Academic literature on the topic 'Tourism – Western Australia – Carnarvon Region'

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Journal articles on the topic "Tourism – Western Australia – Carnarvon Region"

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Stejskal, I. V. "EXPLORATION IN SENSITIVE AREAS: CONVINCING THE COMMUNITY." APPEA Journal 35, no. 1 (1995): 822. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj94059.

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Hadson Carnarvon Pty Ltd (Hadson), on behalf of the Joint Venture Partners, operates permits EP342 and TP/9 located at the northern end of Exmouth gulf, to the east of Cape Range peninsula, Western Australia. The Exmouth region is known for the Ningaloo Reef, and for its diving and recreational fishing. The area also supports a large commercial prawn fishery. Many marine areas in the Exmouth region are regarded as being environmentally sensitive with several areas of conservation value.The partners were committed to drilling two wells in EP342 and TP/9 in 1993 as part of the obligations under the permits. Public mistrust of, and an unfamiliarity with, the oil and gas industry gave the Exmouth community the perception that the EP342 drilling program would have a detrimental impact on the sensitive marine resources of the region and, hence, to the growing tourism industry in the region.Hadson developed a management strategy which involved an extensive local community education and consultation program. Activities for this program included presentations to various community and special interest groups and a two-day public exhibition in Exmouth. The management strategy also included commitment to statutory and voluntary environmental guidelines, and an impact assessment study.Hadson's communication program was successful on a local level: by the time drilling commenced, active opposition to the drilling program had diminished significantly. This drilling program showed the importance of involving the public in the plans of the company, of putting a 'face' to the company and of communicating environmental risk in a trustworthy manner.The State Government announced in July 1994 that petroleum exploration within Ningaloo Marine Park would not be permitted. This decision was not based on scientific evidence, but political strategy and a perception that in the Exmouth and wider community there was an innate 'fear' regarding the impact of the petroleum industry.
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Baillie, P. W., and E. Jacobson. "STRUCTURAL EVOLUTION OF THE CARNARVON TERRACE, WESTERN AUSTRALIA." APPEA Journal 35, no. 1 (1995): 321. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj94020.

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The under-explored Carnarvon Terrace is situated offshore of the Cape Range area in the Carnarvon Basin near the boundary of the Gascoyne and Exmouth Sub-basins. The stratigraphy of the area is controlled by only two wells (Pendock-1, Yardie East-1), but several onshore wells aid interpretation of seismic data.Understanding of the structural evolution of the region is facilitated by interpretation of a high-resolution non-exclusive seismic survey acquired by Geco-Prakla in 1993 (GPCTR-93 Survey).Three major tectonic stages are responsible for the structural configuration of the region:Late Palaeozoic extension in the Gascoyne Sub-basin;continental break-up between Australia and Greater India which took place along a major fracture marked by the Flinders-Long Island-Learmonth fault system active in Late Triassic and Early Jurassic times; andthe collision between Australia and Asia that commenced in Miocene times and is continuing to the present day. This event, marked by wrench and compressional structures, and often reactivation of older structures, is one of the most economically important in Australian geological history.From a regional prospectivity viewpoint at least three plays are worthy of further investigation.
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Przeslawski, Rachel, Matthew A. McArthur, and Tara J. Anderson. "Infaunal biodiversity patterns from Carnarvon Shelf (Ningaloo Reef), Western Australia." Marine and Freshwater Research 64, no. 6 (2013): 573. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf12240.

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Infauna are important in many ecological processes but have been rarely considered in biodiversity assessments of coral reefs and surrounding areas. We surveyed infaunal assemblages and associated environmental factors (depth, seabed reflectance, sediment characteristics) in three areas (Mandu, Point Cloates, Gnaraloo) along the Carnarvon Shelf, Western Australia. This region supports Ningaloo Reef, a relatively pristine coral reef protected by the Ningaloo Marine Park and a Commonwealth marine reserve. Macrofauna were sampled with a Smith-McIntyre grab and sieved through 500 µm. A total of 423 species and 4036 individuals was recorded from 145 grabs, with infauna accounting for 67% of species and 78% of individuals. Rare species (≤2 individuals per species) represented 42% of the total assemblage. Assemblages were significantly different among all three areas, with the most distinct recorded from the southern-most area (Gnaraloo). Although assemblages varied significantly with depth and sediment composition (mud and gravel), these relationships were weak. Results from the current study broadly quantify macrofaunal diversity in the region and identify potential spatial and environmental patterns which will help inform future marine management plans, including the provision of baseline information to assess the efficacy of protected areas in soft-sediment habitats adjacent to coral reefs.
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Ladbrook, Megan, Eddie J. B. van Etten, and William D. Stock. "Contemporary Fire Regimes of the Arid Carnarvon Basin Region of Western Australia." Fire 1, no. 3 (December 14, 2018): 51. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/fire1030051.

