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Adelaide–Darwin railway line

Tarcoola–Darwin railway line
km
2975
Port Darwin - East Arm Wharf
2973
Darwin Berrimah Terminal
Darwin Intermodal
-- Darwin to Katherine --
2958
Elizabeth River
2911
Darwin River
2891
Finniss River
2866
Adelaide River West Branch - 1
2865
Adelaide River West Branch - 2
2779
Union Reef Loop (iron ore)
2712
Edith River
2670
Katherine River
2667
Katherine
-- Katherine to Alice Springs --
Katherine sidings
2627
King River
2218
Newcastle Waters
2154
Muckaty
2024
Tennant Creek
1786
Illoquara
Opened 2004
Opened 1980
1558
Alice Springs yard
1557
Alice Springs
Alice Springs (CAR)
Heavitree
-- Alice Springs to border --
1540
Bohning Cattle Yards / Roe Creek loop
1535
Mereenie siding & triangle
1474
Hugh River
1466
Hugh River loop, siding & spur
1413
Finke River (Larapinta)
1385
Impadna loop, siding & spur
1303
Kulgera yard
1303
Kulgera loop siding & yard
1289
-- border to Manguri --
1243
Marryat loop & siding
1213
Alberga River
1187
Chandler loop siding, triangle & spurs
1177
unnamed river
1131
Marla loop, siding & spur
1052
Cadney Park loop and siding
928
Manguri
892
Rankin Dam
864
Wirrida Iron ore circle
863
Wirrida
788
Carnes
777
Quarry 555 siding
Opened 1980
Existing lines
726
Tarcoola
Trans-Australian Railway
91.6
Port Augusta
Adelaide-Port Augusta line
0
Adelaide Parklands Terminal
km
[1]

The Adelaide–Darwin railway line is a railway line in Australia, between the South Australian town of Tarcoola and the Northern Territory city of Darwin. Preceded by a number of other shorter railways, a line through to Darwin was fully realised in 2004 when the final link from Alice Springs to Darwin was opened. Forming the main section of the 2,975 kilometres (1,849 mi) rail corridor between the cities of Adelaide and Darwin, the line is used by The Ghan passenger train and interstate freight trains operated by Aurizon.

The Adelaide–Darwin rail corridor, completed in 2004. Construction of the first of its five constituent lines had started 87 years earlier – and its ill-fated predecessor 39 years before that.

First steps towards a transcontinental railway edit

 
Darwin's railway station, known as the Berrimah passenger terminal
 
The Berrimah rail maintenance depot and freight terminal, at East Arm, are 1 km before the Berrimah passenger terminal and 5 km before the extreme end of the line at East Arm wharfs
 
Elizabeth River Bridge, 17 km south of Darwin, built for rail and road traffic by the Alice Springs–Darwin railway project in 2003

Under the provisions of the Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910, the Commonwealth Railways assumed responsibility for the South Australian Railways' narrow gauge lines in the far north of South Australia and the Northern Territory. The Act mandated the building of a south–north railway although, crucially, no date was specified.[2][3] Two routes were considered: a standard gauge line branching off the Trans-Australian Railway at Tarcoola or a cheaper extension, from Oodnadatta, of the narrow gauge Central Australia Railway (CAR) line that had opened in 1891. Eventually the latter was chosen, and the extension to Alice Springs was opened in 1929.[4] Meanwhile, the North Australia Railway (NAR) opened in stages south from Darwin to Birdum, the latter being reached in 1929.[5]

In the late 1940s, the South Australian Government developed the Leigh Creek coalfields, 271 km (168 mi) north of Port Augusta to provide coal for a power station in Adelaide and, later, for a new power station built at the port. The infrastructure of the CAR was inadequate for the increased tonnages to be carried, so the federal government funded a new standard gauge line from Stirling North to the coalfields, and on to Marree to provide cattle transport.[6]: 133 

