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The station occupies an area of about 10,117 square kilometres (3,906 sq mi) or 2.5 million acres in the remote south east of Western Australia, making it the largest sheep station in Australia. It is owned by the Jumbuck Pastoral Company. [1] The station is an amalgamation of the Pondana, Rawlinna and Vanesk leases. [2]
John Andrew Henry Forrest AO (born 18 November 1961), nicknamed Twiggy, is an Australian businessman. He is best known as the former CEO (and current non-executive chairman ) of Fortescue Metals Group (FMG), and has other interests in the mining industry and in cattle stations .
Jumbuck Pastoral Company is an Australian company that operates numerous cattle stations and sheep stations in New South Wales, the Northern Territory, South Australia and Western Australia. It is one of the largest landowners in Australia and the biggest wool grower. As at 2013, Jumbuck controlled over 50,000 square kilometres (19,305 sq mi ...
SYDNEY -- Media speculation has suggested that Andrew "Twiggy" Forrest's Fortescue Metals Group (ASX: FMG.AX) and Gina Rinehart's Hancock Prospecting could do a deal to share infrastructure, which ...
There's the recognizability factor-if a logo is too complex or unrelated to its brand, it risks being glanced over without communicating its 15 Corporate Logos That Contain Subliminal Messages ...
This is a list of the largest stations in Australia, which includes stations with an area in excess of 4,000 km 2 (1,500 sq mi). All of the largest pastoral leases are located in the states of South Australia (SA), Queensland (QLD) and Western Australia (WA); or in the Northern Territory (NT).
Rawlinna comes under the jurisdiction of the City of Kalgoorlie-Boulder, despite being situated 380 km (240 mi) to the east. Australia's largest operating sheep station , Rawlinna Station , covering an area of 1,011,714 hectares (2,500,000 acres) – about the area of the Sydney conurbation – adjoins the railway line.
The station was owned or co-owned by the Burt family since the 1880s, but was put up for sale in 2013. [1] The property was acquired by Andrew Forrest in 2015 along with Minilya Station for an estimated A$ 10 million, [17] and is now spelt Brickhouse Station. In 2017 Forrest obtained approval to put 90 ha (220 acres) under irrigation to grow ...