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Buckingham Destination Guide

Discover Buckingham in Australia

Buckingham in the region of Western Australia is a town located in Australia - some 1,867 mi or ( 3004 km ) West of Canberra , the country's capital .

Interactive map of Buckingham

Local time in Buckingham is now 04:18 PM (Sunday) . The local timezone is named " Australia/Perth " with a UTC offset of 8 hours. Depending on your flexibility, these larger cities might be interesting for you: Perth, Collie Cardiff, and Collie Burn. When in this area, you might want to check out Perth . We found some clip posted online . Scroll down to see the most favourite one or select the video collection in the navigation. Are you looking for some initial hints on what might be interesting in Buckingham ? We have collected some references on our attractions page.


Videos

BDC Versadrill Rod Trip

1:44 min by BunDrill
Views: 2121 Rating: 5.00

A Bunbury Drilling Company Drilling Rig pulling out with Auto Rod Handling ..

Paul Madden Bibbulmun Track Adventure 3 - Pain Part A .divx

1:41 min by Paul Madden
Views: 39 Rating: 0.00

Paul walked 16 days 8 hrs 15 mins in November 2010 to beat the previous record. Find his record attempt Bibbulmun track walk in: bibbulmuntrack1000.blogspot.com Paul Madden organises presentations for ..


Videos provided by Youtube are under the copyright of their owners.


Interesting facts about this location

Collie Sub-basin

The Collie Sub-basin is a pocket of Permian sedimentary rocks with an area of 225 km², enclosed within much older Archean rocks of the Yilgarn Craton, near the town of Collie in southwestern Western Australia. , Once considered a unique basin, this area, along with the smaller Wilga and Boyup Sub-basins to the south, are now classified as outliers of the Perth Basin, separated from the main area by ancient earth movements and erosion.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at -33.42 116.30 (Lat./Long.); Less than 4 km away
Tags: Geology of Western Australia, Landforms of Western Australia, Sedimentary basins of Australia

Muja Power Station

Muja Power Station is a power station 22km east of Collie, Western Australia. It has eight steam turbines served by coal-fired boilers that together generate a total capacity of 854 MW of electricity. The coal is mined in the nearby Collie Sub-basin. The station was commissioned on 21 April 1966. It has two 200 MW units and two 227 MW units (Stage C,D). The four smallest and least efficient units, Stages A and B, were closed in April 2007.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at -33.45 116.31 (Lat./Long.); Less than 6 km away
Tags: Buildings and structures in Western Australia, Coal-fired power stations in Western Australia

Collie Power Station

Collie Power Station is a power station in Collie, Western Australia. It is coal powered with one steam turbine that generates a total capacity of 300 MW of electricity. The coal is mined locally from the Collie Sub-basin and is transported to the power plant by overland conveyor. In financial year 2008-09 the station consumed approximately 1 million tonnes of coal. The station was commissioned in 1999 with a single 300 MW steam turbine.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at -33.34 116.26 (Lat./Long.); Less than 9 km away
Tags: Coal-fired power stations in Western Australia

Shotts, Western Australia

Shotts is a small town in Western Australia located in the South West Region just off the Coalfields Road between Collie and Darkan The town originated as a railway siding named Benelaking on the Collie to Narrogin line in 1911. Later the same year the town was renamed as Shotts, in honour of the coal mining town of the same name near Glasgow.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at -33.34 116.27 (Lat./Long.); Less than 9 km away
Tags: South West (Western Australia), Towns in Western Australia

Lake Kepwari

Lake Kepwari is a man-made lake in the south-west of Western Australia, about ten kilometres south-east of Collie. "Kepwari" is a Noongar word meaning "playing in water". The lake is a former open-cut coal mine formerly known as Western Five, part of a mining lease operated by Wesfarmers Premier Coal from 1970 until 1996. It is two kilometres long, one kilometre wide and up to 70 metres deep. It covers 103 hectares and holds about 30 gigalitres of water.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at -33.46 116.23 (Lat./Long.); Less than 12 km away
Tags: Artificial lakes, Lakes of Western Australia