Search Results
Location | Library | Shelf no | Status | Year | Volume | Copy |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maritime | Western Australian Museum | 623.803 MAR | Available | |||
Maritime | Western Australian Museum | 623.803 MAR | Available | |||
Maritime | Western Australian Museum | 623.803 MAR | Available | |||
Maritime | Western Australian Museum | 623.803 MAR | Available | |||
Maritime | Western Australian Museum | 623.803 MAR | Available | |||
Maritime | Western Australian Museum | 623.803 MAR | Available | |||
Maritime | Western Australian Museum | 623.803 MAR | Available |
Gerry Westernberg started building warships to the 1/600 scale when he was in his early teens and then one day purchased a set of plans for the modified Leander Class cruiser HMAS Perth (I) that were drawn to 1/192 scale. This combined with the discovery of balsa wood set him on the path of accurate scale model scratch building that has seen him build well over 100 ships during his career as a ship modeler.
Gerry has always kept to the same scale which has had its good and bad points. The scale is large enough to provide the opportunity for detail but small enough that he does not have to house them in a huge shed.
If he is building a ship from a class of ships, he will often choose one that sank, as a way of paying tribute to those who went down with the ship. Unfortunately, this can be quite challenging, as there is usually a small number of photographs that he can use as a reference. he uses photos as much as he can to inform his model building, as he has found over the years that many plans are drawn incorrectly and this is usually only discovered when you are half-way through the build.
Gerry built the Fremantle World War II diorama in xxxx and exhibited it in the Naval Seapower in Minature exhibition at the Shipwreck Museum in Fremantle between February and April in 2021.
It is a complete diorama of the secret World War II submarine base in Fremantle Harbour, 1942 - 1945, with two submarine tenders, a tanker, three workboats and eight submarines. ...
Soela
Spondylus S05/82/12; Amusium S05/82/12; Pteriids S05/82/01; [Pteriids S05/82/58]; Ostreids (Dendostrea?) S05/82/08; Malleus S05/82/59; Pteriid & Ostrea (?Dendostrea?) S05/82/59[?]
[...]
21-XII-83
[Sydney airport, met colleagues. worked on specimens at Uni NSW]
22-XII-83
[Notes on specimen queries]
Wed 11-i-84
NSW State Fisheries Div'n [Extensive descriptions of the following specimens, a Saccostrea commercialis from Way Way Bay; Ostrea/?Dendostrea from Bare I, Botany Bay (3 spec.); Saccostrea cont. Notes on specimen requests]
16-i-84
SkyWest Terminal. 7.00am - depart for Barrow I. Arrived just before lunch - after lunch in mess went out in chartered vessel Biggada (Alec Norris skipper) to mooring area for tankers. Marked by pencil buoys - some of these were raised - had short swim around them while divers were releasing chains from buoys to be removed & attaching them to "new" buoys. Buoys brought in to landing & I was left to collect from them. Much growth - oysters barnacles - sponges ascidians - pteriids etc. To my dissappointment no noticeable difference between Dendostrea folium specimens at different depths below water level.
17-i-84
[List of vessel crew]
...
> 27th August 1967 (Sunday)
Left Nedlands at approx 12.00 : picked up maps at museum and then off. Filled up vehicle completely with 25 1/4 gals. Marchagee. Filled up with 9 1/2 gals. Turned to Morawa in 3-Springs, getting dark but decided to drive in to the Ederga and camp in the dark. Meal at Morawa. Drove out on Yalgoo road. What changes in the last 10 years. Roads and farms everywhere. Ederga R. find campsite in the dark night in Bert Maine's exposure from which the "Gullewa Vertebra" came. Had warm drink. Clouds clearing, dew beginning, tent up. Turned in at 11.30 hrs.
> 28th August 1967 (Monday)
Listened to VSQ and let them know we were out again. John Flower gave me the Sched ties for Meekatharra. Walked down to exposure gave it a v. close examination. Nothing new, decided that I will sieve exposures after making sure that this is Bert's. Bob will walk upstream to Ederga Springs & see what he can make of it. Walked back to vehicles to get news and came up on Sched to VKS and let Thelma know we are in the area and will listen on 40.10 at 0700 for any telegrams. Back to river. Walked downstream past fenceline to where stream broadens out , turned back. Walked over top of small hill on E bank of River to see if there are any sediments. No luck at all. All metamorphosed pyrites, schists, vein quartz etc. Hopeless.
Hill, in former times there must have been an edge to this broad valley. Will have to go out to the hills right over to the west & see what we can see there. Lunch at 2.15 Bob back from his walk to Ederga Springs. He did not quite get there. He met Neil Mitchell and told him that I am camped at my usual place & would be calling to see him later in the day. We found no fossils but frustrated because the deposits look as though they should be good.
3.30 Drove out to Ederga Springs and walked out due west of the exposure not seen by Bob. Drove over to Barnong and was invited to stay for the evening meal. Judy in good form, just missed Geoff & Carol Bolton who had been there to stay & left the day before. Judy spent evening showing her rock collection including a great deal of nice fossil bood[?] from the Kennedy Range. Looks as though it could be worth a visit. Neil has a pilot on the station at present mustering (at 400 ft! - 4200 acres) they are trying it as an experiment & it seems to be working. I think that we may hire the aircraft to look at exposures - $25 per hour.
Excitement. News this evening announced that the Govt. had approved the Cultural Centre project which our committee has put up. The museum building will be completed by the end of 1969. Back at camp.
> 29th August 1967 (Tuesday)
Camped at Ederga. A misty morning after a heavy dew. Bright sunlight & clear sky. Tried Sched with Meekatharra - theirs is so clumsy for a station like ours that I switched over to VSQ on S360 at 7.30. 1 telegram.
GEORGE PHONE 284411 PERTH
WONDERFUL NEWS MANY THANKS TO DOEPEL AND YOURSELF STOP PLEASE SEND 8WNX MEEKATHARRA TELEGRAPHIC ADDRESS SIR THOMAS : RIDE.
When I get time I will send to SIR THOMAS MEAGHER MV KOOLAMA DERBY DELIGHTED NEWS NEW BUILDING APPROVED STOP PLEASE ACCEPT THANKS OF MUSEUM STAFF AND SELF FOR ALL YOUR SUCCESSFUL GUIDANCE DAVID
Looked over maps and decided on a flight plan. Bob most difficult over it - he is unable to make up his mind what to fly. In the end I worked out a plan which takes in all the upper parts of the Wooramel and the Gascoigne which cut through Tertiary sediments. Drove over to Barnong and fixed things up with the pilot (Harry Van Wees) who phoned Perth & made a booking. Went to Gullewa. Photos of Red-backed Spider [C4005-9]. Back to the Ederga, 2 photos of Gense[?] on the way, he maintained 25 mph for over a mile [C4010-11].
Sent telegram: TERRELL PHONE 284411 PERTH
HAVE BOOKED AIRCRAFT 21ST PLEASE CONFIRM WITH MURCHISON AIRCHARTER HAY ST. : RIDE.
Set mist net over the Ederga. Bob walked over south of camp and found a wonderful artifact, like a stone bullroarer. Had a good meal and turned in about 22.30 hrs, a clear warm night.
> 30th August 1967 (Wednesday)
A clear crisp morning with the smoke lying low like mist. Nothing for me at either Meekatharra or Kalgoorlie beyond a query for VSQ about someone who might have been in our party - but he was not. Nothing in the mist net. Bob caught a gecko in firewood, preserved in formalin.
Drove out over the other side of the Ederga to see if we could get to the breakaways seen a few miles to the East. These look as though they could be sediments.
Telegram sent to TERRELL PHONE 284411 PERTH
NO REPLY YET MY REQUEST FOR SIR THOMAS TELEGRAPHIC ADDRESS : RIDE.
Walked over to the breakaways - a complete dead loss, these are diorite. All the hills are schists, quartz, diorite and generally much metamorphosed. Took 2 colour photos of the Ederga looking SE from a hill about a mile south of the road [C4012,3]. After lunch drove back up to the Yalgoo road to walk out the sediments in the main channel of the river.
Telegram from Bob Terrell. 255 pm 30th, Perth.
DR RIDE. 8WNX SIR THOMAS MEAGHER ARRIVES DERBY 1ST WYNDHAM 4TH SEPT ADDRESS MV KOOLAMA AT EITHER PORT STOP NO COMMUNICATIONS AT SEA : TERRELL.
While walking out exposures light aircraft flew over and dropped message from Harry Van Wees to say that he will stand by at Barnong from 7am for the charter. No luck at the exposures. Back to camp at nightfall. Took down the mist net, too windy.