The northernmost two-thirds followed an alignment generally within 8 km (5 mi) of the narrow-gauge line. The southern third avoided the impediments of the mountainous section near Quorn and Hawker.[7][8] The new standard-gauge line covered one-third of the distance to Alice Springs, and a Commonwealth Railways booklet mentioned its "special importance to the Northern Territory as it is the first stage in the ultimate conversion of the narrow-gauge railway to Alice Springs to standard 4 ft 8+12 in gauge".[9]: 257 

Tarcoola to Alice Springs edit

By 1967, interest in a transcontinental route had revived again. Extension of the route then in existence was one of three options considered, but a route far to the west, largely free of flood events, was chosen.[10] Construction of the current 828 km (515 mi) kilometre line from Tarcoola to Alice Springs began in April 1975, opening in October 1980. The CAR closed shortly after.[11][12] By then, the NAR had closed, in June 1976, following the closure of the iron ore mine at Frances Creek.[5]

Alice Springs to Darwin edit

In 1983, the federal government announced its intention to extend the standard gauge line from Alice Springs to Darwin to complete the Adelaide–Darwin rail corridor. It was planned to open in 1988, Australia's bicentenary year.[13][14] After a change of federal government in March 1983, the new government cancelled the project, and the project languished for a further 16 years.[5]

In June 1999, the AustralAsia Rail Corporation, a company owned by the Northern Territory and South Australian Governments, was awarded the contract to build and operate a 1,420 kilometre Alice Springs to Darwin line as a Build, Own, Operate and Transfer project to the Asia Pacific Transport Consortium (APTC).[5][15] The APTC contracted FreightLink to implement the project and to operate the railway. It cost $1.2 billion to build.[16]

The Federal Government contributed $165 million from the Centenary of Federation Fund, the Northern Territory Government contributed $165 million and the South Australian Government contributed $150 million to the AustralAsia Rail Corporation for the construction of assets by the APTC and FreightLink that were later leased for a peppercorn rent to FreightLink. In addition, the three governments contributed about $26 million each, a total of $79 million in further funding to support the APTC directly, by way of mezzanine debt financing (subordinated debt), equity, and contingent equity. Construction began in July 2001. Completion occurred in September 2003.[5][17][18] On 17 January 2004 the first freight train reached Darwin.[19] On 4 February 2004 the first passenger train arrived in Darwin from Adelaide, travelling 2,979 km in 47 hours.[20][21]

In operation edit

FreightLink failed to make a profit in the first four years. In May 2008 the company announced that the board, shareholders and lenders had agreed to sell the company's ownership of the Alice Springs to Darwin line, citing its inheritance of a large amount of debt from the construction phase that it was unable to manage.[22][23][24] In November 2008, Freightlink went into voluntary administration after failing to reach agreement with creditors on the terms of a sale of the business.[25] Genesee & Wyoming Australia, later acquired by Aurizon, purchased the assets of FreightLink in June 2010 for $334 million, including the 50-year lease on the Tarcoola–Darwin line.[16][26]

As of 2022, the line from Tarcoola to Alice Springs is owned by the Australian Rail Track Corporation and leased until 2047 to Aurizon.[27][28] The line from Alice Springs to Darwin is owned by Aurizon until 2054, when ownership will pass to the Australian Government and the build–own–operate–and–transfer agreement will end.[29] Aurizon undertakes train control on the entire Tarcoola–Darwin line.[30][note 1]

Traffic edit

Two experiential tourism trains operate on the line: The Ghan service operated by Journey Beyond, which traverses the whole line and through to Adelaide weekly in each direction, with a scheduled duration of 53  hours 15 minutes;[31]: 108  and the company's Indian Pacific, an east–west service that runs on the southernmost 727 kilometres (452 miles) before heading west to Perth.

