Alice Springs, Northern Territory

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Alice Springs
Northern Territory

Population:
Density:
26,486 (2005)
178/km²
Area: 149 km²
Time zone: ACST (UTC+9:30)
Mayor: Fran Kilgariff
 Alice Springs CBD, NT
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Alice Springs CBD, NT

Alice Springs is a town in the Northern Territory of Australia. Its estimated population of 26,486 (in 2005) [1] makes it the second-largest settlement in the Territory (the only other towns of significant size are Darwin, the capital, and Katherine). It is popularly described as "the Alice" or simply "Alice". Alice Springs is known as Mparntwe to its traditional inhabitants, the Arrernte. Alice Springs is almost equidistant between Darwin and Adelaide.

Alice Springs is best-known outside the region from the title of the Nevil Shute novel A Town Like Alice, even though little of the story takes place in Alice Springs, and because of its proximity to Uluru (Ayers Rock), the monolithic rock that is one of Australia's best-known natural landmarks and an important focus of Aboriginal culture.

Contents

[edit] History

 "Springs" that gave the town its name
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"Springs" that gave the town its name

Originally named Stuart, the town was established almost as a frontier settlement for north-south travel by camel trains through the desert of the outback. A telegraph station was placed near a permanent waterhole called Alice Springs (see photograph) after the wife of Sir Charles Todd, Postmaster General of South Australia, after whom the Todd River (which is usually dry) was named. The Ghan railway from Adelaide reached Stuart in 1929, and the town moved away from the waterhole, but locals kept the name. In 1933, after much debate, the town of Stuart was officially renamed Alice Springs. The north-south road between Darwin, Alice Springs and Adelaide is still called the Stuart Highway.

Almost in the exact center of the continent, Alice Springs is some 1200 km from the nearest ocean and 1500 km from the nearest major cities, Darwin and Adelaide. Alice Springs is now the midpoint of the Adelaide–Darwin Railway.

During the 1960s it became an important defence location with the development of the U.S/Australian Pine Gap joint defence satellite monitoring base, home to about 700 workers from both countries, but by far the major industry in recent times is tourism.

Alice Springs Landsat image
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Alice Springs Landsat image

[edit] Demography

[edit] Aboriginal population

According to the 2001 census, Australian Aborigines make up approximately 17% of the population of Alice Springs, and 29% of the Northern Territory.[2] As Alice Springs is the regional hub of Central Australia it attracts Aboriginal people from all over that region and well beyond. Many Aborigines visit regularly to use the town's services. Aboriginal residents usually live in the suburbs, on special purpose leases (or town camps) or further out at Amoonguna to the South and on the small family outstation communities on Aboriginal Lands in surrounding areas.

The traditional owners of the Alice Springs area are the Central Arrernte people. As it is the largest town in central Australia, there are also speakers of Warlpiri, Warumungu, Kaytetye, Alyawarre, Luritja, Pintupi, Pitjantjatjara, Yankunytjatjara, Ngaanyatjarra, Pertame, Eastern and Western Arrernte among others.[3]

[edit] American influence

The road to Pine Gap - travelling any closer is prohibited!
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The road to Pine Gap - travelling any closer is prohibited!

The American influence in Alice Springs comes primarily from the proximity to Pine Gap, a US satellite tracking station, located 19 km south-west of Alice Springs. While Pine Gap employs 700 American and Australians, there are currently 2,000 people in the Alice Springs district who carry citizenship of the United States of America.

American influence can be seen throughout Alice Springs, which celebrates all major American festivals, including Halloween, Independence Day and Thanksgiving. There is also a large influence of American culture in sport, including baseball, basketball, and American football competitions, alongside more Australian sports of cricket, Australian rules football and rugby.[4]

[edit] Itinerant population

Alice Springs has a large itinerant population made up of:

  • Tourists
  • Residents of Pine Gap
  • Australian Aborigines visiting from nearby Central Australian communities
  • Australian or international workers on short-term contracts (colloquially referred to as "blow-ins")

[edit] Tourism

The former telegraph station at Alice Springs, now a museum.
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The former telegraph station at Alice Springs, now a museum.

The primary reason for tourism to Alice Springs had been its proximity to Uluru/Ayers Rock, which is 400 km to the south west. However, with the creation of Yulara resort in 1984, and an airport allowing tourists to fly directly to Yulara, many tourists no longer visit Alice Springs. Alice Springs had also been used by many Australian tourists as a stopover point between Darwin and Adelaide or Brisbane and Perth, but the airlines now prefer to fly directly to their destinations.