> 31st August 1967
Camped at Ederga on Barnong Stn. Drove out to Barnong at 07.15 but pilot not yet there due to having to refuel at Yalgoo. Sent telegram to Sir Thomas Meagher through VSQ.
Aeroplane arrived at 08.30 but we delayed take off because of drizzle and low cloud. Did not appear to be any better in the N.W. so took off at 9.00 in Piper Comanche. Cruised railway line at Wurarsa. Woolgorong [2C ] at Murchison bridge Nototherium locality. Flew on up river. Good exposures between the bridge at Billabalong homestead. These will be worth doing. Probably best done from the northern end. 0935. Nothing worthwhile between Billabalong homestead and Twin Peaks. Good pitch in bend of river (Western side) closest to Meeberrie Homestead. Rain closing in. Decided to go up the road to the testing at Byro. Mt Narryer, Byro. No exposures visible. Innovealdy[?] on Wooramel River. Turned up river from NE boundary of Byro. Mogil [?] SP. Flew along river , v. poor exposures to Irrida Pool then N. to Landor. Flew downstream along Gascoigne R. to Mt. Puckford. Excellent exposures, flew and took photos. Seems to be limestones[?] underlying inclusion cement [?]. Well worth a visit [C ], on to Mt. Steere, a strange looking hill on the N. side of the river, took photos [C ]. 11.10 Strange looking breakaway near Yinnietharra, 11.20 Mt Sandiman. 11.45 Reached Merlinleigh Homestead. [C ]. Flew down along the Kennedy Range, seems to be a sandstone in lower part. The thing must dip because as you go further south[?] it rises in the range. Possible that this is the Permian and the paler beds overlying it are the Merlinleigh Sandstone. If so, these are excellent exposures in the vicinity of the homestead. Turned East towards Lyons River homestead. Kennedy River seems to be covered on top with dunes & spinifex. Lyons R. Homestead. Flew S.W. to Gascoyne, very flat no good exposures here. Pilot says same all the way down to Carnarvon. Photos at Weedarra homestead. Left river setting course for Wooramel at Callatharra. Fuel flow began to drop off and loss of engine power - down to 50%. Electric fuel pump makes no difference. CARY Downs airstrip within easy reach. Down at Cary Downs 12.00 hrs. Harry and I walked over to the homestead, noone in - all at the races. Eventually found a gin who said she would get us something to eat if we needed it. Walked back to plane and called through to D.C.A. asked for another plane for Carnarvon.
Plane arrived (another Comanche) and we took off for Barnong about 3.00 leaving the u.s. machine on the ground. Had a ride to end at Barnong & drove back to the camp. Shot rabbit for evening meal and decided to go North next morning to look at the exposures at Mt. Puckford and at Merlinleigh. Will do those at Billabalong some time later.
> 1Sept 1967 (Friday)
Camped at Ederga. A beautiful sunny morning. Packed up and left for Mullewa at 10.45 Mullewa : 20 1/2 gals. super, checked tyres, had lunch, left at 1400 hrs for Billabalong Crossing. 95 milepost from Mullewa. 908.7 Sand dune, first seen near road, close to a large claypan full of water, red dune. Narrayer turnoff. Muggan turnoff on left. Empty tank. 154 miles on tea full 10 gal tank. Filled up with 2 jaeercans. This seems to be a normal consumption with trailer on gravel roads in speeds of 50-55 mph. 160 m. Road junction. Byro homestead, looked at exposures in bed of creek south of homestead. seems to be poor exposures c. 6" of Murchison cement seem no obviously tertiary exposures. Occasional quartz slaus[?] and Permian breakaways away to the West. Should have come into the 10 mile Carnarvon sheet - getting dark. Turnoff on left to Stations on the coast at Shark Bay, Woodleigh & Carsla. Innouendy turnoff. Wooramel River, poor exposures of a light grey stone - did not stop in dark. Turnoff near Gascoyne Jun. road at signpost to Glenburgh 2 miles, Dalgety Downs 14 m.. Gate signpost D.Downs 12 miles road goes right along a fenceline to Glenburgh straight on to D. Downs. Camped in a creek alongside Precambrian hills of quartz. 21 hrs. Warm night, howling wind from N.
> 2nd Sept 1967 (Saturday)
Camped between Glenburgh & Dalgety Downs.
8008.1 Sched with USQ. Charlie back we are getting through very well "Booming"! Telegram to Margaret - husen[?] closed.
RIDE PHONE 862242 PERTH WORKING VICINITY LANDOR PLEASE INFORM TERRELL MONDAY
LOVE : DEE.
It was a warm night, rain about 5am just a sprinkle but enough to make me pull a groundsheet over. Breakfast in a dried creek bed, surrounded by Precambrian outcrops. Off to Dalgety Downs at 10.00. Dalgety Downs homestead : Eastern boundary of Dalgety Downs, turned north along a mill track along the west side of the boundary fence. Passed one mill and then an old disused well with pole & windlass & then on to a corner in the paddock nearest to Mt. Puckford. No gate. Decided to go back to Landor because we could mess around with fence lines and get nowhere.Arrived at Landor. Noone in except a cook with hair in curling pins.
We asked if the race course was on the road to Mt Augustus (obviously everyone at the Landor Races) "I don't know" but if you follow the tracks" - I asked if one of the gates led to Yimmietharra (to get to the river). "He was asking me because I don't know"!!
Drove to the Races, met Ainsley & David Stedman of Dalgety Downs. Ainsley v. hospitable ! wants us to stay for the party. Saw their boss Puckford lose, lets hope the Mount of that name does better for us. A chap called McDonald mentioned fossil wood but Bob let him get away. Will try to catch him tomorrow. Also met Will . Ainsley gave us a map of directions to River.
Left races. Landor Homestead. Across river turn rt off Meekatharra Rd to Dalgetty Downs. reach Dalgetty Downs boundary. Go through run through. Turn N along the fence line past mill. Just before reaching old well go through gate in fence (this is still Dalgetty Downs). Left trailer, put in jerrican.
Continued staying along the fence line for about 1/2 mile & thendiagonally across the paddock. Full of dead snake wood. Light going fast. Go to Gregory creek : high breakaways. this is a tributary of the River and joins it just near the Mt Puckford sal. Camped. Mud-map provided by Ainsley Stedman. [Map of area].
Had a quick look at the section before light failed altogether. The top is grey calcareous and sometimes siliceous cement - a duricrost about 5-10 feet thick. Underneath it is a softer material. Sometimes I suspect a breakdown product in the latugertin[?] profile, other times there appears to be bedded sandstone. Bob found gneiss (Precambrian) in the bottom. If this is Tertiary it is probably Pre-Miocene but does not look terribly good for fossils. Reminds me very much of the Oakover beds.
Very tired. Turned in at 20.00 hrs.
> 3rd Sept (Sunday)
Camped above Gregory Creek/Gascoyne River (see below) in Dalgetty Downs Eastern Boundary. Rabbits, Dingo, Marloo, Emu.
[4031-2] camp.[4033-4] Breakaways below camp showing gneissic basement rock
[4035-6] Relationship of mudstones & sandstones to gneiss.
Walked on to Mt. Puckford to try to reach the breakaway at junction of Gregory Creek. Climbed Mt. Puckford. Photos [4101-2], back i.e. S towards camp to show relationship of beds to the river.[4102] back (N) towards Mt. Gascoyne. View from top shows that our camp is approx 4 miles (1 hr 10 mins. straight walk) from Mt Puckford and on the river about 1/2 miles N of junction of river and Gregory Creek. The exposure of sediments from a peninsula bounded on the East by Gregory Creek and the Gascoyne & in the West by a claypan. Walked straight back to camp, time 1hr 10 mins. After lunch walked S. along the river [C4104] Exposures S. of camp. The top beds of silica seem to overlie directly an evaporite of platelike al spicular crystals with massive opaline silica deposited within it. Sequence seems to be: [Sketch of deposits from Duricrost of silica down to gneiss at base.]
Collected blocks of mudstones about 4 ft. above the gneiss 1/2 mile N of camp for pollen estimation by B E Baker. [4105] Snakewood near camp. Packed up and drove back to race-track to see if we could get fuel. Made camp across road from racetrack.
> Monday 4th Sept. 1967
Camped on other side of road from Landor Racecourse. Drove over to racecourse to see Ainsley and David Stedman. Ainsley was able to arrange for 8 gals of fuel for us enough to get us across to Gascoyne R.
Flat tyre soon after leaving.
Turn off Meekatharra Rd to Dalgetty Downs. Bidy of Dalgetty Downs - trailer brake gone. Check at mill & holding paddock before D.D. homestead. The usual sequence of loess-like blocks on the top, red grit and green grit below repeated here. Only about 3 feet of exposures & no sign of fossils. Remarkable how uniform this sequence is over 1000s of squ miles of W.A. from the Oakover (DeGrey) to the Ederga. Bed of river, had lunch [C4106,7] Dalgetty Brook, trib of Gascoyne.