 
 

Aurizon is the only freight operator in the Tarcoola–Darwin section. Trains originate or terminate at intermodal terminals at Berrimah (Darwin) and Islington (Adelaide). They stop at intermodal points in Katherine, Tennant Creek and Alice Springs.[31]: 79 

The line has facilitated bulk commodity exports from iron ore and copper mines in central Australia, including Oz Minerals' Prominent Hill copper mine.[32] Following a derailment event in December 2011,[33] Oz Minerals elected to use the line to export to the south via Port Adelaide.[34]

Figures for Darwin's dry bulk exports illustrate the fickle nature of mining. In financial year 2010–11, export product delivered to Port Darwin by rail – comprising iron ore, manganese, and copper concentrate – exceeded 3 million tonnes for the first time.[35] With copper traffic ceased, the figure in 2013–14 for iron and manganese was 2.7 million tonnes. After mining of iron ore ceased in 2015–16, only manganese remained. In 2018–19, manganese exports totalled 900,000 tonnes.[36]

Since 2009 the company has hauled iron oxide / copper / gold ore mined at Prominent Hill[37][note 2] from a 1.5 km (0.9 mi) siding at Wirrida, 95 km (60 mi) west of the mine and 129 km (80 mi) from Northgate. In 2012 a new iron ore mine was opened at Peculiar Knob,[note 3] 22 km (14 mi) from Prominent Hill. Until production ceased in 2015, its product was loaded at Wirrida, at a balloon loop immediately north of the Prominent Hill loading site.[38][39][40]

During 2019, a large-scale track upgrade program was started between Adelaide and Tarcoola to allow heavier freight trains to operate at higher speeds. Rails were placed during the year[note 4] and finishing works such as replacing wooden sleepers with concrete ones were scheduled for 2020.[41]

Stations edit

The original CAR and NAR narrow-gauge lines had many small stations, sidings and halts along their routes for pick-up and set-down of wagons and less-than-car loads, and passengers, but freight traffic has been all-through on the post-2004 standard-gauge route. Stations only exist at Alice Springs, Tennant Creek, Katherine and Darwin.[42] Additionally there are crossing loops, most of them 1859 m (2000 yds) long: 12 south of Alice Springs and 3 to the north.[30]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Train control is from Northgate block point, 6 km (3.7 mi) from Tarcoola, where the line diverges from the Trans-Australian Railway. It ends at Berrimah passenger terminal at Darwin. Northgate block point is 731 km (454 mi) from the Adelaide datum at Adelaide Parklands Terminal, near the Adelaide suburb of Keswick. Berrimah passenger terminal is 2,974 km (1,848 mi) from the Adelaide datum.
  2. ^ 29°43′38″S 135°34′01″E / 29.727286°S 135.567022°E / -29.727286; 135.567022.
  3. ^ 29°35′13″S 135°22′58″E / 29.586848°S 135.382827°E / -29.586848; 135.382827.
  4. ^ 70,000 tonnes of 60 kilograms per metre rails replaced 47 kg/m rail, increasing the axle load limit to 25 tonnes.

