Yackamoorundie South Australia | |||||||||||||||
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Coordinates | 33°33′S 138°29′E / 33.55°S 138.48°E | ||||||||||||||
Established | 18 February 1869 | ||||||||||||||
Area | 230 km2 (88 sq mi)[1] | ||||||||||||||
LGA(s) | Northern Areas Council | ||||||||||||||
County | Stanley | ||||||||||||||
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The Hundred of Yackamoorundie is a cadastral unit of hundred in the County of Stanley, South Australia.
The main town of the hundred is Yacka, which was named after the hundred, the hundred in turn being named after Yackamoorundie Creek.[1] The bounded locality of Gulnare, which overlaps the hundred's northern border is the only other town or locality within the hundred. Rising north of Caltowie in the Hundred of Caltowie, the Yackamoorundie Creek, a tributary of the Rocky River, flows briefly through the hundred near Gulnare, at which point it makes a significant change from flowing southwards to flowing westwards.
The indigenous place name yackamoorundie or jakaramurundi is officially thought to mean "sister to the big river", the Yackamoorundie Creek flowing from this point on a roughly parallel course to the bigger River Broughton, which passes east to west through the centre of the hundred and ultimately receives the Yackamoorundie Creek flows. South Australian historian Geoffrey Manning instead records that the place name means "sandy plain country" and suggests a completely different etymology for the town of Yacka.[2]
PLB
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).The name is derived from the Aboriginal jakaramurundi - 'sandy plain country'.