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This study investigates the fire regime for the arid Carnarvon Basin region of Western Australia using remotely sensed imagery. A fire history database was constructed from satellite images to characterise the general fire regime and determine any effect of vegetation types and pre-fire weather and climate. The study area was divided into two sections (northern and southern) due to their inherently different vegetation and climate. A total of 23.8% (15,646 km2) of the study area was burnt during the 39-year study period. Heathland vegetation (54%) burnt the most extensively in the southern study area, and hummock grasslands (68%) in the northern. A single, unusually large fire in 2012 followed exceptional rains in the previous 12 months and accounted for 55% of the total burnt area. This fire burnt mainly through Acacia shrublands and woodlands rather than hummock grasslands, as normally experienced in the northern study area. Antecedent rainfall and fire weather were found to be the main meteorological factors driving fire size. Both study areas showed a moderate to strong correlation between fire size and increased pre-fire rainfall in the year preceding the fire. Predicted future changes in climate may lead to more frequent and higher intensity fires.
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COLLINS, JOHN H. "Marine Tourism in the Kimberley Region of Western Australia." Geographical Research 46, no. 1 (March 2008): 111–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-5871.2007.00496.x.

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Cooper, Martin, Richard Midford, and Julie Anne Jaegar. "Carnarvon Partysafe: Designing a Community Mobilisation Project in Western Australia's Remote North West." Australian Journal of Primary Health 7, no. 3 (2001): 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/py01048.

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Recent studies are increasingly shifting away from viewing drug and alcohol problems as individual medical disorders and recognising the significant role of environmental and community factors. In keeping with this, the Partysafe project, being implemented in the remote North West town of Carnarvon in Western Australia (WA), is utilising a community mobilisation approach to reducing harm associated with alcohol consumption in private residences. Carnarvon, like most rural communities in WA, has a higher rate of alcohol consumption than in the metropolitan region, hence its selection as the target site. An additional reason for selecting a remote town was the belief that national and state level prevention strategies cannot always be successfully implemented due to a region?s unique social and environmental influences. This paper discusses the community mobilisation methodology, giving a practical insight into the specific interventions and evaluation techniques developed for the Partysafe project. The process of identifying community-based alcohol issues and the problems associated with implementation and evaluation are illustrated. A combination of archival quantitative data and community based qualitative data will be used to assess the project?s success. Collection and use of this data is also practically depicted.
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Ingram, Gloria, and Trish Sherwood. "A profile of Farm tourism: the South West Tapestry Region of Western Australia." Rural Society 12, no. 1 (January 2002): 17–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5172/rsj.12.1.17.

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Bailey, Adam H. E., Rosalind C. King, Simon P. Holford, and Martin Hand. "Extending interpretations of natural fractures from the wellbore using 3D attributes: The Carnarvon Basin, Australia." Interpretation 4, no. 1 (February 1, 2016): SB107—SB129. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/int-2015-0113.1.

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Natural fractures can be identified in wellbores using electric resistivity image logs; however, the challenge of predicting fracture orientations, densities, and probable contribution to subsurface fluid flow away from the wellbore remains. Regional interpretations of fracture sets are generally confined to areas featuring an extensive reservoir analog outcrop. We have made use of extensive data sets available in Western Australia’s Northern Carnarvon Basin to map subsurface natural fractures, contributing to a regional understanding of fracture sets that can be applied to broader parts of the basin. The Northern Carnarvon Basin is composed of distinct structural domains that have experienced differing tectonic histories. Interpretation of regional fractures was achieved through an integrated approach, incorporating electric resistivity image logs from 52 Carnarvon Basin wells and seismic attribute analysis of two 3D seismic data sets: Bonaventure_3D ([Formula: see text]) and HC_93_3D ([Formula: see text]). Integration of these two data sets allows for a regionally extensive identification of natural fractures away from well control. Fractures of differing age and character are identified within the basin: Outboard areas are dominated by fractures likely to be open to fluid flow that are parallel to subparallel to the approximately east–west present-day maximum horizontal stress, providing possible flow conduits between potential damage zones identified alongside the north–northeast/south–southwest-striking faults that constitute the major structural trend of the basin, and inboard areas dominated by northeast–southwest to north–northeast/south–southeast fractures formed in fault damage-zones alongside normal, and inverted-normal, faults at those orientations. Finally, fractures observed in wells from the Rankin Platform and Dampier Subbasin occur at neither of these orientations; rather, they closely parallel the strikes of local faults. Additionally, variation is seen in fracture strikes due to isotropic present-day stress magnitudes. This methodology extends fracture interpretations from the wellbore and throughout the region of interest, constituting a regional understanding of fracture sets that can be applied to broader parts of the basin.
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CATULLO, RENEE A., PAUL DOUGHTY, J. DALE ROBERTS, and J. SCOTT KEOGH. "Multi-locus phylogeny and taxonomic revision of Uperoleia toadlets (Anura: Myobatrachidae) from the western arid zone of Australia, with a description of a new species." Zootaxa 2902, no. 1 (June 1, 2011): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2902.1.1.

