Rum Jungle, Northern Territory
{{Use Australian English|date=August 2019}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2024}}
{{Infobox Australian place| type = town
| name = Rum Jungle
| state = nt
| coordinates = {{coord|12|59|39.8|S|131|01|22.7|E|display=inline,title}}
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in Northern Territory
| lga = Coomalie Shire
| postcode = 0845
| est =
| pop = 84
| pop_year = {{CensusAU|2016}}
| pop_footnotes={{Census 2016 AUS | id = SSC70236 | name = Rum Jungle (State Suburb) | quick = on | accessdate=28 June 2017}}
| elevation=
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| rainfall =
| stategov = Daly
| fedgov = Lingiari
| dist1 =
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{{Infobox mine
| name = Rum Jungle
| image = Browns Oxide project.jpg
| width = 300
| caption = Browns Oxide Project entry gate, 2009
| pushpin_map = Australia
| pushpin_label = Rum Jungle
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in Australia
| coordinates = {{coord|12|59|S|131|01|E|region:AU-NT|format=dms|display=inline}}
| place = Batchelor
| subdivision_type = Territory
| state/province = Northern Territory
| country = Australia
| owner =
| official website =
| acquisition year =
| stock_code =
| products = Uranium
| financial year =
| amount =
| opening year = 1950
| closing year = 1971
|discovery year = 1949
}}
File:RumJungleLakeOct192024.jpg
File:USGS Map of Northern Territory Uranium Mines.png
File:Water scene on Poett's old coffee plantation, Rum Jungle, Northern Territory.jpeg
File:Malachite-es6c.jpg specimen from Rum Jungle, 10.5 × 6.5 × 3.2 cm]]
Rum Jungle or Unrungkoolpum is a locality in the Northern Territory of Australia, about 105 kilometres south of Darwin on the East Branch of the Finniss River. It is 10 kilometres west of Batchelor{{Cite web |title=About the Kungarakan Culture & Education Association |url=https://kungarakan.org.au/about/#:~:text=Traditionally,%20Kungarakan%20country%20extended%20from,the%20dispossession%20of%20their%20country. |access-date=2024-06-04 |website=Kungarakan Culture & Education Association}}{{Cite web |title=Rum Jungle uranium mine opens {{!}} Australia's Defining Moments Digital Classroom {{!}} National Museum of Australia |url=https://digital-classroom.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/rum-jungle-uranium-mine-opens |access-date=2024-06-05 |website=digital-classroom.nma.gov.au}}{{Cite web |last= |first= |title=Rum Jungle uranium mine |url=https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/rum-jungle-uranium-mine |access-date=2024-06-05 |website=National Museum of Australia |language=en}} and shares a boundary with Litchfield National Park.
The joint traditional owners of this area are the Kungarakan and Warai peoples, and their rights to the land are recognised in the Finnis River Land Claim, which was granted in May 1981.{{Cite web |last=Government |first=Northern Territory |date=2024-03-27 |title=Rum Jungle History |url=https://nt.gov.au/industry/mining/legacy-mines-remediation/remediation-projects/rum-jungle-rehabilitation/rum-jungle-history |access-date=2024-06-04 |website=NT.GOV.AU |language=en}}{{Citation |author1=Australia. Office of the Aboriginal Land Commissioner |title=Finniss River land claim : report |publication-date=1982 |publisher=Government Printer |isbn=978-0-644-01874-6}}
The European name for this area derives from an incident in March 1873 when miners from the nearby John Bull goldmine met a teamster who was carting stores between Southport and Pine Creek. The teamster tapped a cask of rum that he was carrying and shared it with locals. After waking up from the effects of the teamster's hospitality, they found that he had stolen {{convert|750|oz|kg}} of their gold, along with their horses, and disappeared. Searches for the thief lasted for a number of months until he and the gold were found.{{cite news | url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=bgNVAAAAIBAJ&pg=5417%2C493034 |title=There's drama & tragedy in place names |work=The Sydney Morning Herald |date=2 August 1947 |access-date=18 October 2015 |last=Beatty |first=Bill |page=8}}{{Cite web |title=Rum Jungle |url=https://www.ntlis.nt.gov.au/placenames/view.jsp?id=21279 |access-date=2024-06-04 |website=NT Place Names Register}} The name was first used when reporting the death of Patrick Flynn in November 1873.{{cite news |date=28 November 1873 |title=Northern Territory Times. |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article3142145 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=Northern Territory Times and Gazette |location=Northern Territory, Australia |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia |volume=I |issue=4}}
Rum Jungle is best known as the site of a uranium deposit, found in 1949, which was mined between 1954 and 1971, producing 3,530 tonnes of uranium oxide, as well as 20,000 tonnes of copper concentrate.{{Cite web |date=2013 |title=Rum Jungle |url=http://www.nt.gov.au/d/rumjungle/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150401100417/http://www.nt.gov.au/d/rumjungle/ |archive-date=1 April 2015 |access-date=1 May 2015 |website=Department of Mines and Energy |publisher=Northern Territory Government}}
History
The first European person to travel to the Rum Jungle area was George Goyder in 1869. During his exploration, he noted an unidentified copper-like green ore at "Giants Reef", which was later "rediscovered" and identified to be torbernite.{{cite book |last1=Annabell |first1=Ross |title=The Uranium Hunters |date=1971 |publisher=Rigby Limited |isbn=0727002627 |location=Adelaide |pages=23–27}} That discovery received minimal attention at the time and other European and Chinese people began occupying the area, especially after the discovery of gold in the 1870s. Prospectors also occasionally mined copper and other minerals on a small scale.
