Western Australia's official lowest temperature of −7.2 °C (19.0 °F) was recorded at Eyre Bird Observatory on 17 August 2008.[1]
History
During their nearly 2,000-mile (3,200 km) journey overland from Adelaide to Albany in 1841, 26-year-old Edward John Eyre and his party - companion John Baxter and three Aboriginal men - found fresh water 2 metres (6.6 ft) beneath a coastal sand dune, and camped there for a month, recovering from severe dehydration and exhaustion. This location became known as Eyre's Sand Patch.[2][3]
When the Inter-Colonial Telegraph Line reached the Patch in 1877, a weatherboard and corrugated iron building was erected to house a permanently staffed repeater station, and the location was subsequently known as the Eyre Telegraph Station.
Twenty years later, in 1897,[4] the station moved into a new limestone and corrugated iron building nearby until, in 1927 when the telegraph line moved 150 kilometres (93 mi) north to follow the Trans-Australian Railway, the building was abandoned.
Fifty years later, in 1977, the limestone building was restored by volunteers with the support of the Post Office Historical Society and Birds Australia, using materials supplied by the WA Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, and it now functions as a permanent bird observatory.[5] The building is maintained by volunteers, including two caretakers who live on site for three months at a time.[6][7]
Birdlife
Honeyeaters who spend the summer in the deep south-west extend their range north and east in the winter to feast on the flowering mallee and, at Eyre, honeyeaters, silvereyes and other species are found wintering in the narrow coastal mallee strip. A breeding colony of little penguins spends the summer west of Eyre at Twilight Cove. By 2008, 245 bird species had been recorded in the surrounding nature reserve.[5]
Climate
Eyre Bird Observatory has a semi-arid climate (BSk) with warm-to-hot dry summers and mild-to-cool wetter winters. It is subject to extreme temperatures, particularly cool minima, having received Western Australia's lowest minimum temperature of −7.2 °C (19.0 °F) on 17 August 2008 and Australia's highest diurnal range (difference between daily minimum and maximum temperatures) of 37.4 °C (67.3 °F) on 5 March 2008, when the temperature ranged from 6.8 to 44.2 °C (44.2 to 111.6 °F).[1][8] Factors that cause the lower minimum temperatures despite the observatory being within 1 kilometre (0.6 mi) of the coast include its sandy surface, its location in a shallow depression, and a sand ridge between it and the ocean that cuts it off from shallow marine air masses on calm nights.[8]
Climate data for Eyre Bird Observatory (temperature extremes 1983–present; averages include earlier data from late 19th and early 20th centuries)
^ abRoger Buddridge, "Introduction: A Brief History" pp 2 & 3 and Stephen Davies, "In Search of a Field Station for Naturalists" p. 20 in "Eyre's Sand Patch to Eyre Bird Observatory" 2008 Editor: Alma de Rebeira. ISBN978-0-646-48972-8. Publisher: AM & CPS de Rebeira. PO Box 113, Glen Forrest, Western Australia 6071. (Also available from the Eyre Bird Observatory.)