County of Yarrol

The County of Yarrol is a county (a cadastral division) in Queensland, Australia, located in the Wide Bay–Burnett region to the west of Bundaberg.[1][2] On 7 March 1901, the Governor issued a proclamation legally dividing Queensland into counties under the Land Act 1897.[3] Its schedule described Yarrol thus:

Bounded on the east by the county of Bowen; on the south and west by the Burnett River upwards to the western watershed of Three Moon Creek, by that watershed northerly to the southern watershed of Glassford Creek; and on the north by the southern boundary of the parish of Bompa.

Yarrol
Queensland
Location within Queensland
Lands administrative divisions around Yarrol:
Rawbelle Clinton Flinders
Rawbelle Yarrol Bowen
Wicklow Bowen Bowen

Parishes

Yarrol is divided into parishes, as listed below:

ParishLGACoordinatesTowns
BaniaNorth Burnett24°57′S 151°30′E
BaywullaNorth Burnett25°05′S 151°25′EYarrol
BorillaNorth Burnett24°46′S 151°26′E
CannindahNorth Burnett24°52′S 151°16′EBancroft
CynthiaNorth Burnett25°11′S 151°09′EAbercorn
DalgangalNorth Burnett25°13′S 151°16′E
HollywellNorth Burnett25°21′S 151°09′EEidsvold
LochaberNorth Burnett25°25′S 151°16′E
MalmoeNorth Burnett25°29′S 151°13′ERiverleigh
MinervaBundaberg24°38′S 151°27′E
MolangulBundaberg24°47′S 151°34′E
MundowranNorth Burnett25°33′S 151°19′EMundubbera
MungyNorth Burnett25°17′S 151°26′E
New CannindahNorth Burnett24°43′S 151°16′EKalpowar
Nour NourNorth Burnett25°10′S 151°27′E
ReidNorth Burnett25°25′S 151°24′EGurgeena
TellebangNorth Burnett25°03′S 151°14′E
YarrolNorth Burnett24°54′S 151°25′E
gollark: Not sure what that would do, but I imagine it would change things a lot.
gollark: > random musing: obviously if the speed of light was lower, there would be less energy in those sort of reactions. What *other* trickle down effects would it have, though?There's some relation between c and some electromagnetic constants (permittivity and permeability of free space) so you would probably change those too.
gollark: Somewhat relevant point: seriously just use nuclear it's energy dense enough.
gollark: You might have to contend with running out of usable energy in 10^lots years or something, I suppose.
gollark: The inevitable end point of "no growth/no new stuff/etc" is just "society runs through all available resources, can't get more, dies out" or maybe "natural disaster occurs and limited economic/technological resources don't allow dealing with it well".

References

  1. "Yarrol (entry 38550)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  2. Wide Bay/Burnett Districts, County of Yarrol Maps – E3 Series at Queensland Archives.
  3. "A Proclamation". Queensland Government Gazette. 75. 8 March 1901. pp. 967–980.
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