Those new arrivals exposed the local Aboriginal people, the Kungarakan and Warai, to a variety of illnesses and diseases, including smallpox, leprosy and tuberculosis. Aboriginal people were also subjected to trauma including the sexual exploitation of women, forced migration and massacres.
One such was the Stapleton Siding massacre in July 1895 in which 80 Aboriginal people were killed following the distribution of poisoned damper. Joe McGinness was told the story by his mother Alngindabu, who survived the massacre, and said of it:{{Citation |author1=Joe McGinness |title=Son of Alyandabu: My fight for Aboriginal rights |publication-date=1991 |publisher=St Lucia, Qld., Queensland, Australia University of Queensland Press |isbn=978-0-7022-2335-8}}
{{Blockquote|text=The majority of the tribe (Kungarakany)... about one hundred people, became victims of poisoned damper... at a railway siding known as Stapleton... weed-killing powder... was supposedly mistaken for baking powder and added to the flour in preparing damper. Those who ate the poisoned damper became violently ill before their death.|author=Joe McGuinness|title=Son of Alyandabu : My fight for Aboriginal rights (1991)}}
That was one of at least three poisoning incidents suffered by the Kungarakan people.{{Cite web |title=Stapleton Siding (Perrmadjin) |url=https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/detail.php?r=1008 |access-date=2024-06-05 |website=Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia, 1788-1930}}
One notable early European resident was Nellie Flynn, who was only about 145cm tall and who arrived in the area in 1909. There she met her future husband, Tom Flynn, who was 189cm tall, and was believed to have walked the 2,000km from Cooktown, Queensland. Nellie Flynn lived in the area until the 1970s and became a well-known character.{{cite web |title=Nellie Flynn (Territory Women) |url=https://hdl.handle.net/10070/227683 |access-date=5 June 2024 |website=Territory Stories|hdl=10070/227683 }}{{Cite news |date=2020-07-23 |last1=Byrne |first1=Conor |last2=Tetlow |first2=Miranda |title=Nellie 'Shotgun' Flynn — the grand dame of Batchelor |url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-07-23/woolwonga-woman-nellie-shotgun-flynn-the-real-map-of-batchelor/12481320 |access-date=2024-06-05 |work=ABC News |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |language=en-AU}}
Mining
= Uranium mining =
In April 1948, a notice was published in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette that the Government was offering a rewards of £25,000 for the discovery of uranium ore in Australia.{{cite news |date=5 April 1948 |title=Rewards for the discovery of uranium ore in the Commonwealth and its Territories |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article232814018 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=Commonwealth of Australia Gazette |location=Australia, Australia |page=1848 |via=National Library of Australia |issue=55}} The reward was offered due to an increased demand for uranium following World War II, and the United States and Britain had identified Australia as a potential source.