Mooloo Downs turnoff. This is east of the fenceline of the Dairy Creek homestead paddock and not West as mapped in the 10 mile series. Dairy Creek homestead N. of river. Crossed river and joined Mullewa Rd. Low grey breakaways about a mile away, look like Tertiary or Quaternary sediments probably those mapped as Naddara from McWhere et al.
Tertiary equivalent of Oakover ; BMR Bull Courtney[?]. Drove over to iken[?] clearing & kangaroo on way [B&W]. He kept up 30 mph for a considerable distance (Marloo, m.).
[4108] These are a ring of breakaways around the southern edge of a clay pan feature of crabhole country and clay. They consist of evaporates containing[?] silicified bands of a thin silica on the top. they seem to be intrdiate[?] in character of deviant form[?]. Between the evaporates of Lake Baker and those of the Gregory Creek (or Oakover) beds. I think that in these sands a tentative guating[?] eye is justified. No frills.
Back on road i.e. next breakaway is 1 mile S. of road.
Arrived at Gascoyne Junc. 281/2 gals of fuel. Got hold of mechanic and stripped off both trailer brake-drums. These are a mess. Both sets of bearings are very dry and it is clear that the whole set-up is most inefficient; the toggle only expands one of the shoes and these are very small indeed. Merv Johns the mechanic says that he thinks that they came off an English make of car, possibly a Vauxhall or a Morris Minor ! One toggle cam has pulled out altogether - a complete mystery. I left the other side in and he will try to copy it. Repacked the bearings and reassembled trailer. Merv meanwhile repaired the tyre. Becoming very clear that for working use Michelins are no good because of their very thin walls. The steel only runs through the tread and they are useless where stakes are liable to go through. Put a small patch on the wall but it really needs welding. No small criss-cross patches available.
Had a drink and left the junction at 22.10. Lyme River/Mt. Sandiman boundary. Camped in stunted mulga for night. A clear cool but not cold night. 0030hrs. NOTE: In Gascoyne Jun. met a couple of stone collectors who said that a small party of Fremantle Rock Collectors (some club or other) had been through and that they had a fossil"flying lizard", Address of the person with the fossil: Richard House, 3 Dunkley Ave., Applecross. He will be in Perth on the 11th.
> 5th Sept (Tuesday)
Camped at Mt. Sandiman Stn south of homestead. 6.45 up. A lovely morning, slight wind from East. Sched: Spoke to Ruth & Margaret Hogg. No sign of Athol's toolkit. Charlie says that he has now rectified trouble in 6675 and, in future, will be using that for all scheds except 07.30. Suggests that I check it later in the day. Turnoff to Minnie Creek on right. Mt Sandiman homestead. Met [manager] who said that he will drive us out to a paddock where there are lots of fossil wood in the Merlinleigh boundary.
Right fork goes to Mulgerie & Willinby. Woolshed end yards. Did not go through gate into enclosure but west and north of paddock to a gate at the N.W corner. Through gate. Wooden gate on Merlinleigh boundary, turned N. along fence line to corner in fence and then East for small distance. Left fence line, turned South into open paddock with a little mulga and smaller gibbers, also much-silicified fragments of shell.
Back at fence-line. Climbed hill.
Description of hill at 24.8:
The breakaway seems to consist almost entirely of Permian shales and mudstones. Much crossbedded. White in colour with bands of purple and some with ferruginized bands. At the base there is a grey mudstone which contains in some places small Chonetes brachiopods. The higher-up ferruginized bands contain spirifecs and productids. About 8ft from the top there is a coarse pebble layer with silicified wood, at least 3 species of polycepeds, Aturia. Fossils are not plentiful. The matrix is rather variable ranging from sands to a fairly coarse pebble conglomerate. This is obviously the Tertiary Merlinleigh Sandstone. It is Lagorchestes[?] on the top.
After lunch we went back down the breakaway from Merlinleigh homestead and walked around the breakaway to the east. V. poor exposures of the M. sandstone. As far as can be seen, completely unfossiliferous. They tend to pick out to the south and are thickest in the northern ends of the breakouts, most interesting finds were a number of v. large rounded stones of reef quartz and quartzites. These can only be glacial ; there are traces of a large coarse pebble (or small boulder) bed at the same level. Seems little doubt that this is a Permian tillite. It seems to be about 1/3 up the section - rather surprised that it is so high. Photographs south along the Range[4109-11]. Back to the homestead. Rather depressed by the poor quality of the beds.
Found owl (Boobook) roosting in the remains of the bathroom. Good owl pellets.
Took b&w of the owl in tree outside where he flew to get away from us. Took 2
c. of a large spider's web and also 1 c. of two crested pigeons on the edge of
the water tanker.[4112,13,14]. ...
Up at dawn, mosquitoes v. bad.
Sched. repeat of yesterday afternoons telegram. Left camp after one of the most tedious packs up I have ever done.
Warbo Rd., Back west for 1 mile to look for Alan Sch... lost mailie. Back at Minnie Creek turnoff, heading East. Signpost. Lost due to loss of hat.
Road comes round the corner of Lake Throssell, Bluff on the east side, about 8-10 ft till seems to be some sort of diatomaceous earth, no stratigraphy, no fossils.
no 13 signpost. Sandhills, lunch. Signpost. Many birds on left ? rockhole, Signpost. "freshwater limestone" outcropping in road. Flowers on roadside. Hunt Oil turnoff. Airstrip.
Sched very poor reception. Charlie calling us but in the end gave up "see you in the navy, see you in the morning..." Alex collected 2 Chalinolobus.
Breakaways - laterite : c. 10-15 ft in height., Rockhole away v. low (c.2-5 ft) breakaway on north of road - is this Gahnda ? on wrong side of road. Drove in to see if there is another rockhole in the south - certainly not as far as can be seen from the road - as outcrops. Back at Rockhole for camp. Athol and Alex set nets over the rockhole - a deep permanent hole. Poor shelter in vicinity but Athol examined it and says no deposits - scoured out. Blackened roof.
Sked taken next day:
(1) 31st Outpost Flying Doctor Kalgoorlie. All well, Margaret.
(2) Bill Clewley arrived back in Kalgoorlie all well.
Reply: RIDE PHONE PERTH 862242 ALL WELL MOBILE AFTER RAIN INFORM TERRELL TELEGRAPHIC ADDRESS 8WHISKY NOVEMBER XRAY OUTPOST KALGOORLIE OTHERWISE DELAY MUCH LOVE DEE.
Athol caught a Chalinolobus gouldii female in net over water. [WR120] C. gouldii F. netted over water, night 1/2 Feb. A.M. Douglas, forearm 42.9 mm., fixed in formalin. Many budgerigars.
> 2nd Feb. 1967 (Thursday)
Sunrise earlier over here. 0700 Sched.
Left camp about 10.00 to try to get at the breakaway in the Rowe Hills south of Gahnda Rockhole. Creek crossing on main road, turned in across spinifex[?] bearing 128*, sighted drum on right c.100* al moistyated [?] find a seismic line on the same bearing and moved across into it, continued on it 2 m. to track junction turned to 47.30* for 2 m., then onto track bearing 126* which later tended northwards to 140* at 97.5 investigated[?] a low breakaway on northern side, signs of shales & sandstones at bottom, but extensively lateritized and the whole section aslituated[?] by it (about 10-12 ft.) dug a burrow under mulga roots - ? Dasyceras [?] but noone at home. Very poor animal country, rarely any scats in the breakaways - one that looks like a possum[?] scat.
Continued on bearing of 146* for 2.2 miles to due south bearing 165* across creek to crest where large breakaways in the vicinity of Sharpes Bluff visible to East. Turned a bearing of 94* for 2.2 miles to where we took 4 colour photos from west looking out on a bearing of 80 to Lake Baker. V. impressive 3 isolated mesas[?] on the left, a low one in the centre and a line of big breakaways on the right. Picked way down into the bottom where we stopped in Walga[?] at the foot of the Right Hand breakaway. Explored the breakaway & collected specimens. At the lower levels it seems to consist of shales & sandstones with sandstones but sandstones become increasingly common towards the top where the whole is capped by a hard silicious demicrust[?] about 12-15 ft thick.
