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[[Category:Mining towns in South Australia]]
[[Category:Mining towns in South Australia]]
[[de:Tarcoola]]

Revision as of 20:11, 17 October 2007

Tarcoola (30°42′S 134°34′E / 30.700°S 134.567°E / -30.700; 134.567, postcode 5710, altitude 204 m) is a town in the Far North of South Australia 416 km north-northwest of Port Augusta. The town was proclaimed on February 21, 1901. The name was taken from the nearby Tarcoola Goldfields, which in turn had been named after Tarcoola the winner of the 1893 Melbourne Cup horse race. The horse Tarcoola had been raised on Tarcoola Station on the Darling River. Tarcoola in the local aboriginal language around Tarcoola Station means river bend.

The original Tarcoola goldfields are long closed, however there is now new exploration for minerals in the wider area, including the Challenger Mine. Tarcoola is now best known as the junction in the railways that run west to Perth, north to Darwin and southeast to the south and east of Australia.

The town is served by the twice-weekly trains run by Great Southern Railway, The Ghan (running between Adelaide, Alice Springs and Darwin) and the Indian Pacific (running between Sydney and Perth. Each train stops twice a week heading in each direction at the railway station. The mail for Tarcoola also arrives by train.

Tarcoola is in the South Australian House of Assembly electoral district of Giles and the Australian House of Representatives Division of Grey.

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