In 1949, John Michael "Jack" White discovered torbernite in the shafts of old copper mines.{{cite book |last1=Zoellner |first1=Tom |title=Uranium |date=2009 |publisher=Penguin Books|location=New York |isbn=9780143116721 |page=186}} White was a buffalo shooter, crocodile hunter and prospector, who ran a small farm in the area with his Aboriginal partner, whose name has not been disclosed. He recognised the uranium ore from a color pamphlet that had been produced as part of the announcement of the reward. He delivered his samples to the Mines Branch in Darwin on 13 August 1949, and was later able to collect the full reward. News of the discovery was published throughout Australia.{{cite news |date=20 September 1949 |title=Uranium Find Rum Jungle |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article95654888 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=Kalgoorlie Miner |location=Western Australia |page=1 |via= |volume=55 |issue=14,511}}{{Cite news |date=1949-09-21 |title=Uranium find at Rum Jungle |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article148049121 |access-date=2024-06-05 |work=Maryborough Chronicle |via=National Library of Australia}}{{cite news |date=7 September 1949 |title=Uranium Find Reported |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article273708199 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=Daily Mirror |location=New South Wales, Australia |page=3 |via=National Library of Australia |issue=2580}}{{cite news |date=6 October 1949 |title=Uranium Field Discovered |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article76221796 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=The Central Queensland Herald |location=Queensland, Australia |page=13 |via=National Library of Australia |volume=19 |issue=1072}}
In 1952, the Australian Government funded the setting up of a mine and treatment plant to provide uranium oxide concentrate to the UK-US Combined Development Agency under a contract which ran from 1953 to 1962.{{cite news |date=5 October 1953 |title=Spectacular Activity At Rum Jungle |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2893699 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=The Canberra Times |location=Australian Capital Territory, Australia |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia |volume=28 |issue=8,145}}
The mine was officially opened on 17 September 1954 by the Prime Minister Robert Menzies, who promised that "[t]he world will forget about atomic bombs and concentrate on using uranium for the benefit of humankind" while also talking about its importance in terms of the defence of Australia.{{cite news |date=18 September 1954 |title=Rum Jungle ore to supply Australia's power needs: Prime Minister's forecast at opening of uranium plant |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article256864724 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=Kalgoorlie Miner |location=Western Australia |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia |volume=60 |issue=16907}}{{cite news |date=1 September 1954 |title=Milestone for Rum Jungle |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article134087244 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate |location=New South Wales, Australia |page=5 |via=National Library of Australia |issue=24,305}}{{cite news |date=17 September 1954 |title=Rum Jungle Project Opening Today |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article47615158 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=The Advertiser (Adelaide) |location=South Australia |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia |volume=97 |issue=29,930}}{{cite news |date=18 September 1954 |title=Menzies sets £3M uranium |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article50608575 |accessdate=6 June 2024 |newspaper=The Courier-mail |location=Queensland, Australia |page=3 |via=National Library of Australia}}{{cite news |date=17 September 1954 |title=Our uranium aid in defence |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article229898518 |accessdate=6 June 2024 |newspaper=The Sun |location=New South Wales, Australia |page=9 |via=National Library of Australia |issue=13,915}} On 13 September, days before the mine officially opened, four staff of the mine were killed when two trucks collided.{{cite news |date=14 September 1954 |title=Dead At Rum Jungle Named |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article49880264 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=The West Australian |location=Western Australia |page=4 |via=National Library of Australia |volume=70 |issue=21,262}}{{cite news |date=13 September 1954 |title=Four killed as trucks hit head-on |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article49879992 |accessdate=5 June 2024 |newspaper=The West Australian |location=Western Australia |page=3 |via=National Library of Australia |volume=70 |issue=21,261}}
The mine was the responsibility of Commonwealth Government, through the Australian Atomic Energy Commission, although management of it was by Territory Enterprises Pty Limited, a subsidiary of the Rio Tinto Group, on a contract basis. Batchelor, a nearby town, accommodated most of the mining personnel and grew significantly at that time.
By 1959, the economically viable ore had been extracted but operations continued on a small scale until 1963. Other work continued there until April 1971, with stockpiled ore from Rum Jungle and other sites around Australia, including from Eva Creek and Adelaide River, continued to be processed.{{Cite web |last= |date=2012-06-16 |title=Rum Jungle |url=https://nuclear.australianmap.net/rum-jungle/ |access-date=2024-06-05 |website=Australian Nuclear and Uranium Sites |language=en-AU}}{{Cite web |title=Eva Creek – mining legacies |url=https://www.mininglegacies.org/mines/northern-territory/eva-creek/ |access-date=2024-06-05 |language=en}} A total of 863,000 tonnes of uranium ore were processed and much was sold on the open market; some of this was also stockpiled and held in storage at Lucas Heights Reactor in Sydney.
