Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Esperance, Western Australia
Esperance is a town in Western Australia, located on the south coast around half-way between Albany and the South Australian border. Its population is around 13,000 people, and its major industries are tourism, agriculture and fishing.
Attractions
Approximately 8 hours' drive from Perth, the state capital, Esperance is a popular destination for medium term trips for families based there. It is also around 4 hours' drive south from the Goldfields mining town of Kalgoorlie, and offers a convienient get-away for weekends for the mine workers.
Near the town itself are many attractive beaches, offering surfing, scuba diving and swimming. Also nearby are a number of salt lakes, including the Pink Lake, which gains its rosey hue from red algae living within its waters.
There are five major national parks near the town. A major nearby tourist attraction, 56km from the town center, is the Cape Le Grand National Park, which offers a picturesque coast of largely granite terrain and sheltered white sand beaches. The park is a popular spot for recreational fishing, as well as four wheel drive enthusiasts and hikers.
Climate
Esperance has a mediterranean type climate with hot dry summers and cool wet winters. In summer the average maximum temperature is in the mid 20s (degrees Celsius), however on occasion hot, dry northerly winds can blow off the arid interior of the state to the north-east, raising temperatures up to 40 degrees and above.
The winter climate is generally less prone to extremes. The dominant influence is the cool, moist winds from the Great Southern Ocean to the south, bringing lower temperatures and the bulk of the annual rainfall in cold fronts. The average maximum temperatures are in the high teens.
History
Esperance, roughly translated, is French for 'hope'. French explorers are credited with making the first landfall near the present day town, naming it and other local landmarks whilst sheltering from a storm in this area in 1792.
Ten years later Matthew Flinders sailed the Bay of Isles, discovering and naming places such as Lucky Bay and Thistle Cove.
Whalers, sealers and pirates followed, as did pastoralists and miners, keen to exploit the free land and cash in on the gold boom in the gold fields to the north.
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