Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Eucla (/ j uː k l ə / YOU-cla) is the easternmost locality in Western Australia, located in the Goldfields-Esperance region of Western Australia along the Eyre Highway, approximately 11 kilometres (7 mi) west of the South Australian border. At the 2016 Australian census, Eucla had a population of 53. [2]
Eucla National Park is a national park in Western Australia, 1,238 kilometres (769 mi) east of Perth. The southern edge of the park borders a section of the Great Australian Bight. Other notable features of the park include Wilson Bluff and Delisser sandhills. The area is composed of mallee scrub and heath vegetation, typical of the southern coast.
Eucla Airport is an airstrip in Eucla, Western Australia. It has one runway that is 1369 m long. It has a Traffic Pattern Altitude of 305 m. [1] It is mostly used by the Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia, who completed 84 medical evacuations from the airstrip between 2009 and 2014. There is an ongoing campaign to upgrade the flood-prone ...
Eucla Division is one of five Land Divisions of Western Australia, part of the Cadastral divisions of Western Australia. It includes Eucla and Esperance and part of the Nullarbor Plain . It is located in the southern parts of the Goldfields-Esperance region.
UTC+08:45 is used in five places in Australia, including Border Village in South Australia, as well as Cocklebiddy, Eucla, Madura and Mundrabilla in Western Australia. It runs from just east of the South Australian border to shortly east of Caiguna. It is included in the tz database with designator Australia/Eucla.
The Eucla Basin is an artesian depression located in Western Australia and South Australia. The onshore-offshore depression covers approximately 1,141,000 km 2 and slopes southward to an open bay known as the Great Australian Bight. [1] It extends more than 500 km offshore and about 350 km inland from the coastline.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirect page. Redirect to: Eucla, Western Australia
The cliffs are subjected to high-energy waves from the Southern Ocean, and are receding northwards. The same formation extends from Eucla to Madura in Western Australia where it forms the scarp separating the Roe Plains from the Hampton Tableland, but in this section the coastline has moved away from the cliffs. The scarp in this area runs ...