== Pollution and clean-up ==
The Rum Jungle mine closed in April 1971{{Cite news|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article110680216|title=A mining village refuses to die|last=Simper|first=Errol|date=2 October 1971|work=The Canberra Times|access-date=10 April 2018}} and the {{convert|200|hectare|acre|adj=on}} site was abandoned.{{Cite news|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article126883382|title=NT wants $16m for Rum Jungle clean-up|date=1982-07-10|work=Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 – 1995)|access-date=2018-04-10|pages=3}} The Federal Government (which controlled the mine through its agency the Australian Atomic Energy Commission, now known as Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation decided not to rehabilitate the mine site {{why|date=August 2016}}. The mining company Conzinc, now part of the Rio Tinto Group, which owns Energy Resources of Australia, operators of the Ranger Uranium Mine in Kakadu National Park, consistently denied any responsibility for rehabilitation. That led to the mine becoming known as one of Australia's most polluted environments,{{Cite journal|title = Continuing Pollution From the Rum Jungle U-Cu Project: A Critical Evaluation of Environmental Monitoring and Rehabilitation|last1 = Mudd|first1 = G.M.|date = 2010|journal = Environmental Pollution|doi = 10.1016/j.envpol.2010.01.017|pmid = 20176422|last2 = Patterson|first2 = J. |volume=158 |issue = 5|pages=1252–1260| bibcode=2010EPoll.158.1252M }} due to the oxidation of sulphides and the release of acid and metals into the east branch of the Finniss River. The 1500 mm annual rainfall, along with the pyritic mineralisation in the area, created ideal conditions for such oxidation.{{Citation needed|date=June 2024}}
An initial attempt to clean up Rum Jungle was made in 1977, following the Ranger Uranium Environmental Inquiry (1976 - 1977), which led to the setting-up of a working group to examine more comprehensive rehabilitation. A $16.2 million Commonwealth-funded program got under way in 1983 to remove heavy metals and neutralise the tailings. Of the damage to the Rum Jungle area the Commissioner of the Inquiry, Justice Russell Fox stated:{{Cite web |title=Rum Jungle uranium mine opens {{!}} Australia's Defining Moments Digital Classroom {{!}} National Museum of Australia |url=https://digital-classroom.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/rum-jungle-uranium-mine-opens |access-date=2024-06-05 |website=digital-classroom.nma.gov.au}}
{{Blockquote|text=[Rum Jungle] represents to many people, not least of all the Aboriginal people, an awful example of what should not be allowed to happen.|author=Justice Russell Fox, Commissioner|title=Ranger Uranium Environmental Inquiry, 1977}}
Elevated gamma radiation, alpha-radioactive dust, and significant radon daughter concentrations were detected. The levels were so high that, in the late 1980s, it was decided that something had to be done.{{by whom|date=August 2016}} Radiation protection standards had been revised, so that the levels of pollution were officially recognised as unsafe for human health. As a result, a supplementary $1.8 million program to improve Rum Jungle Creek South waste dumps was undertaken in 1990.{{citation needed|date=January 2025}}
In 2003, a government survey of the tailings piles at Rum Jungle found that capping, which was supposed to help contain the radioactive waste for at least 100 years, had failed in less than 20 years.{{cite web
|url = http://www.inap.com.au/public_downloads/Research_Projects/Rum_Jungle_Report.pdf
|author = Taylor,G. Spain,A. Nefiodovas,A. Timms,G. Kuznetsov,V. Bennett, J.
|work = Australian Centre for Mining Environmental Research
|year = 2003
|title = Determination of the reasons for deterioration of the Rum Jungle waste rock cover
|access-date = 2007-04-06
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110219044627/http://inap.com.au/public_downloads/Research_Projects/Rum_Jungle_Report.pdf
|archive-date = 2011-02-19
|url-status = dead
}} The Northern Territory and Federal Governments continued to argue over responsibility for funding rehabilitation on the polluted East Finniss River.
{{cite web
|url = http://www.nt.gov.au/nreta/naturalresources/water/aquatichealth/publications/pdf/2002/rumjungle_rep02_c.pdf
|author = Department of Infrastructure, Planning and Environment
|work = Technical Report 2002/1
|year = 2002
|title = Rum Jungle Monitoring Report 1993-1998
|pages = 176–9
}}{{dead link|date=April 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
{{As of|2004}} contamination of local groundwater has yet to be addressed.