About 8 ft below the demicrust bottom collected a wood cast (two pieces) and a ? caprolite, also a number of other things not determinable without sectioning, also collected typical specimens of various kinds of sediments.[colour]. On way back tried a new route to see if we could find an ... way to give Alex practice in driving and navigation. Drove west and reached our 02.1 position with a speedo reading of .... then back along same track for 2 m. and then onto track bearing 45* very rough track which crosses the Rowe Hills from the bottom of the median watershed (NW-SE) to the upper watershed which comes down to Lake Baker from Gahnda Rockhole.Very difficult driving across the octont[?] ridges of the hills for 6 miles to where turned into a track bearing 295* to where track turned R. at T junction to approx 15* crossed creek & then headed N.W. starting mulga to find road where it crosses the line of latitude outcrop at Gahnda. Blew tyre with stake. Changed wheel after some confusion because could not find wheel brace at first. Drove on around edge of mulga for abt 1 mile. Back at camp, .... joined road about 2000* sw of rockhole.
> 3 Feb 1967 (Friday)
Athol got another bat Nyctophilus geoffroyi female in the net over the Gahnda Rock Hole [WR121] wt 6.5 g., ... fixed in formalin.
Sched. 0700 hrs
(a) Inter[?] station memo sent to 8Whisky Tango to tell them that fuel at depo[?] consists of diesel 25 gals, petrol 4 gals. For Kevin to take it over, I will write to him from Perth. (
b) Telegram recd. from Perth via U.J.Q. TEDFORD NOT GOING MEEKATHARRA STOP WILL BE IN PERTH UNTIL 10TH PERHAPS 11TH AND WOULD LIKE TO SEE YOU IF POSSIBLE STOP SIR THOMAS INFORMS YOU TIM HAS RESEARCH GRANT - TERRELL
(c) Telegram sent TERRELL CARE MUSEUM PERTH MOVING TODAY VIA WARBURTON MISSION STOP CONGRATULATE SIR THOMAS - RIDE
(d) telegram sent TERRELL CARE MUSEUM PERTH PLEASE CHECK MRS DOUGLAS HAS ADEQUATE FUNDS PRESCHOOL EXPENSES - DOUGLAS
Left Gahnda Rockhole for Sharpes Bluff, Turn off road on Hunt Oil Line 128* 3 miles, road ends at L junction bearing 47* 2 miles, turn into road bearing 126* becomes 146* 5 miles, bear north at corner 165*, 1.5 miles. Inerted white-tipped surveyors peg Turn off track on bearing 94* for 2-3 miles. Lip of valley between Sharpes Bluff breakaways and Lake Baker where photos taken yesterday. Walked down along vehicle tracks looking for Alex's exposure metre. No luck, collected some more fossils. A ? madible (broken into 4) and some plant-like structures. The latter is ..... in the very top surface of the breakaway, it is fairly clear that the fossils so far found in float are all from this top demicrusted sandstone. Across the valley it appears that this layer[?] has a large overburden on at least one mesa. Back at Rockhole after a look around for the meter - no luck. The trip back from the Sharpes Bluff took 55 mins. direct. Collected gecko under baggage. Left Gahnda Rockhole.
Low breakaways with laterized[?] shales, no good. Green Hillman abandoned on road, water in vehicle, suspect aboriginal party seen before, no number plates. Lunch at Sched.[C ]. Very hot indeed water balance gone to hell. Could hardly hold lunch. Got in some salt and managed to keep it. Was silly and took off shirt earlier in the morning after carrying fossil from Sharpes bluff & lost much water.
Collected grasshoppers. Broad creek low trees. Broad creek low trees. broad road coming away to north. Crossed creek.
Native Welfare Notice edge of Reserve : Poor notice - "must not enter". Would be better to have printed "enter and report".
Blacks Lookout. Warburton Mission. Finished up with about 10 gals. in tanker.
Information for Dick Hawthorn at Warburton Mission. Hunt Oil had a camp at Alexander Springs, thinks there was a road through to the Gunbarrel Highway. RACWA map gives road ring south for 50 m. W. of Turnoff Gunbarrel Highway / Warburton-Giles Rd. We saw the bottom end of this 27 miles before Warbo. - (map gives it as 35).
Distance to Carnegie in RAC map 322 miles.
Call sign 8 ROMEO BRAVO. 5360.
Changed Sched 6.45 weekdays, 7.15 Saturday, 8.55 Sunday, Give positions
1300 hrs every day you are feeding on 6825 and transmitting on 5260. Alexander Springs 265255 Gowalys[?] sheet. Telephone nos. in case we need information re Hunt Oil turnoff to Alexander Springs.
Lord 865795, Geol. Survey 285061, WAPET 233941.
Dorothy Hawthorn got us a cup of tea. She is obviously overworked in the heat. So we went out and fueled up. Dick [Hawthorn] has a fossil Ostrea from somewhere around - low not known, also our chalk balls should be looked at by someone.
Elder Creek is a glorious sight. Great trees all over the place reminds me of the Oakover in places. Country starts to improve as the Mission is approached[?] , v. great contrast to the country between it and Cosmo. Managed to take in all 44 gals. Dick lent us a 121/2 gal drum which we have just behind the Kaywoo[?] spread[?]. I estimate we are carrying approx. 50 gals plus. Left mission, camped in mulga.
> 4 Feb. 1967 (Saturday)
A strong wind from the east, going to be hot. Sched: Heard 8ROMEO BRAVO tell Charlie that he had annoyed a private Sched, Charlie paid compliment saying that he knew me and had no worries.
Sent telegram : USQ TIM MEAGHER PERTH TELEPHONE 611122 DELIGHTED YOUR NEWS ANTICIPATE SUCCESS RIDE.
Packed up and got away at 09.30. Stopped and took photos of .....[?] [C3328/9] Sandhill country with triodia, mallee, mulga, bluebush, al grevillea & callitris. Michael White v. pleased to have a new sp. of morabine[?] on the grevillea, took photos[C3330-35].
Turnoff along Gunbarrel Highway, signpost Carnegie 282 m., Warburton 40, Giles 175, (Kulgera 580). Surveyed Astrofix S 25* 42'27" E.126"39'47
L. Beadell 16/8/1958 [C3335-6]. Recoalmed[?] the post, new kodachrome in camera, 34.-[C3401] View down Gunbarrel towards Carnegie: Travertine outcrops in the road but no exposures anywhere else, spec. collected. Todd Range : a line of laterite breakaways, good morabines collected but no fossils. Lay road extending North to the horizon [C3402] photo taken eastwards along highway, investigated road to south, it gave up at back of highway. A hundred yards further on find a small metal tag Rockhole 100*. These proved to be 3 excellent rockholes( (?) on the surface of an exposed outcrop. Collected fora from them, no tortoises Preserved in formalin [C2403,4]. Cairn on Mt. Samuel, a wonderful view across to the south, can see Sutherland Range on the horizon. A road moves around the base of Mt. Sutherland and goes south at a bearing of 185*S. A road turning off at 178*, turned down it and camped at 2841.3 Ref. south of neck 388798. A hot night, v. windy with strong winds with variable directions., Kept me awake.
> 5 Feb (Sunday)
Calculated petrol consumption on the following basis: Consumption up to Minnie Creek, 445.5 m. + 1 jerrycan. Consumption Minnie Creek to Warbo 386.5 m. + 2 jerrycans excluding the move quantities the mpg works out to 13 and 12.5 mpg. Distance from turnoff to Carnegie Homestead = 211.2 miles and on a basis of 13mpg with spare can = 16.6 gals in 4 cans + 1 reserve. At present we have 6 jerrycans + 1/2 tank +12 gals. ie we have approx 20 gals to play with ie 260 miles. Decided that it is unlikely that the Hunt Oil people would have gone west from the road through the breakaway country between it and Alexander Springs and that seems more likely to have cut SW from Mt. Beadell and Decter Airfield.
Listened to Western Australian ABC news /"Third Network" excellent reception. Sched to 8ROMEO BRAVO nothing for VJQ, reception v. poor to JJQ no RV with Athol who was filling water canteens at Mt Samuel rockholes. Camels[?] in chain of lakes crossing the road, suspect that this is the system which flows SW past Sutherland Ra. ie Lake Breeden, Royd Lagoon, Lake Gillen [C3405-10].
Just out of lake system travertine exposed in road, collected specs. , a brown conglomerate exposed in road, collected specs., Quartzite exposed in road, collected specs. Alex collected 2 Amphibolus, sandhills. Sandhill country E of Thryptomene Hill, caught morabines. Survey post concrete [?] with bronze plug. Surveys ^ . Track leading off in about 110* into sandhills.
