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Almost Destroyed EarthCache

Hidden : 12/2/2009
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
2.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   not chosen (not chosen)

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Geocache Description:

Note: Colorado and Oregon users: The information on this page is fairly lengthy and may not be completely displayed on your GPS. You should print this page before attempting the EarthCache

This is an easy & pleasant walk along our lake foreshore and onto Windang Island which is accessible whatever the tides


ALMOST DESTROYED

An Island and a Lake almost destroyed by man kind. It does not matter whether it was from sand mining or rock mining, Windang Island and Lake Illawarra have had their bad luck overturned by Mother Nature.

LAKE ILLAWARRA
Throughout recorded white Australian and passed-down Aboriginal history, Lake Illawarra has been silting and flooding with its entrance being covered by large volumes of ever-shifting sand.
There are hills to the north, west and south of the lake and sand dunes to the east. Geologists estimate that the hills began forming some 200 million years ago and that volcanic and uplift activity continued until around 20 million years ago. Lake Illawarra is located in the Macquarie Rivulet valley. The valley was drowned approx. 6000 to 7000 years ago (Holocene Marine Transgression era) when the sea levels reached what they are now. The sand dunes which form the barrier between the lake and the ocean are the result of much more recent sea level changes. Lake Illawarra is classed as a “Barrier Estuary”. Barrier Estuaries have narrow elongated entrance channels and broad tidal sand flats. It is also the largest estuarine lagoon along the NSW coast. An “estuary” is a partially enclosed coastal body of water, partially saltwater, partially freshwater. It also must be part tidal and part non tidal. Its unusual characteristic is that despite a surface area of 35 square kilometres, it has a maximum depth of only 3.5m with a significant area of the lake being less than 1m in depth. The average lake depth is 1.9m. The Lake, being a “Barrier” estuary, has a relatively long and shallow entrance that was periodically blocked off. Due to the nature of the sea entrance, very little tidal variation occurred in the lake. Its freshwater catchment area covers 270 km2

Natural cycles at one point saw the lake entrance not only open, but over 2.8 metres deep, allowing small sharks and dolphins passage in and out of the lake.
Commercial sand excavation was undertaken along Warilla and Perkins beaches from the 1940s to 1970s. The major sand dune along Warilla Beach, next to today’s beachside car park, was excavated and some of it’s’ product was even exported to Waikiki in Hawaii. Extensive sand extraction of close to 500,000 tons annually at Windang/Primbee around the early 1960s did in fact allow the sea to breach the formidable Perkins Beach dunes at Kemblawarra.

WINDANG ISLAND
The Illawarra coastline is dominated by steep rocky headlands, with bays and some of the most pristine beaches in the world. A major headland at Red Point (Port Kembla) divides the coast into two morphologically distinct regions. North of Red Point region is referred to as the Wollongong Embayment and the south, which includes the Shellharbour area, is the Windang Embayment. Windang Island and Stack Island (Minnamurra River) are the only significant near–shore islands along the Shellharbour coastline. Both are made of “Bumbo Latite”. This applies to all the exposed bedrock along the coast between Shellharbour South Beach and Minnamurra. Windang Island is joined to the mainland by a tombolo which extended either from the northern or southern entrance bank. The tombolo was part of the Windang barrier system.

WHAT COULD HAVE HAPPENED
The biggest risk to Lake Illawarra and Windang Island was by the concept of creating a deep sea channel from near the present “Tallawarra Power Station” site through Lake Illawarra and out to sea. This was to be built using the rock from Windang Island.
Sub littoral (below tide level) kelp forests exist around the island. These forests are home to Ostracods. There is a minimum of 69 species recorded living in the kelp. A greater proportion of Ostracods are the smooth-shelled forms occurring in the shallow waters.

In 1895 The Illawarra Harbour and Land Corporation Railway Line was commenced and an attempt was made to link the proposed Lake Illawarra Harbour to the "Ocean Seam Colliery". The railway line was to be 10.8 kms long from Tallawarra Point, through Koonawarra to the main road and crossing over the Illawarra Railway line to the colliery which was situated 500 metres west of the Old West Dapto Public School site.  It never hauled coal as the coal deposits when tested were found to be unsatisfactory.  Only the northern end of the Illawarra Harbour and Land Corporation railway, apart from the Dapto Smelter section, was ever used to haul paying loads. There are some physical remains of this line still to be seen in Dapto.
If they had been successful, this haven for sea life would have been destroyed. The jetty built on the western shore of the lake was to allow the export of coal from the Ocean View/Seam colliery. As part of this scheme, a channel was to be dredged through the entrance of Lake Illawarra to allow ocean-going boats to reach the lake jetty. The channel was to be 7.3 kms long and 131 metres wide between the breakwaters at the lake entrance. A railway line was built on Windang Island to carry rock cut from the south-western side of the Island through to the mainland side of the Island. This rock was used to build the breakwaters, the remains of which can be seen today. The project was abandoned in 1902 because of the problem of drifting sand blocking the lake entrance channel.

Mother Nature stepped in and saved a “Sea Haven” that could have been lost forever.

The railway line linking the mine with the jetty opened in 1895 but closed in 1902, abandoned because of problems associated with dredging the lake. The decision was then made to make Port Kembla the coal loading point. 

To complete this Earth cache you need to email us explaining simply;

1. At GZ the Bumbo Latite has a different appearance to the rest of the rock platform. Describe the changed appearance and what you think has caused these changes

2. Post a photograph of your GPSr /yourself with a set of the old wheels from anywhere in that area

Additional Hints (No hints available.)