Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00074:clause:7b_2028:p6
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00074
Segment Type: clause
Provision Reference: sch 7B cl 2028 (pt 6/10)
Character Range: 157308–161289

Eclipse               2.0 Seconds

                COLOUR OF LIGHT: White

                SECTORS: White: 064° - 238° (174°)
                TRUE BEARING Obscured: 238° - 064° (186°)
                FROM SEAWARD

                LINE OF LEAD: 199°, 505 metres from Goods Island (Front) Light
                TRUE BEARINGS
                FROM SEAWARD

                LENS: Chance 250 mm focal radius

                LIGHT SOURCE: Lamp:  12V 100W C8 Halogen LP PR30s
                 Lampchanger:  CR Control S-2086BLR 10amp (6 position)

                LANTERN: Stone Chance.

STRUCTURE: Steel tower with timber frame, 4.5 metres high to balcony

                ELEVATION: 105 metres

                RANGE: Nominal:               14 nautical miles
                 Geographical:              25.3 nautical miles

Endnotes
[i] "AMSA Interactive heritage lighthouse map," Australian Maritime Safety Authority, accessed October 2020, https://www.operations.amsa.gov.au/lighthouses/?_ga=2.236400321.1108408984.1535497123-1996646104.1535497123
[ii] Australia ICOMOS, The Burra Charter: The Australia ICOMOS Charter for Places of Cultural Significance (Australia ICOMOS, 2013).

[iii] Peter Marquis-Kyle, Heritage Lighthouse Report: Goods Island (Australian Maritime Systems Group, 2007).

[iv] Australian Maritime Systems Group, Goods Island Lighthouse: Heritage Asset Condition Report, 4th Revision (Australia Maritime Safety Authority, 2020).

[v] D. J. Stanton, D. G. Fell and D. O. Gooding, Vegetation Communities and Regional Ecosystems of the Torres Strait Island, Queensland Australia: An accompaniment to Land Zone, Vegetation Community and Regional Ecosystem Maps (Torres Strait Regional Authority Land and Sea Management Unit, 2008), 180 http://www.tsra.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0014/2048/20-appendix2-vegetation-communities-regional-ecosystems.pdf

[vi] "Goods Island Lighthouse, Thursday Island Town, QLD, Australia," Australian Heritage Database, accessed October 2020, https://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/ahdb/search.pl?mode=place_detail;search=state%3DQLD%3Blist_code%3DCHL%3Blegal_status%3D35%3Bkeyword_PD%3D0%3Bkeyword_SS%3D0%3Bkeyword_PH%3D0;place_id=105458

[vii] "Goods Island Lighthouse, Thursday Island Town, QLD, Australia," Australian Heritage Database, accessed October 2020, https://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/ahdb/search.pl?mode=place_detail;search=place_name%3Dgoods%2520island%3Bkeyword_PD%3Don%3Bkeyword_SS%3Don%3Bkeyword_PH%3Don%3Blatitude_1dir%3DS%3Blongitude_1dir%3DE%3Blongitude_2dir%3DE%3Blatitude_2dir%3DS%3Bin_region%3Dpart;place_id=101518

[viii] Garry Searle, First Order: Australia's Highway of Lighthouses, (SA: Seaside Lights, 2013), 34.

[ix] Torres Strait Regional Authority, hammond: Sustainable Land Use Plan (2010), adapted from "Myths & Legends of the Torres Strait", Lawrie, 1970.

[x] Rowland, J and Ulm, S., Indigenous Fish Traps and Weirs of Queensland cited in QAR, No. 8, Vol. 14 (2011)

[xi] Matthew Flinders, A voyage to Terra Australis (London: W. Bulmer and Co., 1814), 119-120.

[xii] The Great Barrier Reef Inner Route (or 'inner route') is the principal shipping lane that extends from Booby Island to Cape Grafton, passing along the northern and eastern seaboard of Australia between the mainland and the Great Barrier Reef. The northern portion of the 'inner route' from Booby Island to Cairns is actually part of the Great North East Channel and includes the Prince of Wales Channel through the Torres Strait, to the north of Goods Island; while the Normanby Sound, to the south of Goods Island is used as the western approach to Thursday Island.
Ian Hawkins Nicholson, Via Torres Strait: A maritime history of the Torres Strait Route and the Ship's Post Office at Booby Island (Queensland: Roebuck Series, 1996), 116.

[xiii] Jean Farnfield, "The moving frontier: Queensland and the Torres Strait," in Lectures on North Queensland History, ed. B. J. Dalton (Townsville: James Cook University, 1974),