References edit

  1. ^ Darwin Line SA Track & Signal
  2. ^ Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910 Federal Register of Legislation
  3. ^ Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910 Commonwealth of Australia Consolidated Acts
  4. ^ "Australian Commonwealth Railway Developments" Railway Gazette 28 January 1927 page 116
  5. ^ a b c d e History of the railway AustralAsia Railway Corporation
  6. ^ Fitch, Ronald J. (2006). Australian Railwayman: from cadet engineer to railways commissioner. Dural, New South Wales: Rosenberg Publishing Pty Ltd. ISBN 1877058483.
  7. ^ Newland, Andrew; Quinlan, Howard (2000). Australian Railway Routes 1854 - 2000. Redfern: Australian Railway Historical Society. p. 67. ISBN 0-909650-49-7.
  8. ^ Port Augusta to Marree Chris's Commonwealth Railways
  9. ^ Fuller, Basil (1975). The Ghan: the story of the Alice Springs Railway. Adelaide: Rigby. ISBN 0727000160.
  10. ^ "The Senate - Alice Springs Railway". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 April 2017.   subscription: the source is only accessible via a paid subscription ("paywall").
  11. ^ "In Brief" Railway Gazette International June 1975 page 210
  12. ^ Standard Gauge to Alice Springs – Construction of Tarcoola–Alice Springs Railway Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin June 1981 pages 117–139
  13. ^ "Preliminary work starts on 1500km Alice - Darwin link" Railway Gazette International April 1981 page 262
  14. ^ "Premier launches Alice - Darwin line" Railway Gazette International March 1983 page 152
  15. ^ Darwin deal Railway Gazette International July 1999
  16. ^ a b "Taxpayer funds sought from new rail owner". The World Today. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 10 June 2010.
  17. ^ Industry unites at Australian showcase Railway Gazette International November 2003
  18. ^ "Transcontinental link is ready for business" Railway Gazette International January 2004 page 20
  19. ^ Australia's last frontier is conquered Railway Gazette International February 2004
  20. ^ "Completion of the Adelaide to Darwin railway line". Australian Bureau of Statistics. 8 December 2006.
  21. ^ First Train 13 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine AustralAsia Railway Corporation
  22. ^ Calacouras, Nick (20 May 2008). "Railway up for sale". NT News. Darwin, Australia: Nationwide News Pty Limited.
  23. ^ Vesna Poljak and Michael Smith (19 May 2008). "Banks force sale of $1.2bn Adelaide-Darwin rail link". Australian Financial Review. p. 1 and 19.
  24. ^ Calacouras, Nick (20 May 2008). . Northern Territory News. News Ltd. Archived from the original on 21 July 2008. Retrieved 20 May 2008.
  25. ^ . Northern Territory News. News Ltd. 7 November 2008. Archived from the original on 12 February 2012. Retrieved 12 November 2008.
  26. ^ "FreightLink-owned Adelaide-Darwin railway to be sold to US company Genesee & Wyoming". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 9 June 2010. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  27. ^ Our Network Australian Rail Track Corporation
  28. ^ Network map 4 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Genesee & Wyoming Australia
  29. ^ AustralAsia link making rapid progress Railway Gazette International 1 April 2002.
      subscription: the source is only accessible via a paid subscription ("paywall").
  30. ^ a b Vincent, Graham (2020). "Darwin line" (PDF). SA Track and Signal. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  31. ^ a b "Trainline 6 Statistical Report" (PDF). Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics. 2018. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  32. ^ "First Prominent Hill shipment set for export". ABC News. 29 April 2009. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  33. ^ "Train derailment copper concentrate recovered". ABC News. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  34. ^ "Oz Minerals - Intermodal Solutions Group". Intermodal Solutions Group. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  35. ^ . Darwin Port. Archived from the original on 5 November 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  36. ^ "Dry bulk". Darwin Port. Darwin Port Operations Pty Ltd. 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  37. ^ First production from Prominent Hill copper-gold operation OZ Minerals ASX announcement, 26 February 2009. Accessed 12 January 2010.
  38. ^ "Monitor mining operations: South Australia". Mapbox. 2020. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  39. ^ Vincent, Graham (2020). "Northgate-Wirrida" (PDF). SA Track and Signal. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  40. ^ Vincent, Graham (2020). "Tarcoola" (PDF). SA Track and Signal. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  41. ^ Powell, Jake (3 August 2020). "$252m rail upgrade contracts soon to be awarded". The flapping mouth. iSeekplant Pty Ltd. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  42. ^ (PDF). Australia Southern Railroad. 2 January 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2010.

Further reading edit

  • Bromby, Robin (2004). Rails to the Top End: The Adelaide-Darwin Transcontinental Railway (4th ed.). Alice Springs: Paul Fitzsimons. ISBN 9780958176019.
  • Rozycki, Jack (Jan–Mar 2003). "The Never Never Line. Australia's biggest project: the Adelaide-Darwin railway". Australian Geographic 69: 50–67.