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We generated a multi-locus phylogeny to test monophyly and distributional limits in Australian toadlets of the genus Uperoleia from the western arid zone of Australia. The molecular data were used in combination with a detailed assessment of morphological variation and some data on call structure to complete a taxonomic revision of the species that occur in this region. Our work reveals the existence of not two but five species in the region. Uperoleia russelli is restricted to the Carnarvon and Gascoyne Regions south of the Pilbara. Uperoleia micromeles is distributed from the Tanami Desert through the Great Sandy Desert and along the northern edge of the Pilbara. Uperoleia talpa was previously believed to be a Fitzroyland region endemic but it is further distributed along Dampierland and into the Roebourne Plain. Uperoleia glandulosa is a larger species than previously described as well as a greater habitat generalist, inhabiting the rocky Pilbara region and the sandy region around Port Hedland. We also describe a new species, U. saxatilis sp. nov., endemic to the Pilbara craton.
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Paten, Tom. "The prospectivity of the Late Triassic intervals in the outboard Exmouth Plateau, Western Australia." APPEA Journal 60, no. 2 (2020): 742. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj19173.

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The Exmouth Plateau is a deep-water plateau on the Australian continental margin underlain by 10–15 km of flat-lying, tilted and block-faulted Paleozoic–Mesozoic sedimentary rocks, which were deposited predominantly during periods of extension before continental break-up commenced in the middle Jurassic. The recent acquisition of the Mawson MC3D broadband seismic survey provides a modern, high-quality dataset located ~230 km to the north-west of Dampier, in the outboard Exmouth Plateau, in a relatively under-explored portion of the Northern Carnarvon Basin. The Late Triassic Mungaroo Formation is the primary reservoir target for the majority of the exploration in the Exmouth Plateau to date. A detailed investigation into the reservoir potential and prospectivity of the Mungaroo Formation is possible by utilising this modern dataset. The high-quality data presents a high-resolution view of the Rhaetian carbonate reef platforms and pinnacle reef complexes that are present within the Mawson survey footprint, revealing an under-explored play type within the region. The development of a detailed stratigraphic framework through the Late Triassic–Jurassic, combined with the use of attribute analyses and amplitude versus offset products can help de-risk identified prospects and highlight further prospectivity during the exploration process.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Tourism – Western Australia – Carnarvon Region"

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Lawrie, Misty Suanne. "Patterns of coastal tourism growth and multiple dwelling : implications for informal camping along the Ningaloo coastline." University of Western Australia. School of Earth and Geographical Sciences, 2008. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2008.0222.

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Over the past few decades, the development of coastal areas has become an increasingly contested arena. For many years, tourism in remote coastal areas has been the preserve of a few intrepid campers, surfers and recreational fishers. More recently, however, numbers along parts of the coast have increased rapidly, not only contributing to an expansion of camping activity, but also pressure for more commercially oriented tourism. This has contributed to concerns about the environmental sustainability of tourism in remote coastal areas. Governments have increasingly been faced with the challenge of balancing ecological concerns with the pursuit of economic development. Adding to the complexity are the differing needs and demands of various segments of the tourism market all looking to enjoy particular places. Balancing the demands of campers, backpackers, package tourists and others in a single place is often wrought with conflict. This study explores some of these issues in a remote coastal area in Western Australia. The Ningaloo coast has evolved from a difficult to reach destination used by a small number of campers, to one of Western Australia's most popular tourist destinations in just two decades. The thesis examines the factors underlying the growth and change of tourism in the region, tracing its evolution from a few small rudimentary campsites to proposals for large scale resort developments. Of particular interest to this thesis is how planning and policy processes aim to address developmental pressures and resource use/planning conflicts. Additionally, this study provides an insight into the issues facing the informal, long term camper as the traditional segment of Ningaloo's tourism market. It examines how current planning and policy for the Ningaloo coastline affects this group by reshaping traditional tourism use of the area.
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Book chapters on the topic "Tourism – Western Australia – Carnarvon Region"

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"Nature- based wellness tourism: the case of the Margaret River region in Western Australia ChRISTOf PfORR , MIChAel hugheS , MelANIe dAWkINS." In Wellness Tourism, 200–211. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203079362-22.

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