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Broome is a pearling and tourist town in the
Kimberley region of Western Australia, 2200 km north
of Perth. The year round population is approximately
14,436, growing to more than 45,000 per month during
the tourist season. Broome International Airport
provides transport to several regional and domestic
towns and cities.
History
Broome is situated on the traditional lands of the
Yawuru people.
The first European to visit Broome was William
Dampier in 1688 and again in 1699. Many of the
coastal features of the area are named by him. In
1879, Charles Harper suggested that the pearling
industry could be served by a port closer to the
pearling grounds and that Roebuck Bay would be
suitable. In 1883, John Forrest selected the site
for the town, and it was named after Sir Frederick
Broome, the Governor of Western Australia from 1883
to 1889.
In 1889, a telegraph undersea cable was laid from
Broome to Singapore, connecting to England. Hence
the name Cable Beach given to the landfall site.
The town has an interesting history based around the
exploits of the men and women who developed the
pearling industry, starting with the harvesting of
oysters for mother of pearl in the 1880s to the
current major cultured pearl farming enterprises.
The riches from the pearl beds did not come cheap,
and the town's Japanese cemetery is the resting
place of 919 Japanese divers who lost their lives
working in the industry. Many more were lost at sea,
and the exact number of deaths is unknown. The
Japanese were only one of the major ethnic groups
who flocked to Broome to work on the luggers or the
shore based activities supporting the harvesting of
oysters from the waters around Broome. They were
specialist divers and, despite being considered
enemies, became an indispensable part of the
industry until World War II.
Broome was attacked by Japanese aircraft on 3 March
1942. The air raid killed at least 88 people.
The West Australian mining boom of the 1960s, as
well as the growth of the tourism industry, also
helped Broome develop and diversify. Broome is one
of the fastest growing towns in Australia.
At Gantheaume Point and 30 metres out to sea are
dinosaur footprints believed to be from the
Cretaceous Age approximately 130 million years ago.
The tracks can be seen only during very low tide.
Broome entered into a Sister City agreement with
Taiji, Japan in 1981 as historic ties between the
two towns date back to the early 1900s, when Japan
became instrumental in laying the groundwork of
Broome's pearling industry. The annual dolphin
hunting in Taiji was the subject of the 2009
documentary The Cove, and sparked a unanimous
decision by the town's council, headed by Graeme
Campbell, to end the relationship with the town if
the dolphin hunt were to continue. The decision on
suspension was reversed in October 2009.
Cable Beach
Cable Beach is situated 7 km from town along a good
bitumen road. The beach itself is 22.5 km long with
beautiful white sand washed clean daily by tides
that can reach over nine metres. The water is
crystal clear turquoise, and the gentle swells
hardly manage to topple over as they roll up onto
the almost perfectly flat beach. Caution, however,
is required when swimming from November through
March as box jellyfish are present during those
months. There have been cases where crocodiles have
been sighted off the shore, but this is a rarity and
measures are taken to prevent these situations. Four
wheel drive vehicles may be driven onto the beach
from the car park. This allows people to explore the
beach at low tide to a much greater extent than
would be possible on foot. Sunset camel rides
operate daily along the beach.
Cable Beach is home to one of Australia's most
famous nudist beaches. The clothes optional area is
to the north of the beach access road from the car
park and continues to the mouth of Willie Creek, 17
km away.
Located directly east of Cable Beach over the dunes
is Minyirr Park, a coastal reserve administered by a
collaboration of the Shire of Broome and the Rubibi
people.
Roebuck Bay
Being situated on a north/south peninsula, Broome
has water on both sides of the town. On the eastern
shore are the waters of Roebuck Bay extending from
the Main jetty at Port Drive to Sandy Point, west of
Thangoo station. Town Beach is part of the shoreline
and is popular with visitors on the eastern end of
the town. It is also the site of the famous
Staircase to the Moon, where a receding tide and a
rising moon combine to create a stunning natural
phenomenon. On Staircase to the Moon nights, a food
and craft market is operated on Town Beach.
Roebuck Bay is of international importance for the
millions of migratory waders or shorebirds that use
it seasonally on migration through the East Asian -
Australasian Flyway from their breeding grounds in
northern Asia. They feed on the extensive intertidal
mudflats and roost at high tide on the red sand
beaches of the Bay. They can be seen in the largest
numbers in summer, but many of the younger birds
remain throughout the first and second years of
their lives. The Broome Bird Observatory, sited in
pindan woodland close to the northern shore of
Roebuck Bay, was established by Birds Australia in
1988, and formally opened in 1990. The purpose of
the observatory is to study the birds, learn how to
protect them, and educate the public about them.
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