External links edit

  • AustralAsia Railway Corporation
  • History of the Adelaide-Darwin Railway 31 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tarcoola To Alice Springs Railway Act 1974
  • Crossing Loops T-AS
  • Crossing Loops AS-D

adelaide, darwin, railway, line, tarcoola, darwin, railway, linekm2975, port, darwin, east, wharf2973, darwin, berrimah, terminaldarwin, intermodal, darwin, katherine, 2958, elizabeth, river2911, darwin, river2891, finniss, river2866, adelaide, river, west, br. Tarcoola Darwin railway linekm2975 Port Darwin East Arm Wharf2973 Darwin Berrimah TerminalDarwin Intermodal Darwin to Katherine 2958 Elizabeth River2911 Darwin River2891 Finniss River2866 Adelaide River West Branch 12865 Adelaide River West Branch 22779 Union Reef Loop iron ore 2712 Edith River2670 Katherine River2667 Katherine Katherine to Alice Springs Katherine sidings2627 King River2218 Newcastle Waters2154 Muckaty2024 Tennant Creek1786 IlloquaraOpened 2004Opened 19801558 Alice Springs yard1557 Alice SpringsAlice Springs CAR HeavitreeCentral Australia Railway Alice Springs to border 1540 Bohning Cattle Yards Roe Creek loop1535 Mereenie siding amp triangle1474 Hugh River1466 Hugh River loop siding amp spur1413 Finke River Larapinta 1385 Impadna loop siding amp spur1303 Kulgera yard1303 Kulgera loop siding amp yard1289 Northern TerritorySouth Australia border border to Manguri 1243 Marryat loop amp siding1213 Alberga River1187 Chandler loop siding triangle amp spurs1177 unnamed river1131 Marla loop siding amp spur1052 Cadney Park loop and siding928 Manguri892 Rankin Dam864 Wirrida Iron ore circle863 Wirrida788 Carnes777 Quarry 555 sidingOpened 1980Existing linesTrans Australian Railway to Perth726 TarcoolaTrans Australian Railway91 6 Port AugustaPichi Richi RailwayAdelaide Port Augusta line0 Adelaide Parklands Terminalto Melbournekmstandard gauge3 ft 6 in narrow gauge 1 This diagram viewtalkedit The Adelaide Darwin railway line is a railway line in Australia between the South Australian town of Tarcoola and the Northern Territory city of Darwin Preceded by a number of other shorter railways a line through to Darwin was fully realised in 2004 when the final link from Alice Springs to Darwin was opened Forming the main section of the 2 975 kilometres 1 849 mi rail corridor between the cities of Adelaide and Darwin the line is used by The Ghan passenger train and interstate freight trains operated by Aurizon The Adelaide Darwin rail corridor completed in 2004 Construction of the first of its five constituent lines had started 87 years earlier and its ill fated predecessor 39 years before that Contents 1 First steps towards a transcontinental railway 2 Tarcoola to Alice Springs 3 Alice Springs to Darwin 4 In operation 5 Traffic 6 Stations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksFirst steps towards a transcontinental railway edit nbsp Darwin s railway station known as the Berrimah passenger terminal nbsp The Berrimah rail maintenance depot and freight terminal at East Arm are 1 km before the Berrimah passenger terminal and 5 km before the extreme end of the line at East Arm wharfs nbsp Elizabeth River Bridge 17 km south of Darwin built for rail and road traffic by the Alice Springs Darwin railway project in 2003Under the provisions of the Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910 the Commonwealth Railways assumed responsibility for the South Australian Railways narrow gauge lines in the far north of South Australia and the Northern Territory The Act mandated the building of a south north railway although crucially no date was specified 2 3 Two routes were considered a standard gauge line branching off the Trans Australian Railway at Tarcoola or a cheaper extension from Oodnadatta of the narrow gauge Central Australia Railway CAR line that had opened in 1891 Eventually the latter was chosen and the extension to Alice Springs was opened in 1929 4 Meanwhile the North Australia Railway NAR opened in stages south from Darwin to Birdum the latter being reached in 1929 5 In the late 1940s the South Australian Government developed the Leigh Creek coalfields 271 km 168 mi north of Port Augusta to provide coal for a