Aboriginal Air Services
Aboriginal Air Services was an umbrella company of 4 distinct airlines owned by the Aboriginal people of central Australia. Four companies (see below) gradually came together as a consortium over nearly twenty years.[1] The consortium, known as Aboriginal Air Services was fully owned by the Aboriginal people.
In the late 1990s, Aboriginal Air Services offered tourist flights on the mail plane.[2]
The consortium ceased operating on 17 September 2006.[3]
Airlines
- Ngaanyatjarra Air (Western Australia)
- Ngurrajuta Air (Northern Territory, operated by the Ngurajuta Association of Hermannsburg)[4]
- Janami Air (Northern Territory, from the Warlpiri tribe)
- PY Air (South Australia)
gollark: Huh, apparently the IRCd monitor is still operating.
gollark: citrons: yes, if it's electric and does not use "heat pumps" or something.
gollark: I actually also harvest time-series data from ABR and SPUDNET.
gollark: Network load was also not higher than usual, so I have absolutely no idea what happened.
gollark: Unfortunately, I have no more detailed per-process logs and thus absolutely no idea what was using that much CPU.
References
- Aboriginal Air Services
- "Outback special delivery". The Age. Melbourne, Victoria. 14 February 1998. p. 12, S6. Retrieved 19 September 2019 – via newspapers.com.
- "Aboriginal Air Services to close". The Age. 15 September 2006.
- D'Alpuget, Blanche (28 January 1989). "Hope springs in Alice". The Sydney Morning Herald Good Weekend. Sydney, New South Wales. p. 33. Retrieved 19 September 2019 – via newspapers.com.
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