Black Weir, formerly Black School Weir, is the most upstream weir of those on Ross River. Built in the early 1930s, Black Weir is a hollow buttress weir with an ogee shaped face on the downstream side, a sloped face on the upstream face and stone pitched abutments. The weir's name is derived from the name of Black School which abutted Ross River near the location of weir when it was constructed. Following damage to the weir due to flooding, the weir underwent major renovations in 1934. These renovations included the addition of a second pump well, the addition of further buttresses and the underpinning of the original structure. It took until 1936 to fill the reservoir behind the weir, but only provided a few years water supply. During World War II the large influxes of population as a result of Townsville's heavy military presence necessitated the provision of more water. In 1940 a galvanized iron wall was erected atop Black Weir to provide additional storage capacity to supplement the town's water supply. This continued for many years in order to provide additional water which could be pumped from the weir
Location: -19.315355, 146.736795 . More than 5.5 km from a controlled airport, daylight flying, more than 30m from people, not over a populous area, and no higher than 120m.
Music: A Warrior's Morning
by TeknoAXE
is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Watch video Black Wier, Townsville, Australia from a DJI Phantom 3 Standard Drone online, duration hours minute second in high quality that is uploaded to the channel Aussie Mark 23 January 2017. Share the link to the video on social media so that your subscribers and friends will also watch this video. This video clip has been viewed 138 times and liked it 5 visitors.