Mount Jukes (Tasmania)

Mount Jukes
Elevation 1,104 m (3,622 ft)
Location
Location West Coast, Tasmania
Range West Coast Range

Mount Jukes is a mountain in the West Coast Range on the West Coast of Tasmania, Australia. It was named by Charles Gould in 1862 after Professor Joseph Beete Jukes, English geologist, who was involved in issues relating to Charles Darwin. Jukes had visited Hobart in 1842-3 on HMS Fly.

With multiple peaks, and glacial lakes on its upper eastern reaches, Mount Jukes was the mountain above the town of Crotty and is west of what is now Lake Burbury.

Contents

Mines

It has had mines and small mining camps adjacent to the lakes, and on the northern upper slopes, near where the Mount Jukes road traverses the upper slopes of the King River Gorge.

Road

Mount Jukes Road (22 km length) [1] was constructed by the Hydro in the 1980s at the time the Crotty Dam was made. It connects southern Queenstown with Darwin Dam, where the previously utilised North Mount Lyell Railway formation between the Linda Valley and Crotty was submerged by Lake Burbury.

Peaks and spurs

Mount Jukes has a number of named features[2]:-

Other named features that are not given specific heights include:-

Lakes

Two named glacial lakes in the upper part of the eastern side of the mountain are:-

It is by the lakes that a number of small mines were started in the early years of the twentieth century.

West Coast Range

Notes

  1. ^ HEC (no date) King River Power Development p.12 Construction Highlights
  2. ^ The details of these features come from the Tasmap1:100 000 Franklin map Sheet 8013 Edition 6 1997 , and the 1:25 000 maps Darwin sheet 3832 edition 2 1999, and Owen sheet 3833 edition 2 2001

References

2003 edition - Queenstown: Municipality of Queenstown.
1949 edition - Hobart: Davies Brothers. OCLC 48825404; ASIN B000FMPZ80
1924 edition - Queenstown: Mount Lyell Tourist Association. OCLC 35070001; ASIN B0008BM4XC

Map Reference