Notabilis Hill, NH. F. 19. Y junction with left fork being 220*, took left fork. Rt fork appears to be the Gunbarrel. Helicopter pad wuth three roads coming out of it: 1. 336* 2. 218* 3. Approx. 100*. Turns to 267* for 6 miles, [small turnoff to south did not take], Breakaways to north, turn to 238* for 3 miles, turns south 179* for 11 miles to crossroads where we turned right at 278* (We investigated construction but this became a mere surveyors line so we returned to the crossroads at) drove along road for 10 miles which started at 278* and became 265* (for purposes of plotting, I assumed that 5 miles was done at 278* and 5 at 265*). We refuelled the Land Rover so that we now had a completely full vehicle with a potential of some 420-450 miles. Crossroads at 350*, straight over. Flooded creekflats incredible number of frogs & tadpoles. Collected and took photos of Michael & Alex fishing[C3412-15], [B&W 1-3]. New road to left (crossroads) at 195*. This should take us straight to Sutherland Ra. which is now approx 15 m. to the south of us. Ran along flooded creek flats with travertine exposed in road to a valley with a flood across the road. Frogs calling, tracks everywhere. Dog, fox, large macropod, v. small macropod (on its own), probable bandicoot and numerous other tracks. Some rain on the way in and heavy showers from lunchtime onwards. Dodged around the floods but diesel could not get across the first big dune decided to camp for night on top of dune to south of flooded flats.
Miles travelled since morning = 183.5 m. Miles travelled on Gunbarrel 50.5 distance for Gunbarrel turnoff to Carnegie = 177.2 m. ... to Warbo = 127.8 but distance given on signpost of 282m. distance to Carnegie Homestead =197.3 m. Must send telegrams tomorrow:
To 8 ROMEO BRAVO. POSITION APPROX 18 MILES FROM ALEXANDER SPRINGS WILL MOVE BACK TO GUNBARREL AND ON TO CARNEGIE TODAY. TERRELL CARE MUSEUM PERTH> LEAVING VICINITY ALEXANDER SPRINGS FOR CARNEGIE TODAY RIDE.
KEY CORSEARCH CANBERRA VICINITY ALEXANDER SPRINGS TODAY STOP ARRIVING MELBOURNE FEBRUARY 17 WITH MANY LIVING MORABINES HOPE YOU CAN VISIT MELBOURNE SOON AFTER TO INSPECT THEM - MICHAEL WHITE
> 6th Feb Monday
Decide to christen this place Athol's Lagoon. BROOME SHEET. Photo of camp[C3416-20] collected male Amphibolus in good breeding condition. Packed up and got through on Sched. Sent all telegrams and asked Charlie if we had any news of a road out of Alexander Spring to the N.W. He agreed to ring Geol. Survey to ask them & we arranged a Sched at 0930 on 6825 kc. Alex checked the frogs collected yesterday all O K. Athol & Michael to stay put - we will try to reach Sutherland Range. Left camp at 0850 hrs. [Sandhill] country, fine rock exposed - [pitches] for the last couple of miles [C3421]. Sched 0930 hrs. Got through v. well. The telephone number Dick gave me for Geol. Survey was wrong so had to stand by while checked new number. Drove on down track to 35.2 and turned right at crossroads as bearing 267* to 36.2 where we were on top of the range. Range here seems to consist of quartzite and sandstone[?] with sidiulls[?] right up in the depression. Probably O.K. if we could get to the southern side but this would take days. Charlie came up on Sched and said no roads to the S.W. all to the N.E. Hut Oil says previously 1-2 m. in W. of Alexander Spring ad 30 m N.Graded road to N.E. in 1964. Sutherland Range turned back [C3422,3,4], collected green [?] at 12.00 hrs.
Back at camp at Athol's Lagoon, packed up and crossed lagoon to join others. 13.50 left lagoon, 15.50 at Gunbarrel Hwy. Route out perfectly clear and easy in our tracks. V. hot and tired day. Cloud building.
Tadpoles (but later evidently destroyed). Mt. Beadell, sediments, the top part seems to be something like spangolite collected greens. n the top there seems to be a conglomerate but I expect that this an old B[?]horizon and chemically fired. Saw euro - shot and seemingly[?] wounded but got up and away in mulga. Saw mice crossing road. Stopped and camped. This place is a spinifex plain with a very few stunted bushes & dead workwoods[?]. Surveyors peg (cement with bronze), Northern Territory Surveys.
Alex had a field day : collected Pseudochis when he was walking around, then shot Notomys alexis f., then ran one down alive I was too tired to take any effective part in the proceedings beyond helping Athol set traps.Notomys alexis f. [WR122] collected A. Baynes shot in spinifex plain 5 m. NW of Mt. Beadell, preserved in formalin. Notomys aexis [WR163] kept alive will try to send down to Perth. Photo taken of locality[C3425, 26] all with shotgun cant in. Telegrams for Sched next day:
1. WHITE>PHONE 859033 MELBOURNE. BETWEEN WARBURTON MISSION AND CARNEGIE STOP CONFIRM RETURNING FEBRUARY 17 LOVE MICHAEL.
2. DOUGLAS PHONE 491175 PERTH -ARRIVING HOME LATE SUNDAY EARLY MONDAY LOVE ATHOL
3. PETER RIDE PHONE 862242 PERTH HAPPY BIRTHDAY STOP WE WILL HAVE PARTY WHEN I GET BACK LOVE DAD.
> 7 Feb. 1967 (Tuesday)
10.30 hrs left camp after preping all specs taken previous night. Very sticky but strong wind and low clouds - showers of rain. Large main road joins from East. Mt. Everard & Mt.Gordon. Athol had climbed to top of Mt E - he got there first & waited for us. Structure same as Mt Beadell. Airstrip at 62.8. Surveyors trig where road turns SW. NM/F/23. Became deeply bogged with diesel, petrol got across we then soybombed[?] the diesel out. Mungilli Claypan filled with water [C3427,8,9] also examined exposures to south of road[C3430] tracks of camels[?]. The problem of these small exposures is a difficult one. All the way from Mt. Beadell, whever they occur i.e. Mt. Everard, and small breakaways to Mt. William Lambert they have each one exposure i.e. a very light "spangolite"-like material capped by what is probably the same thing but much more silicious. Camped in sandhills with threatening clouds and strong wind. Drizzle during the early part of the evening. Tried burning spinifex and walking around but no tracks or anything in the spinifex. Alex took bearing back up hill aong track of road which winds[?] slightly 33*.
> 8 Feb. 1967 (Wednesday)
Up at 4.45 Decided to get on immediately in the hope of getting to Carnegie before the rain makes it impossible. Stopped for Sched and breakfast. Not in traffic list but sent telegram:
TERRELL CARR MUSEUM PERTH -M POSITION 35MILES EAST CARNEGIE HOMESTEAD STOP HOPE REACH VICINITY WILUNA TONIGHT - RIDE
Drew up route in the Sutherland Range for the map board. [Sketch]
Windmill on left, first cattle., gate, Carnegie Homestead, Gordo & Mrs Brown, left in charge while Linke's on holiday. Found petrol and diesel and fuelled up approx 20-22 gals into each vehicle. Browns gave us v. good steak. Lake. Rounded hill of exposures with siltstones & clays with intrusted[?] tips which have eroded off to form heaps of shale like material. No fossils seen. Collected from Hill north of lake about 180* n. of road from horizon[?] half way up.[C3431] [sketch] Exposures in bed of creek s. of road [Sketch]. Chased red kangaroos for Alex to photograph. Stopped for Sched to VSQ, not in traffic list. Turned over to 4010 to listen to the Meeka traffic list. Meanwhile Michael caught one of the species of morabine which he had come to the West for. Got through to VVS at around then ("Thelma") but I could be listening to the traffic list 7am & 400[?] pw daily. Fence line with gate. Creek crossing.
Wongawoll Homestead - noone at home. Back at homestead after .... track. Small concrete survey post. Gate in fence line : two gates took right. Left road to chase kangaroo. Small concrete survey post. Stopped to brew up on flat N. of well marked creek with large eucalypts. Alex went off with gun to see if he could get a couple of ducks. Got out wireless aerial to see if possible to get weather forecast, v. threatening getting dark early.
Athol and Michael arrived in yellow peril. They must have moved. Amazing incident with an aerosol container with insect repellent. Went off in dark and sprayed Athol's face. Decided to go on because of threat of rain and creek to cross. No sign of Alex. Ultimately after tooting and lights he turned up. The creek is Wongawol Creek at Kepeltin Spring. Creek impossible at road but found way across in the dark to the E of road. Yard across the creek, found road after casting around in the dark and rain. Turn off ? Windidda. Turn off. Found reasonable camp in mulga. V. tired, brewed up and got to bed with as little delay as possible. Alex had to be awakened to have his meal. Even Athol is tired. Rain stopped. Steak for tea v. good.
> 9 Feb. 1967 (Thursday)
Camp in mulga, left 08.30. Sched but no good. Reception excellent on 4010 band but VK3 could not hear. will try later. Telegrams :
TERRELL CARE MUSEUM PERTH.ARRANGE HELEN COLLECT NOTOMYS SENDING FROM MEEKATHARRA TODAY AIR. RIDE.