{{cite web
|url = http://www.geo.tu-freiberg.de/umh/Abstract_View/mudd_146_abstract.pdf
|author = Mudd, G.
|work = Uranium Mining and Hydrogeology Conference, UMH IV
|year = 2004
|title = The continuing Rum Jungle dilemma : accounting for ground-surface water interactions in AMD polluted systems
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20051220031003/http://www.geo.tu-freiberg.de/umh/Abstract_View/mudd_146_abstract.pdf
|archive-date = 2005-12-20
}}
{{update-inline|date=January 2025}}
=== Rum Jungle Lake ===
One of the principal problems associated with rehabilitating the Rum Jungle Creek South open cut mine was that, after mining ceased, the mine pit was converted to a lake known as Rum Jungle Lake. It is considered to be the only water body in the Darwin region not infested with crocodiles and, after the mine's closure, it quickly became very popular with locals and Darwin residents as a recreation reserve, for activities including swimming, canoeing and scuba diving.{{cite web |title=Rum Jungle Lake at Batchelor, Northern Territory, Australia |url=http://www.litchfieldnationalpark.com/Rum_Jungle_Lake_Litchfield_National_Park.htm |access-date=31 October 2012 |publisher=Tourism NT}}{{cite web |title=Rum Jungle Lake |url=http://www.cavedivers.com.au/dive-site/rum-jungle-lake |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190713042958/http://www.cavedivers.com.au/dive-site/rum-jungle-lake |archive-date=13 July 2019 |access-date=31 October 2012 |publisher=Cave Divers Association of Australia}} In November 2010, the lake was closed to the public after a series of recordings showed low levels of radiation. After testing by the Environmental Research Institute, it was decided that the site was safe and it was reopened in October 2012.{{Cite news |date=2012-10-15 |title=Old uranium site reopened for swimming |url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2012-10-15/old-uranium-site-reopened-for-swimming/6155360 |access-date=2024-06-05 |work=ABC News |language=en-AU}} In June 2024, the Coomalie Community Government Council released a community survey regarding planned further rehabilitation works on the lake.{{Cite web |title=Rum Jungle Lake Project {{!}} Coomalie Community Government Council |url=https://www.coomalie.nt.gov.au/rum-jungle-lake-project |access-date=2024-06-05 |website=www.coomalie.nt.gov.au |language=en}}
= Brown's Oxide Project =
In December 2001, Compass Resources lodged a Referral under the EPBC Act with Environment Australia. That document referred to the proposed development of a large-scale mining project, the Browns Polymetallic Project, that would produce lead, cobalt, copper, nickel and silver, over a project life of at least 15 years. As indicated in the 2001 Referral, Compass considered that the Browns Polymetallic Project was a "nuclear action" under the EPBC Act, on the basis that the project could be considered to include rehabilitating a facility or area in which mining or milling of uranium ore had previously been undertaken.[http://www.nt.gov.au/nreta/environment/assessment/register/brownsoxide/index.html Brown's Oxide – Natural Resources, Environment and the Arts] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060906070422/http://www.nt.gov.au/nreta/environment/assessment/register/brownsoxide/index.html |date=2006-09-06 }}
Compass suspended its work on the polymetallic proposal in 2002, after low metal prices caused the withdrawal of Compass's financial partner, Doe Run.{{cite web |url=http://kakadu.nt.gov.au/pls/portal30/docs/FOLDER/TOPENDSECRET/ATTACHMENTS/AMCJFeb06lowres.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2006-03-17 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928104435/http://kakadu.nt.gov.au/pls/portal30/docs/FOLDER/TOPENDSECRET/ATTACHMENTS/AMCJFeb06lowres.pdf |archive-date=2007-09-28 }}
In 2005, Compass lodged an application for a much smaller project, focusing on cobalt, nickel and copper mining. Because that project, the Brown's Oxide Project, was much smaller than the polymetallic project proposed previously, Compass was in a position to develop it on its own.
The Northern Territory Government assessed the project and Marion Scrymgour, the Minister for Natural Resources, Environment and Heritage in the Northern Territory Government, concluded that the Browns Oxide Project, as proposed in the Public Environmental Report and subsequent documents, "can be managed without unacceptable environmental impacts".
