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The
township
of
Tennant
Creek
today
is
a
modern
outback
gold
mining
town
and
the
centre
for
the
Barkly
pastoral
industry.
The
Creek
itself
is
l2kms
(7
miles)
north
of
the
town,
and
this
is
where
the
Overland
Telegraph
Station
was
built
in
1872.
The
historic
stone
buildings
can
still
be
visited.
Tennant
Creek
is
not
a
desert.
The
vegetation
is
open
malice
shrubland
and
the
average
rainfall
is
422mm
(16.6
inches).
The
temperatures
range
from
50°C
to
the
mid
thirties
in
the
winter
and
from
the
mid
twentiesin
the
summer.
The
rich
gold
and
copper
fields
gave
rise
to
famous
mines
like
Peko,
named
after
prospector
Joe
Kacsinsky’s
dog.
Hundreds
of
old
mines
dot
the
“Honeymoon”
ranges,
so
named
because
two
miners
brought
their
new
brides
to
live
there.
You
can
visit
an
early
gold
mine
by
night,
then
sit
around
the
camp
fire
under
the
millions
of
stars
in
the
brilliant
night
sky.
Or
you
can
experience
a
more
modern
working
mine
or
historic
stamp
battery
or
try
your
hand
at
finding
gold
yourself.
For
more
of
the
real
Outback,
you
can
go
out
for
an
evening
or
morning
ride
on
horseback
and
learn
about
bush
tucker.
The
Tennant
Creek
region
is
traditional
Warumungu
country,
and
today
many
Aboriginal
tribes
make
it
their
home.
You
can
learn
about
Aboriginal
culture
from
murals
around
the
town,
or
visit
the
Aboriginal
art
gallery,
and
meet
some
of
the
people
as
they
create
their
paintings
and
objects.
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