FRY PHONE 746415 PERTH SENDING NOTOMYS POSSIBLY ALEXIS AIR MEEKATHARRA TODAY CONTACT HELEN. DAVID
Michael & Athol left during Sched to get on with collecting.VKJ procedure not easy to break into.She calls all the stations in turn whether they have traffic or not. Caught up with "yellow peril"and swapped passengers so that I could have a talk with Mildred.
Stopped on road and collected 2 spp of morabines - 1 a new species with a bifid sub-anal plate and the other one of the Virgo sp. group. This is probably the :Meeka - species". Got through on Sched and passed telegrams at 11.30. Meekatharra. Had lunch and refuelled the vehicles. Alex & Athol got the Notomys off to Helen by air. Paid for lunch $2. Alex & self left Michael and Athol in Meeka to get off the morabines and we pressed on to Magnet and Yalgoo. Telephoned Margaret & told her to expect us night of 10th between 5.30 & 6.30. Tried to get through to Broads at Mellenbye - no answer. Amphibolurus barbatus on road. Alex collected. Cue. Lake Austin full of water, ripples of wind, a nice sight, road open but only just.
Mt Magnet. Filled up. Telephoned Mellenbye, roads not home : in Perth for fortnight. Had meal. Decided to drive on to Barnong in the dark to look at the exposures. Bought fruit. Yalgoo in dark. Barnong Stn. turned off dam fence line to Mooloo well. Shot 2 rabbits, spotlight, Alex with gun seated on spare wheel. Bedded down in usual campsite. Mosquitoes very bad. Sound of a little waterfall - unusual !
> 10th Feb. 1967 Friday
Examined exposures, v. interesting, a high floodline up to the very top of the bank - well marked line of refuse[?] along the sandy sloping bank on the W. side of the Ederga. All exposures swept clean & v. easy to examine. Walked down from there[?] to Crocodile side of the greenstone bars to the fenceline where it crosses the creek. River flowing quite strongly. About 4-6" deep over the sandbanks, about as silt as the sea. Atherines of various sizes swimming. Lots of signs of Varanus and Amphibolurus swimming around. The exposures downstream are v. interesting. I get the impression that the whole is much more complex than we originally thought. There seems to be a very old conglomerate overlying the greenstone and, moreover, there also seems to be a sedimentation level above the present B horizon. Does this mean that the B horizon is an early soil which has since been planed off and then added to ? [sketch]. Stopped to refuel. Perenjori, lunch. 61 mile peg south of Bindoon, many termite mounds 1/2 mile N. of tins[?]. 18.15 hrs. HOME.
List of people : Cosmo Newberry - Claude Cotterill
Warburton Mission - Sam Mollenhauer
Secretary UAM Perth K. R. Morgan
Margaret Daleman owner and administrator Windidda, Carnegie & Wongawol
Mr. D. Keer, manager Windidda Stn
Mr W A Brosnan, Manager Wangawol Stn.
Mr. R. Linke Manager Carnegie Stn.
Mr. A. John Carlisle - Meteorite collector
Bill Clewley, Kalgoorlie School of Mines, 79 Ward St.
Hodson, T.
Ross Ryan 162 Boulder Rd.
Tony Davis Warburton Ra. Mission
Dick Hawthorn Warburton Mission
Mick Sawyer Warburton Mission
3 p. of details....
6-i-86
[Travel from Perth to Ravensthorpe]
7-i-86
[purchasing supplies, visiting colleagues]
Departed for Masons Bay & set up camp 33°57'30''S 120°28'45'' at cove east of Masons Bay. After 2pm went to Starvation Boat Harbour inspected ramp at S end of Harbour.
#2: collected from beach drift. #2.1: collected dead Bothriembryon ar area between Powel & North Powell Point & on landward slope of sand dunes (#1) W of salt lakes (W of Harbour), & dead & live succineids (approx 33°56'08''S 120°30'58''). Very large Nerita atramentosa on Point (also large Austrocochla rudis) Subninella undulata present (#2.2). Collected dead Bothriembron & Theba on hillside #2.3.
2.1 Beach Drift. 2.2 Tide pools - granite. 2.3 hillside - seaward slope.
Stn#1: W of Starvation Boat Harbour, WA. - on landward slope of sand dunes approx 33°56'08'' 120°30'58''E.
Stn#2: between Powell & North Powell Points, Starvation Boat Harbour WA. 33°55'23'' 120°33'30''. #2.1 Beach Drift. #2.2 Tide pools, granitic rock. #2.3 seawwrd slope of hillside; granite & limestone.
Weather overcast with occasional v light showers. Wind strong from S to SE. Seas high.
8-i-86
Note: Discrepancy concerning names of Masons Point & Masons Bay between map & local residents.
Organised gear. Went out to intertidally exposed reef (granitic rock offshore from camp) - launched boat off beach at foot of track further W within camping area. 33°57'35''S; 120°29' E. Collected intertidally in rock pools & gutters & under boulders to 2m.
Stn#3: Cove east of Masons Bay. Fauna very sparse except for N. atramentosa & A. rudis & siphonarians & acmeid with black lines in between ribs. Worms (various tube dwelling) common - sponges common but varied & colonies small - ascidians simple & colonial. Molluscs very rare. Gibbula preissiana; Stomatella imbricata; Haliotis scalaris; H. laevigata; Herpetopoma aspersal Clanculus ?consabrinus; Scutus. Drift on beach opp reef very v poor. Gena; Austrocochlea rudis (large & heavy); Tugali cicatricosa; Aulisabia fabacea; Patelloida atracostata; Siphonaria ?chapmani; Nerita atramentosa; Serpulorbis ?sipho; Melarapha unifasciata; Fusinus tessellatus; Campanile symbolicum; Dicathais aegrota; ?Lepsiella flindersi; White cone ?anemone ?cl[?]; Barbatia squamosa ? small; Brachidontes ? restialis?; ?Monticutid; ?Erecynid? Mylitta sp (vv small elongate, v fine divaricate ribs ant & post ends); ?Mysella ?donaciformis; Blue spotted tiny chiton; Cryptoplax.
Stn#4: In afternoon we drove around to Masons Bay & approx. 33°58' 120°26'30'', & collected from beach drift - much more diverse than on Cove beach. Then moved around closer to (West Masons Point) (more southerly (& westerly)) point of Masons Bay & collected around it. Here the drift was extremely abundant but the species diversity, though greater, was less than could be expected - from the apparently greater diversity of habitat. 33°58'20'' 120°26'30''.Stn#4.1
Collected uphill behind W Masons Point & beaches - dead & damaged (mammals? reptiles?) shells of Theba & long dead shells of Bothriembryon. No succineids seen. Stn#4.2.
Weather fine & sunny - strong SE to ESE wind, high seas.
9-i-86
Stn#5: Masons Bay. Stn#6: Cove.
Stn#5: approx 33°58'15'' 120°26'30'', Embayment towards W end of Masons Bay. Jerdacullup (Sheet Series R712 Sheet 2930-11 Edition 1 - LSWA.) Dive 9.30-1015am.
Where granitic rock descends from hill & makes a peninsula obliquely out from shore to define a sheltered embayment. Loisette & I dived with SCUBA - depth 1-5 or 6m. Large boulders covered with algae (mostly brown sargassum etc) with few vertical faces & ledges on which grew sponges & ascidians. Some Haliotis laevigata in patches.
Station#6: 33°57'40'' 120°28'10''; W end of cove, E of Masons Point. 1-3m. dirty sand with granite reefs & some limestone subtidally. After strong wind & seas abundant algae covered with fine silt - brown (seemingly terriginous) which had also accumulated among colonies of Caulerpa flexicilis & C. sp cf flexilis (but not in one plane & with side branches sometimes branched themselves - less "foliose" & possibly more delicate. Less accumulation of sand & silt within colonies of C. ?vesiculifera & C. brownii. Small colony of C. racemosa growing through sand on subsand limestone. V small colonies & amount of Halimeda. Short tufted reds include Laurencia cf filiformis & Gelidium cf glandulaefolium. Much brown algae incl. Scaberia agardlii, Hormosira, Sargassum spp, Cystophora? subfascinata. Caught a Warty Prow fish - orange. Large Sunfish seen on return journey. Small trochoid; Nucula (?obliqua); ?Cylindrobulla (prob from Caulerpa bases); Euplica; Gena curicula; Niotha; Microstrea ?aurea (dead only); Dentimitrella 2spp (cream) (cream & mauve); Conus anemone in sand uner rock - size range under single rock, none under adjacent rocks; Gibbula preissiana; Stomatella umbricata; Hipponyx conicus; Eubittium (Cacozeliana); Myletta sp; Pseudocopagia victoriae (dead); Natacid ?Proxiuber shorehani or juvenile Notocochlis gualteriana; Epicodakia tatei; Cantharidus pucherianus & C. lehmanis; Pellox ?gapiniana; small white 'leptonid' dead; Diala c interrupted spiral lines; v small transparent gastropod c black soft tissues;
Den[?]bella 3rd sp c complex pattern at whorl convexity & at extreme [?] end of white arrowheads & brown radial lines in defined patches between them, & c sinous radial lines to previous suture; Clanculus ringens; small fusiform c rad ribs c brown sections of spiral ribs which are coloured in interstices.
