| The Burketown Bore was drilled by the State Government
and completed in December, 1897 at Long. 139° 32' 56", Lat.17°
45' 04". The original records state that the depth of the bore was 2,304
feet and it had a flow rate of 155,560 gallons per day .
Somewhat more recently, the vital statistics supplied by C.S.I.R.O.
in 1959 for registered Bore No. 330, Burketown were:
Depth: 702.3 (m)
Elevation: 10 (m)
Depth of Aquifers: 329.2 (salt), 606.6, 671.0 and 690.7
Flow rate M3/D: 180
Temp . 68C°.
Total salts: 598 mg/l
No doubt these figures are full of meaning to water engineers and other
water-literate experts, but to most of us they just mean that it is a big
bore, which for a very long time has been supplying water which is suitable
only for adult cattle to drink, and is not much use for anything else.
In the 1959 report C.S.I.R.O. also noted that the water was unsuitable
for drinking, domestic use or irrigation, that the flow was uncontrolled
and the casing was leaking very badly.
Govt Bore, Burketown 1904
John Oxley Library image
At the time the sinking of the bore was a most important development
for Burketown and an indicator of the attitude of the State Government
to the expected economic development of the area. The Gulf country' s currency
was high in 1890s, largely due to the establishment of the big meat works.
Burketown was to be a major centre for travelling stock.
We are told '...The water pouring from the borehead flows into a
swampy area and thence into the anabranch. This area gives water and fodder
to stock, in the dry part of the year ...'
What the bore has also done, year in year out, is to put vast amounts
of artesian water, full of all sorts of minerals, out on the ground, creating
a very unusual environment in the flooded acres. Recent decades indicate
ecological changes occurring in the 'swamp' which are of considerable scientific
interest.
One by-product of the bore, which has virtually disappeared, was the
Public Bath House. It was probably built some time in the 1940s. Local
opinion has it that the Bath House was the first of its kind.
Users had to be very careful not to scald themselves, which was a bit
tricky, since it involved shutting the water off by valve at the borehead,
thus allowing the water to flow along a connecting pipe and up into a catchment
tank situated on top of the Bath House. This tank held 300 gallons and
sufficient hot water to provide hot showers to whatever heat was required
by the users.
The secret of successful showering and avoiding severe scalding, was
to know when to open the main borehead again, as the water coming from
deep inside the earth is almost boiling.
The Public Bath House was certainly operating well into the 1960s, as
documented in the North Australian Monthly of August 1963.
An article entitled 'Burketown of the Gulf' said:
'...This shower building is a great boon to travellers
and is greatly appreciated by all users of the roads, this being dusty
country. When one has travelled extensively for many years on outback roads,
a hot shower at the end of a long tiring day's journey is sheer bliss..'
Almost a hundred years has passed and this tremendous ready-made hot
water system is still on tap and flowing well (though no longer in the
Bath House) - the electricity bill for the same supply over that time hardly
bears contemplation.
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