Mount Meharry
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Template:Infobox mountain Mount Meharry (Panyjima:Script error: No such module "Lang".)[1] is the highest mountain in Western Australia. It is located in the Hamersley Range within the southeastern part of Karijini National Park in the Pilbara region, approximately Script error: No such module "convert". south-southeast of Wittenoom,[2] and Script error: No such module "convert". east-southeast of Tom Price.[3]
The Pandjima peoples are the traditional owners of the area.[4]
History
Mount Meharry is named after William Thomas Meharry (1912–1967), Chief Geodetic Surveyor for Western Australia from 1959 to 1967. It was discovered by Europeans by Surveyor Trevor Markey and his party in 1967. Tom Meharry directed the survey party and performed the calculations that confirmed the mountain was the highest peak in Western Australia, being Script error: No such module "convert". higher than Mount Bruce which lies Script error: No such module "convert". northwest of Mount Meharry.
After Meharry's sudden death on 16 May 1967 the Nomenclature Advisory Committee (now the Geographic Names Committee) recommended to the Minister for Lands that the recently discovered peak be named after him. The Minister for Lands Stewart Bovell approved this on 28 July 1967 and a notice naming the peak was published in the Western Australian Government Gazette on 15 September 1967.
In 1999, Gina Rinehart, daughter of Lang Hancock, applied to the Geographic Names Committee to rename the mountain after her father.[5] The application was declined and in 2002 she lobbied the then-Premier Geoff Gallop with the same proposal.[6] He, too, declined the request.
Geography
The summit of Mount Meharry can be reached from the Great Northern Highway via an unsealed road Script error: No such module "convert". in length and a vehicular track Script error: No such module "convert". in length. Permission should be sought from the managers of the land over which the road and track pass. These are Juna Downs Station and the Department of Parks and Wildlife, which manages Karijini National Park. In dry conditions, a two-wheel-drive vehicle can reach the national park boundary at about Script error: No such module "convert". elevation, requiring a walk of about Script error: No such module "convert". to the summit.
References
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