Alice Springs has a large number of tourist resorts, a casino, the Araluen Centre for Arts and Entertainment, nightclubs, clubs, pubs, restaurants and cafes. Visitor attractions include a Desert Park wildlife centre, the Old Telegraph Station, hot air balloon rides, Royal Flying Doctor Service, School of the Air, camel tours, a reptile centre, the Olive Pink Botanic Garden, and a cinema. Also supporting the tourist industry are over a dozen hotels, caravan parks and backpacker lodges, as well as tourist centres that run tours to Hermannsburg, The Olgas, Uluru (Ayers Rock), King's Canyon, Wallace Rock Hole, Chambers Pillar and a number of other places.[5]

Alice Springs is host to a large number of festivals, including the Finke Desert Race and the Todd River Race that are held annually.[6]

Much traditional Aboriginal artwork from the neighbouring Central Australian communities, including artefacts and Dreamtime stories is for sale to tourists in Alice Springs.[7]

[edit] Economy

This view shows the transport links passing through Heavitree Gap in the MacDonnell Ranges found adjacent to the town
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This view shows the transport links passing through Heavitree Gap in the MacDonnell Ranges found adjacent to the town

Alice Springs has a booming economy and is one of Australia's wealthiest towns. Major inputs to the economy include:

  • Tourism, especially related to Uluru, which gives Alice Springs 500,000 tourists per year.[5]
  • The significant government funding in relation to the high traditional Aboriginal population.
  • Income derived from Pine Gap adds $12 million per year to the economy.[4]

[edit] Climate

Temperatures vary by an average of 20°C from minimum to maximum on any given day. In the summer, the temperature typically reaches the low 40's°C as a maximum temperature (but can be as high as 48°C). In winter, it can drop to as low as -7°C as a minimum temperature, but temperatures as low as -10°C have been recorded. The climate is arid, with little or no rainfall, although the amount of rainfall varies enormously from one year to the next.[8]

[edit] Crime

In 1985/1986, 70% of the prison population was Aboriginal. The majority of crimes committed by Aborigines in Alice Springs was against other Aboriginal people, often alcohol-related. Attempts have been made to allow Aborigines in Alice Springs to use customary law as a defence (for example, payback or traditional customs) but thus far this has failed. Alice Springs has been linked with the Azaria Chamberlain disappearance and Peter Falconio disappearance in nearby Uluru and Barrow Creek.

[edit] Transport

The original Ghan railway from Adelaide reached Stuart in 1929. In the 1980s, there was an attempt at a direct rail service from Sydney by the named train The Alice (Train) however it only lasted four years. Alice Springs is now the midpoint of the Adelaide–Darwin Railway.

The town is served by an airport (IATA code ASP), located 14km south of the town center, with flights to most Australian state capitals and nearby Uluru (Ayers Rock).

[edit] Sport

Australian rules football is popular in the Alice. The Central Australian rules football League has several teams with a high participation rate, particularly amongst indigenous communities. The local stadium Traeger Park is designed to host AFL and International Cricket matches and has a capacity of 10,000. In 2004, an AFL pre-season Regional Challenge match between Collingwood Football Club and Port Adelaide Football Club attracted a capacity sell-out crowd. Cricket is also popular in Alice Springs.

A unique sporting event, held annually, is the Henley-on-Todd Regatta, also known as the Todd River Race. It is a sand river race with bottomless boats and it remains the only dry river regatta in the world.

Another unusual sporting event is the Camel Cup. This is also held annually at the local racetrack, Blatherskite Park. It is a full day event featuring a series of races using camels instead of horses.

[edit] Media

Alice Springs is served by both local and national radio and television services. The Government-owned ABC provides 4 broadcast radio stations - local radio 783 ABC Alice Springs and local transmitters for national networks Radio National, ABC Classic FM and Triple J.

Commercial radio stations are 8HA 900 kHz and SUN FM 96.9 MHz and community (public access) radio is provided by indigenous broadcaster 8KIN 100.5 MHz.

Four broadcast television services operate in Alice Springs - commercial stations Imparja Television (callsign IMP9) and Seven Central (QQQ31), and Government-owned ABC (ABAD7) and SBS (SBS28). Imparja incorporates programming from the commercial Nine and Ten networks.

[edit] Pop Culture

In the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, astronauts take survival training at a station situated in Alice Springs.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved on 25 September 2006
  2. ^ About Alice Springs
  3. ^ Alice Springs - Aboriginal Culture. Alice Springs Town Council (2006-06-08). Retrieved on 2006-11-25.
  4. ^ a b The American Connection
  5. ^ a b Alice Springs Lifestyle
  6. ^ Major Alice Springs Events
  7. ^ Visiting the Alice Springs
  8. ^ Alice Springs' Climate

[edit] See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 23.7° S 133.87° E