power station in Adelaide and later for a new power station built at the port The infrastructure of the CAR was inadequate for the increased tonnages to be carried so the federal government funded a new standard gauge line from Stirling North to the coalfields and on to Marree to provide cattle transport 6 133 The northernmost two thirds followed an alignment generally within 8 km 5 mi of the narrow gauge line The southern third avoided the impediments of the mountainous section near Quorn and Hawker 7 8 The new standard gauge line covered one third of the distance to Alice Springs and a Commonwealth Railways booklet mentioned its special importance to the Northern Territory as it is the first stage in the ultimate conversion of the narrow gauge railway to Alice Springs to standard 4 ft 8 1 2 in gauge 9 257 Tarcoola to Alice Springs editBy 1967 interest in a transcontinental route had revived again Extension of the route then in existence was one of three options considered but a route far to the west largely free of flood events was chosen 10 Construction of the current 828 km 515 mi kilometre line from Tarcoola to Alice Springs began in April 1975 opening in October 1980 The CAR closed shortly after 11 12 By then the NAR had closed in June 1976 following the closure of the iron ore mine at Frances Creek 5 Alice Springs to Darwin editIn 1983 the federal government announced its intention to extend the standard gauge line from Alice Springs to Darwin to complete the Adelaide Darwin rail corridor It was planned to open in 1988 Australia s bicentenary year 13 14 After a change of federal government in March 1983 the new government cancelled the project and the project languished for a further 16 years 5 In June 1999 the AustralAsia Rail Corporation a company owned by the Northern Territory and South Australian Governments was awarded the contract to build and operate a 1 420 kilometre Alice Springs to Darwin line as a Build Own Operate and Transfer project to the Asia Pacific Transport Consortium APTC 5 15 The APTC contracted FreightLink to implement the project and to operate the railway It cost 1 2 billion to build 16 The Federal Government contributed 165 million from the Centenary of Federation Fund the Northern Territory Government contributed 165 million and the South Australian Government contributed 150 million to the AustralAsia Rail Corporation for the construction of assets by the APTC and FreightLink that were later leased for a peppercorn rent to FreightLink In addition the three governments contributed about 26 million each a total of 79 million in further funding to support the APTC directly by way of mezzanine debt financing subordinated debt equity and contingent equity Construction began in July 2001 Completion occurred in September 2003 5 17 18 On 17 January 2004 the first freight train reached Darwin 19 On 4 February 2004 the first passenger train arrived in Darwin from Adelaide travelling 2 979 km in 47 hours 20 21 In operation editFreightLink failed to make a profit in the first four years In May 2008 the company announced that the board shareholders and lenders had agreed to sell the company s ownership of the Alice Springs to Darwin line citing its inheritance of a large amount of debt from the construction phase that it was unable to manage 22 23 24 In November 2008 Freightlink went into voluntary administration after failing to reach agreement with creditors on the terms of a sale of the business 25 Genesee amp Wyoming Australia later acquired by Aurizon purchased the assets of FreightLink in June 2010 for 334 million including the 50 year lease on the Tarcoola Darwin line 16 26 As of 2022 update the line from Tarcoola to Alice Springs is owned by the Australian Rail Track Corporation and leased until 2047 to Aurizon 27 28 The line from Alice Springs to Darwin is owned by Aurizon until 2054 when ownership will pass to the Australian Government and the build own operate and transfer agreement will end 29 Aurizon undertakes train control on the entire Tarcoola Darwin line 30 note 1 Traffic editTwo experiential tourism trains operate on the line The Ghan service operated by Journey Beyond which traverses the whole