Description
Yaamba is a town and locality in the Shire of Livingstone, Queensland, Australia.
Yaamba is a town and locality in the Shire of Livingstone, Queensland, Australia.
History
The Darumbal (Tarumbul, Tharoombool) language region includes the city of Rockhampton extending south towards Raglan Creek and north towards the Styx River and inland along the Broad Sound Ranges.The area takes its name from the pastoral run taken up in the 1860s by Peter Fitzallan MacDonald. It is believed to be an Aboriginal word (language and dialect unknown) meaning "main camping ground".In July 1872, a Rockhampton architect John William Wilson found a large salt water crocodile known as Big Ben dying in Alligator Creek (it had been shot). Big Ben had originally inhabited the lower reaches of the Fitzroy River but had been frightened by the shipping in the river and had retreated to Alligator Creek. In October that year, Wilson displayed Big Ben and some other crocodiles in Rockhampton's Theatre Royal. Big Ben was 22 feet 3+1/2 inches (6.795 m) long and an analysis of his stomach revealed human bones; local Aboriginal people had long believed Big Ben had eaten people and held a corroborree to celebrate his death.
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Population: 1-100
Time zone: UTC +10:00
Area: 66.723 km2
Elevation: 11-50 metres
Town elevation: 24 m
Population number: 62
Local Government Area: Livingstone Shire Council
Attribution
This article contains content imported from the English Wikipedia article on Yaamba, Queensland