Middalya Station
Middalya Station is a pastoral lease that opeates as a sheep station in Western Australia. It was located 132 kilometres (82 mi) south east of Coral Bay and 256 kilometres (159 mi) north east of Denham in the Gascoyne region. The Minilya River runs through the property. The traditional owners of the area are the Tharrkari people who currently lease and manage Ullawarra station. Douglas John Hearman acquired Middalya at some time prior to 1897. During the shearing season of 1918 a total of 15,500 sheep were shorn including 3,000 lambs producing a total of 300 bales of wool.
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Middalya Station
Middalya Station is a pastoral lease that opeates as a sheep station in Western Australia. It was located 132 kilometres (82 mi) south east of Coral Bay and 256 kilometres (159 mi) north east of Denham in the Gascoyne region. The Minilya River runs through the property. The traditional owners of the area are the Tharrkari people who currently lease and manage Ullawarra station. Douglas John Hearman acquired Middalya at some time prior to 1897. During the shearing season of 1918 a total of 15,500 sheep were shorn including 3,000 lambs producing a total of 300 bales of wool.
has abstract
Middalya Station is a pastoral ...... 3 producing 525 bales of wool.
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Wikipage page ID
40,979,129
Wikipage revision ID
650,512,829
Caption
Location in Western Australia
label
Middalya Station
lat deg
lon deg
1.14768e+2
hypernym
point
-23.906 114.768
type
comment
Middalya Station is a pastoral ...... a total of 300 bales of wool.
@en
label
Middalya Station
@en
lat
-2.3906e+1
long
1.14768e+2