During question time in the Northern Territory Parliament on 4 May 2006, Kon Vatskalis, the Minister for Mines and Energy, announced the approval as "good news". To ensure the environment was managed properly, the approval was subject to final review by the Commonwealth Government, under a bilateral agreement between the two governments.{{cite web |url=http://aspect.comsec.com.au/asxdata/20060505/pdf/00612091.pdf |title=Archived copy |website=aspect.comsec.com.au |access-date=30 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927012733/http://aspect.comsec.com.au/asxdata/20060505/pdf/00612091.pdf |archive-date=27 September 2007 |url-status=dead}} Pending final Commonwealth approval, the project is set to be in production by early 2007.{{Citation needed|date=June 2024}}{{update-inline|date=January 2025}}
While the project was located near the old Rum Jungle mine, the Browns Oxide Project targeted copper cobalt and nickel, not uranium. Nonetheless, Compass acknowledged that, at some future point, it would be interested in mining uranium at the nearby Rum Jungle site, over which it held a lease. Any proposal to mine uranium would require a totally new application and environmental assessment as a separate project.{{Citation needed|date=June 2024}}
Geology of the region
The major uranium prospects of Brown's, Intermediate, White's, White's extension and Dyson's, occur northwest of, but parallel to, the north-east trending Giant's Reef Fault. Ore deposits occur in Precambrian carbonaceous slate and graphitic schist of the Lower Proterozoic Brooks Creek Group. Structurally, the deposits are within a sheared anticline on the southern flank of a granite dome. Primary minerals include chalcopyrite, bornite, bournonite, pyrite, and uraninite. Oxidized ores include azurite, malachite, pseudomalachite, iron oxides, torbernite, saleeite, and phosphuranylite.{{cite book|last1=Heinrich|first1=E. Wm.|title=Mineralogy and Geology of Radioactive Raw Materials|date=1958|publisher=McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.|location=New York|pages=317–319}}
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://portal.ga.gov.au/deposit-report/minerals/rum-jungle/333859 Rum Jungle Deposit Summary Report]
- [https://portergeo.com.au/database/mineinfo.asp?mineid=mn1026 Rum Jungle – Whites, Dysons, Intermediate, Browns, Mount Burton, Mount Fitch]
{{Commons category|Minerals of Rum Jungle}}
- {{cite news
| first=Adrienne
| last=Francis
| url=http://www.abc.net.au/rural/nt/content/2006/s1576224.htm
| title=Renewed activity around Rum Jungle
| work=ABC Rural: Northern Territory
| publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation
|date=22 February 2006
| access-date=2006-03-16
}}
- {{cite news
| first=Adrienne
| last=Francis
| url=http://www.abc.net.au/rural/nt/content/2006/s1576224.htm
| title=Minerals Council defends uranium industry
| work=ABC Rural: Northern Territory
| publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation
|date=28 February 2006
| access-date=2006-03-16
}}
- {{cite web| year =2005| url =http://www.acfonline.org.au/news.asp?news_id=674| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20060825191413/http://www.acfonline.org.au/news.asp?news_id=674| url-status =dead| archive-date =2006-08-25| title =ACF's Submission on the Browns Oxide Project (NT)| publisher =Australian Conservation Foundation| access-date =2006-03-16}}
- {{cite web
|year = 2006
|url = http://www.compass-resources.info
|title = Compass Resources protest site
|work = anti-corporate satire
|publisher = Justin Tutty
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070421024738/http://www.compass-resources.info/
|archive-date = 2007-04-21
}}
- {{cite web
| year = 2007
| url = http://www.ntne.ws/articles/article.php?section=rumjungle
| title = NTNe.ws
| work = collection of news articles and media releases about rum jungle
}}
- {{cite web
| year = 2005
| url = http://www.compassnl.com/
| title = Compass Resources NL
| access-date = 2006-03-16
| archive-date = 19 April 2006
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060419011558/http://www.compassnl.com/
| url-status = dead
}} – company web site
- [http://www.mindat.org/loc-41612.html Rum Jungle data] at Mindat.org
- [http://www.rumjungle.nt.gov.au Rum Jungle mine site, Department of Resources] at Government of the Northern Territory
{{Coomalie Shire Localities and Settlements}}
{{Recreational dive sites|fresit}}
{{authority control}}
Category:Uranium mines in the Northern Territory
Category:Mining towns in the Northern Territory
Category:Surface mines in Australia
Category:Underground mines in Australia
Category:Underwater diving sites in Australia