Station #7: 33°58', 120°28'8''; E side of East Masons Point. 0-3m. Sheltered by land from NW winds. [locality sketch map]. Loisette & Clay dived in semi-enclosed pool E of Point - ! worked along shore going N over seam of granite & dolerite runing W->E into water from shore. Granite brown with rounded boulders. Dolerite black with sharp boulders. Much brown algae (Sargassum Hormosira Cystophora etc) on granite but reds more abundant, I think, on dolerite - as were sponges & corallines. Haliotis laevigata patchy on ground. Clay reported Haliotis conucopara in crevises. I found an orange Warty Prow fish.
Friday 10-i-86
Weed washing, sorting, labelling in camp. Jan Watson arrived at about midday. She had met up with Clay at the Taylors. Clay had gone to Hopetoun to get petrol (& also to get water from the Bootleys).
Stn#8: 33°58' 120°28'08''
After lunch we went to W side of Cove to area where I had swam yesterday & had seen Amphibolus beds (near dolerite dykes) which were of interest to Jan. Collected along that stretch of shore 1-3m & then went as far up S as sill where Clay & Loisette had collected yesterday. Dense but generally small beds of Amphibolus, & this was only seagrass seen though yesterday I collected a single long cylindrical leaf yesterday which had obviously floated in. (later found growing at Station 9). On the reefs inshore there are plenty of reds on top with browns generally growing on the sides & on the basement rock. (Profusion of Cystophora spp). large clumps of a stringy twisted algae (but fronds were generally wider than 5mm). Some Dictyopteris. Plenty of Seaberia, Hormosira, Cystophora retorta, Pachydictyon & other forms not identified, Ecklonia. Reds include Laurencia, ?Pterocladia, Gelidium, Hyporea.
& a very delicate form with reticulate fans off one side of axes [sketch] Claudia elegans (Is this recorded for WA?). Greens included mats of Caulerpa flexilis sometimes interspersed with C? vesciculifera.
V small brown bivalves on Laurencia cf filiformis ?Byssus of 1 thread? This also might be the habitat of v small dark brown gastropods & more fragile transparent gastropods c dark soft parts & also clasping forams shaped like flat coiled gastropod but chambered & clinging to stalks. Also on ?Gelidium, Far fewer found on Cystophora. A v small transparent gastropod with planispiral but rapidly expanding & descending body whorl on ?Pterocladia or maybe on hydroids on this weed. These shells are sometimes in pairs & have a single repiratory hole. Are they scissurellids - could they be haliotids (do not look right shape). Pycnogonid on spongy twisted alga (piece put in with pycnogonid in Crustacea vial). Haliotis laevigala; Haliotis roei; Haliotis conicopera; Ninella torquata; Scularcopagia victoriae; Campanile symbolicum - many dead - larger - ? less acute cone than live ones; Phasianotrochus eximius (juv) on Cystophora; Elongate brown Pellax on Cystophora (orange-tan with white patches posteriorly near suture; & a ?Diala on some weed (in vial with bivalves).
Land snails: During the late afternoon I walked W along beach to area beyond camping area where dune behind beach is high & limestone layer is obvious halfway up cut away slope found 2 freshly dead & one longer dead Bothriembryon rhodostomus, fresh dead & live Theba, fresh dead Cochlicella acuta & dead Succinea. Searched diligently for live boths. without success. No dead boths found above limestone or on top of soil Theba alive in hollows in limestone. Most Theba Cochlicella & Succinea shells at base of slope but this could have been due to gravity. Area was well covered by small shrubs, grass climps lily clumps & in some places by Ti-trees.
Saturday 11-i-86
Because of trouble with sunburn & because of unfinished sorting I stayed in camp while Loisette Jan & Clay went off to Starvation Boat Harbour - this being the only possibly collecting area with the SW to S winds.
Stn #9: Approx. 120°33'30'' 33°54'50'' In[?] about 6 metres offshore in segrass beds of Posidonia & 1 or 2 spp of Zostera (all with very long leaves).
Station 10: Approx. 33°55'10'' 120°33'33'' Approx 1-3m. Inshore with 2 spp of Amphibolus; greenish chiton[?]; small green fish; Jam thinks that there is a species difference or proportional difference in species representation on the long flat & the short teisted leaved Amphibolus. Long leaved Amphibolus antartica: greenish chiton; small green fish; v many v small brown gastropods; many "dialids"; few chitons; triphorids; few number of v small mytilids. Twisted leaved Amphibolus griffithi: v. many chitons (3 spp?); few mytilids (Musculus?). Land snails: Clay went for a search for boths. in area I had searched before - ie to W of W end of campsite but though he found more dead shells, had no success with finding live ones (no station number) (Cove E of Masons Bay W of camping area foreshore dunes & l/s & granitic outcrops). Flock (?30-40) New Hollands honeyeaters & a couple of larger "honeyeaters" like wattle birds without wattles (? squeakers) (? cuckoos) drank & bathed from water dish. New Holland Honey Eater.
Sunday 12-i-86
[List of individuals from Fitzgerald River Nation Parks Association, wention of presentation given by S. S-S. and Loisette]
Tide didn't fall - winds from southerly direction SE changing to SW 120°02' -> 120°02'20''
Station 11 Barrens Beach: Walked along beach - limestone reef - scoured & with shallow pools. Clay found Microstrea aurea live. Janthina; cuttlebones. Clay found 4 Microstrea aurea on reef nearly (to E). Siphonarians. Report of oysters on large rock moss on reef - investigated - no trace - just Melarapha, siphonarians, some acmeids, few dead barnacles (grey falt striated).
33°55'35'' 120°03'10''
Station 12 2 mile Reef: E of Barrens Beach & S of Lake "Hopetoun". Diversity of bivalves on beach. Glycymeris; cardiids; venerids; machrids[?]; psammobiids; Turbo (Subninella) undulata; plenty of siphonarinids; plenty of Austrocochlea rudis & Nerita atramentosa.
Jan & Clay went of to 2 mile reef & to Hopetoun Harbour in morning & to 6 mile Reef in afternoon. Clay found more Microstrea aurea. Loisette & I went back with Helen to her home - met Clay & Jan there. Specimens from Clay & Jan stations labelled fully & not given station numbers.
Monday 13-i-86
Approx. 33°56'(10") 120°12' Station 13 "5 Mile Reef": about 10(?) km E of Hopetoun - sandy beach - sandy lagoon with some rocks & algae. - "barrier" reef joining to beach reef platform (intertidal) to E. Limestone - calcarenite. [sketch map of station locality] very strong wave action, strong flow over reef, strong rip. Jan & Clay swam out through gap - Jan got into difficulties - both had to jettison weight belts to get back in - Clay helping Jan. Loisette & I swam along inside edge of reef - best collecting was on undercut below beach limestone - calcarenite at point - roof was just below LWL & current through was strong - & obviously always strong enough to support good large colonies of sponges (including jelly-like sponge) ascidians (including 3 sand covered colonial forms) & hydroids. Took samples of red algae from undercut - greens (2 spp of Caulerpa) from just out of cave[?] & browns (many Cystophora spp, Zonaria etc from inside of reef, great place for browns but little else.)
Between 120°17'30'' & 120°21' [No station number]: On way stopped in 3 places (easternmost being adjacent to shore of lake) to look for land snails - in all I found dead Bothriembryon; Theba; & at last found live Succinea but no live ones (uphill from lake). Found no trace of molluscs on shore of lake. Got back about 2pm. Processed all afternoon. Some molluscs in weedeashings including small nudibranchs (only 1 large nudibranch (orange mauve & red & white) found). Bivalves included small Musculus & [?]Liatellids(?).
