the inland edge, and the
Flinders Highway and
Lincoln Highway along the west and east coasts.
The major industry is
farming -
cereal crops,
sheep, and
cattle in the drier north and more water-intensive activities such as
dairy farming and a growing
wine industry in the south. Many coastal towns have commercial fishing, in particular Port Lincoln, had a large
tuna-fishing fleet, which is gradually being converted to
fish farming in bays along the coast.
There is a commercial
nephrite jade mine near
Cowell.
Iron ore is mined in the hills near
Iron Knob inland from Whyalla, to where it is transported by rail for
smelting.
National Parks located on the Eyre peninsula include
Lincoln National Park,
Coffin Bay National Park,
Gawler Ranges National Park, and several conservation parks and reserves like
Acraman Creek Conservation Park.
In January
2005, the Eyre Peninsula was the site of Australia's deadliest
bushfire in 20 years, killing 9 people.
External links
★
Terraserver.com navigable satellite map of the Eyre Peninsula.
★