line and through to Adelaide weekly in each direction with a scheduled duration of 53 hours 15 minutes 31 108 and the company s Indian Pacific an east west service that runs on the southernmost 727 kilometres 452 miles before heading west to Perth nbsp A freight train near Alice Springs headed for Darwin in January 2004 nbsp Closer view Aurizon is the only freight operator in the Tarcoola Darwin section Trains originate or terminate at intermodal terminals at Berrimah Darwin and Islington Adelaide They stop at intermodal points in Katherine Tennant Creek and Alice Springs 31 79 The line has facilitated bulk commodity exports from iron ore and copper mines in central Australia including Oz Minerals Prominent Hill copper mine 32 Following a derailment event in December 2011 33 Oz Minerals elected to use the line to export to the south via Port Adelaide 34 Figures for Darwin s dry bulk exports illustrate the fickle nature of mining In financial year 2010 11 export product delivered to Port Darwin by rail comprising iron ore manganese and copper concentrate exceeded 3 million tonnes for the first time 35 With copper traffic ceased the figure in 2013 14 for iron and manganese was 2 7 million tonnes After mining of iron ore ceased in 2015 16 only manganese remained In 2018 19 manganese exports totalled 900 000 tonnes 36 Since 2009 the company has hauled iron oxide copper gold ore mined at Prominent Hill 37 note 2 from a 1 5 km 0 9 mi siding at Wirrida 95 km 60 mi west of the mine and 129 km 80 mi from Northgate In 2012 a new iron ore mine was opened at Peculiar Knob note 3 22 km 14 mi from Prominent Hill Until production ceased in 2015 its product was loaded at Wirrida at a balloon loop immediately north of the Prominent Hill loading site 38 39 40 During 2019 a large scale track upgrade program was started between Adelaide and Tarcoola to allow heavier freight trains to operate at higher speeds Rails were placed during the year note 4 and finishing works such as replacing wooden sleepers with concrete ones were scheduled for 2020 41 Stations editThe original CAR and NAR narrow gauge lines had many small stations sidings and halts along their routes for pick up and set down of wagons and less than car loads and passengers but freight traffic has been all through on the post 2004 standard gauge route Stations only exist at Alice Springs Tennant Creek Katherine and Darwin 42 Additionally there are crossing loops most of them 1859 m 2000 yds long 12 south of Alice Springs and 3 to the north 30 See also edit nbsp Railways portalCentral Australia Railway North Australia RailwayNotes edit Train control is from Northgate block point 6 km 3 7 mi from Tarcoola where the line diverges from the Trans Australian Railway It ends at Berrimah passenger terminal at Darwin Northgate block point is 731 km 454 mi from the Adelaide datum at Adelaide Parklands Terminal near the Adelaide suburb of Keswick Berrimah passenger terminal is 2 974 km 1 848 mi from the Adelaide datum 29 43 38 S 135 34 01 E 29 727286 S 135 567022 E 29 727286 135 567022 29 35 13 S 135 22 58 E 29 586848 S 135 382827 E 29 586848 135 382827 70 000 tonnes of 60 kilograms per metre rails replaced 47 kg m rail increasing the axle load limit to 25 tonnes References edit Darwin Line SA Track amp Signal Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910 Federal Register of Legislation Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910 Commonwealth of Australia Consolidated Acts Australian Commonwealth Railway Developments Railway Gazette 28 January 1927 page 116 a b c d e History of the railway AustralAsia Railway Corporation Fitch Ronald J 2006 Australian Railwayman from cadet engineer to railways commissioner Dural New South Wales Rosenberg Publishing Pty Ltd ISBN 1877058483 Newland Andrew Quinlan Howard 2000 Australian Railway Routes 1854 2000 Redfern Australian Railway Historical Society p 67 ISBN 0 909650 49 7 Port Augusta to Marree Chris s Commonwealth Railways Fuller Basil 1975 The Ghan the story of the Alice Springs Railway Adelaide Rigby ISBN 0727000160 The Senate Alice Springs Railway Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 23 April 2017 nbsp subscription the source