Tuesday 14-i-86
Strong winds from S, cloudy but not overcast. Decided not to go to Esperance as conditions would be unsuitable for launching boat & working jetty. Jan went into town to phone & shop. I went searching in morning for land snails along track just above (to N) of camp site & running to east. Collected Theba to south (ie seward) of tracck & SE of end of track collected Theba, couple of very dead Bothriembryon, pupoids, pupillids & succineids & laomids in Eucalyptus (mallee) grove adjacent to, among & under moss in low areas - Only 1 (of possibly 2) species of laomid was taken live. In afternoon went further E & to N from this mornings area of search. No shells of any species found far away from coast. In dip between coastal row of dunes & first lot of hills behind - just W of point which marks E of Cove; found Succineids; Pupoids, Pupillids; Laomids; Bothriembryon; all dead. Succineids seem to be most widespread, extending from slightly uphill of dips on landward side to limit of vegetation of beach. Bothriembryon not found near beach or far from dips but in one area approx. opposite *ie N of) E point of cove dead shells were scattered over S face of hill - I thought that they might have been dispersed from hill top which was covered with low shrubs (Thryptomene?) but could not find any in & around this densely covered area. they could hav been carried by predators though noe were broken in characteristic way. Those on hill could have been caught by dessication after wandering from dip in which were growing Eucalyptus sp cf angulosa (though see shape of WA nuts & ridging on caps of buds). Other species of Eucalypt in area an E. tetragona.
Wed 15-i-85
Stn 14: Esperance: Left for Esperance at 6.30am - going by Springdale Rd to Ravensthorpe-Esperance Rd. Arrived about 8.15am. Bought weight belt, clip etc for Jan. Purchased Fuel. Swtt off from boat ramp near harbour at about 9am - went to E side of Tanker Jetty near outer end. Dived for about 1 1/4 0 1 1/2 hrs around piles near end in about 9 metres. Jetty piles beautifully covered with sponges, ascidians (compound & simple), gorgonians with large barnacles. Balanus at surface. Annelids[?] on gorgonians. A few species of nudibranch. Haliotis scalarisl H. cyclobates on stubbie bottle. Chamids on pilings but particularly on those lying on bottom. Clay found 1 Ostrea angassi. Plenty of hammer oysters. Amoniids on pilings.
Thurs. 16-i-85
Went in to meet Glen Boothey but he had already left to go abalone diving W of Hopetoun. Came back to camp -launched boat & went out to reefs indicated as good ground by Glen.
Station 15: Reef S of breakers approx SSE of camp. Depth 7m at top of reef & probably 10m at base. Great place for seaweeds - mostly brown Cystophora spp. Ecklonia Zonaria (?augustata). Greens included Caulerpa spp (annulata! (blusih) brownii cactoides flexilis scalpelli); Apjohnia; Struvea with & without fertile fronds. Codium spp (fragile, pomoides); v little (v small) Halimedes; Dictosphaeria. Reds were prominent & clumps were generally large. ?Rhodymenia sp [sketch] curled; ?Delisea ?hypneoides & D sp.; Red like Laurencia but with fine tuft out of terminal pore [sketch]; Botryocladia; Gelidium; Griffithsia ?brownii (but green brown).
Molluscs- live juv. Phasianella on brown weed (Sargassium ? base fronds); Chiton (red mantle, green & pink valves) on Herdmania momus; Phasianotrochus eximius on red algae; Pellax on red weed; Subninella; Haliotus laevigata; Dicathais.
Station 16 - 'pool' on E point of Masons Bay: Microstrea aurea.
Fri 17-i-86
Station 17: SE of East Mt Barren WA - off Four-mile Beach. Green algae; Upjohnia; Caulerpa ?racemosa & 3 other spp; Ulva little & sheltered; Struvea; Bunch of long pointed sausages with fruiting body near tip to one side [sketch]. Browns: Great quantities of kelp; Lesser amounts of Cystophora. Reds: Great diversity.
Station 18: Depth 15m, S of Stn 17. ie SE of East Mt Barren, off Four-mile Beach. Depth 15m. algal covered reefs with sand pockets.
Station List
S. Slack-Smith, C Bryce, L Marsh.
#1 W of Starvation Boat Harbour, WA, on landward slopes of sand dunes; approx. 33°56'08''S; 120°30'58'' E. 7-i-86.
#2 Starvation Boat Harbour between Powell & North Powell Points, WA. approx. 33°55'23''S, 120° 33'30''E.
#2.1 Beach Drift; #2.2 Tide pools in granitic rock; #2.3 seaward slope of hillside - granite & limestone. 7-i-86
#3 Cove E of Masons Bay, WA. offshore, granitic reef, intertidal ->2m. approx 33°57'35"S 120°29'E. 8-i-86
#4 Masons Bay, WA. approx 33°58'20''S, 120°26'30''E; #4.1 beach drift; #4.2 sand dunes.
#5 Masons Bay, WA. approx 35°58'15''S, 120°26'30''E; sheltered bay, algae on granitic reffs, seagrasses in sand, 106m. 9-i-86.
#6 Cove E of Masons Bay, WA - at W end, granitic and limestone reefs in silty sand, alagae & seagrasses, 1-3m, approx. 33°57'40"S, 120°28'10''E. 9-i-86.
#7 Point at E end of Masons Bay, WA, granitic reefs and seagrasses on E side. 0-3m, approx 33°58'S, 120°28'08''E. 9-i-86.
#8 Cove E of Masons Bay, WA. - W end, granitic reefs and seagrass beds adjacent to shore, 1-3m. approx 33°58'S; 120°28'08''E. 10-i-86.
#9 Starvation Boat Harbour, WA. N of North Powell Point. approx 33°54'50''S, 120°33'30''E. 6m, seagrass beds (Posidonia sp & Zostera spp). 11-i-86.
#10 Starvation Boat Harbour, WA. N of North Powell Point. approx 33°55'10''S, 120°33'33''E, 1-3m, seagrass beds (Amphibolus spp). 11-i-86.
#11 Barrens Beach, WA. Beach drift, and fringing intertidal limestone reefs. approx 33°55'40'', 120°02'30'' to 33°55'30'', 120°02'30''. 12-i-86.
#12 Two-mile Reef, S of Culham Inlet, WA. approx. 33°55'35''S, 120°03'10''E. Beach drift and fringing intertidal limestone reefs. 12-i-86.
#13 Five-mile Reef, approx 10km E of Hopetoun, WA. 'lagoon' between sandy beach & offshore limestone reefs, 0-3m, approx 33°56'S, 120°12' E. 13-i-86.
#14 Esperance WA - at end of jetty on piles, under stones & on seagrass & sand. 9m. 15-i-86.
#15 E of Masons Bay, WA. offshore granitic reefs, approx 33°59'S, 120°29'E; 7-10m. 16-i-86.
#16 Same as #8.
#17. SE of East Mount Barren, W.A. - off Four Mile Beach 1/2km offshore, algal covered limestone. Depth 8-10m. 17 Jan 1986. approx 33°56'10''S, 120°04'50''E.
#18 SE of East Mount Barren, WA - off Four-mile Beach, approx 1km offshore, algal covered limestone. Depth 15m. 17-i-86. approx 33°56'40''S, 120°04'50''E.
23-XI-86
Perth-> Margaret River
24-XI-86
Margaret R to C. Leeuwin
Water Wheel Seep. Austroassiminea letha [sketch map of locality]. Snails not in areas c dry soil on top of rises (small shrubs), nor on paths through swamp where soil compacted nor in low lying areas over which water flows (now or in past) nor in areas near seaward edge of swamp. Snails are present only on soil with abundant accumulation of litter & humus - ie not washed by water flow. Snails are in areas with damp to fairly dry soil - with abundant plant cover (couch grass, buffalo grass, rushes, sedges, herbs). In some areas near rock outcrop snails have been there in past but not now. In some areas generally under water snails are present on small islands of honeycomb ?flowstone where CaCO3 has precipitated around rocks etc - these were probably always [?] - otherwise precipitation would not have occured. Snails seen to occupy most of seepage area, They are uphill as far as lower corners of fenced off Water Authority land (where water board have apprently been using CuSO4 to kill algae) but much less abundant at NW corner than at SW corner & in neither place were they evenly distributed, at SW corner also Succinea (dead) & Bothriembryon dead & juveniles alive 0 also discoidal flamed snails at NW corner also live Succinea, Physastra (?) mollusc eggs. at slightly higher ground at NW corner no w v few Astroassiminea & Bothriembryon. Seepage at Water Supply Dam is pumped to town but considerable flow continues over dam wall - this is presumably the water that feeds the water wheel area to the S - the flow to the NW which empties at the Quarry Bay Point (& also perhaps flows under the dune to exit at 2 places directly into Quarry Bay S shore, Obviously the eater flow regime of these areas depends possibly entirely on the flow of water over the dam. On way back to Augusta 0 checked in seepage area about 1/2 way between the Monument & Skippy Rock Rd turnoff from Leeuwin Rd - Anne found Austroassiminea. ...