is only accessible via a paid subscription paywall In Brief Railway Gazette International June 1975 page 210 Standard Gauge to Alice Springs Construction of Tarcoola Alice Springs Railway Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin June 1981 pages 117 139 Preliminary work starts on 1500km Alice Darwin link Railway Gazette International April 1981 page 262 Premier launches Alice Darwin line Railway Gazette International March 1983 page 152 Darwin deal Railway Gazette International July 1999 a b Taxpayer funds sought from new rail owner The World Today Australian Broadcasting Corporation 10 June 2010 Industry unites at Australian showcase Railway Gazette International November 2003 Transcontinental link is ready for business Railway Gazette International January 2004 page 20 Australia s last frontier is conquered Railway Gazette International February 2004 Completion of the Adelaide to Darwin railway line Australian Bureau of Statistics 8 December 2006 First Train Archived 13 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine AustralAsia Railway Corporation Calacouras Nick 20 May 2008 Railway up for sale NT News Darwin Australia Nationwide News Pty Limited Vesna Poljak and Michael Smith 19 May 2008 Banks force sale of 1 2bn Adelaide Darwin rail link Australian Financial Review p 1 and 19 Calacouras Nick 20 May 2008 Railway up for sale Northern Territory News News Ltd Archived from the original on 21 July 2008 Retrieved 20 May 2008 End of the line as train sale derailed Northern Territory News News Ltd 7 November 2008 Archived from the original on 12 February 2012 Retrieved 12 November 2008 FreightLink owned Adelaide Darwin railway to be sold to US company Genesee amp Wyoming The Advertiser Adelaide 9 June 2010 Retrieved 9 June 2010 Our Network Australian Rail Track Corporation Network map Archived 4 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Genesee amp Wyoming Australia AustralAsia link making rapid progress Railway Gazette International 1 April 2002 nbsp subscription the source is only accessible via a paid subscription paywall a b Vincent Graham 2020 Darwin line PDF SA Track and Signal Retrieved 19 December 2020 a b Trainline 6 Statistical Report PDF Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics 2018 Retrieved 3 February 2021 First Prominent Hill shipment set for export ABC News 29 April 2009 Retrieved 30 May 2016 Train derailment copper concentrate recovered ABC News Retrieved 10 April 2016 Oz Minerals Intermodal Solutions Group Intermodal Solutions Group Retrieved 30 May 2016 Dry Bulk Exports Darwin Port Archived from the original on 5 November 2016 Retrieved 30 May 2016 Dry bulk Darwin Port Darwin Port Operations Pty Ltd 2019 Retrieved 24 August 2020 First production from Prominent Hill copper gold operation OZ Minerals ASX announcement 26 February 2009 Accessed 12 January 2010 Monitor mining operations South Australia Mapbox 2020 Retrieved 19 December 2020 Vincent Graham 2020 Northgate Wirrida PDF SA Track and Signal Retrieved 19 December 2020 Vincent Graham 2020 Tarcoola PDF SA Track and Signal Retrieved 19 December 2020 Powell Jake 3 August 2020 252m rail upgrade contracts soon to be awarded The flapping mouth iSeekplant Pty Ltd Retrieved 24 September 2020 Network Operating Guide Part 32 Tarcoola to Darwin PDF Australia Southern Railroad 2 January 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2010 Further reading editBromby Robin 2004 Rails to the Top End The Adelaide Darwin Transcontinental Railway 4th ed Alice Springs Paul Fitzsimons ISBN 9780958176019 Rozycki Jack Jan Mar 2003 The Never Never Line Australia s biggest project the Adelaide Darwin railway Australian Geographic 69 50 67 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Adelaide Darwin Railway AustralAsia Railway Corporation History of the Adelaide Darwin Railway Archived 31 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine Tarcoola To Alice Springs Railway Act 1974 Crossing Loops T AS Crossing Loops AS D Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adelaide Darwin railway line amp oldid 1175426490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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