AIMS headquarters
Cape Ferguson, Townsville
The site
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Aerial view of the
Institute, showing the main laboratory complex and engineering
facilities.
General
information
The
Institute is situated on a 207 hectare parcel of land at Cape
Ferguson which has Turtle Beach as the eastern boundary and
Ticklebelly or Chunda Bay as the southern boundary.
To
the north and west is national park land. The site was chosen
because of its freedom from adjacent development, clear
unpolluted seawater and its ideal harbour.
The
construction of the facility, completed in June 1977, included
an all weather sealed access road, freshwater pipeline from
Townsville, saltwater reticulation, an 11 kVA electricity supply
from the Townsville grid, underground telegraphic cabling,
emergency back up generator, and sewerage treatment plant. The
buildings on the site include the Main Laboratory Complex,
Marine Operations Centre, six residences and units, and the
plant room/canteen complex. The structures are built to
withstand cyclonic winds to 225 Km/hr.
Unfiltered
seawater is pumped from underwater intakes in Turtle Bay to two
450,000 litre reinforced concrete storage reservoirs on an
elevated site near the building complex. Freshwater is piped
from Townsville, but because of the distance a 2,250,000 litre
freshwater reinforced concrete reservoir is located adjacent to
the seawater reservoirs so that a service of adequate pressure
is available.
Since
construction, several facilities have been added. The
Mariculture Facility was opened in March 1990. The Ron Smith
Building, which houses the Mechanical Engineering, Electronics,
Carpentry workshops and the pressure test tank was opened in May
1992. Also added in recent times is the Mangrove shade house,
Monitoring and Oceanographic Modules and the Flammable Liquids
Solvent Store
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Is
it Chunda Bay or
Ticklebelly Bay?
The
extract below comes from the original Australian
Institute of Marine Science Information Manual dated
November 1978.
The
AIMS breakwater and jetty are located on the southern
side of Cape Ferguson commonly called Ticklebelly Bay.
However on the topographical map series produced by the
Division of National Mapping it is referred to as Chunda
Bay.
Which
is correct? The choice of words depends on one's taste,
but old timers tell of the origins of the two names - according
to legend.
The
first legend concerns a huge groper which lives in the
bay. He is estimated to be 150 years old and has grown
to an enormous size, about 500 kg. His age and size is
attributed to his craftiness in never having been caught
by fisherman. He has swallowed the bait many times but,
like most gropers, he possesses the ability to
regurgitate it - hook, line and sinker. Consequently the
bay was named after the notable Australian activity -
the Chunda!
The
second legend stems from the aboriginal folklore. The
waters of the bay teem with fish and the bigger fish
grow fat and sluggish feeding on the abundance of
smaller fish that laze in the shallows. The indigenous
aborigines of past times displayed ancient skills in
stroking the fish on their undersides, that is, tickle
their belly. The fish naturally relaxed with the
enjoyment and the aborigines were able to scoop them by
hand onto the shore. No bait, hook line or sinker - just
Ticklebelly!!
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AIMS main entrance
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Access
to AIMS Townsville
The Cape
Ferguson Facility is located 50 Km by road from the Townsville central
business district (CBD). See -
Where is AIMS
Townsville located.
Access is by
appointment only or escorted tours.
Public access is not permitted from the sea.
All
visitors are requested to speak to the receptionist on the intercom at
the gate and follow the signs to the reception Area. We ask that you
record your visit in our visitors book and follow the instructions
offered by our Receptionist. The area surrounding the Institute is
National Park and the ocean area is classified as no entry and zoned
"Scientific Research Zone". Hence we request that you respect the area
and no fishing or swimming is allowed.
Public
access is not allowed to Turtle Beach or the Marine Operations Centre.
The main
laboratory complex
The 10,000
sq. m Main Laboratory Complex is the focal point of the Institute.
Completed in June 1977, the unique and unprecedented module design is
to develop and maximise interaction between scientific staff. The
slope of the site places the ground floor at ground level at the
western end of the building and the lower ground floor at the eastern
end. The complex is air conditioned and has reticulated services
including compressed air, LPG, and fresh and salt water. Each of the
original eight modules has a open balcony deck on one side and opens
onto the central Library on either of two floors. The Library forms
the focal point of the complex and has conference rooms and a lecture
theatre adjacent.
Scientists
Offices open onto multi user laboratories which were designed on a
chemistry/biological sorting format. Specialist Laboratories now
include Microbiology, Molecular Chemistry & Biology (Mass
Spectrometer, NMR and HPLC's), Organic Geo-Chemistry, Nutrient
Analysis facility (SFA's), Elemental analysis (including ICP-AES,
Zeeman GFF-AAS) Gamma Radiochemistry, and Genetics Laboratory. Shared
facilities include Constant Temperature Rooms, Radioisotope
laboratories, Solvent Distillation room and microscope facilities.
Unfiltered ambient temperature Seawater flows through two aquaria on
the ground floor and the first floor contains a flow through cascade
aquarium with solar simulation.
Two of the
largest balconies were enclosed and converted into scientists offices.
The exposed timber noticeable in the library and petitions is
Queensland Silver Ash.
The Ron Smith
engineering facility
| Named in memory of a
valued and long-serving AIMS employee who passed away in 1996,
the complex consists of four separate workshops covering a total
floor space of 2,400 sq. m. Approximately 50% is
air-conditioned. Compressed air is reticulated throughout the
complex and special extraction systems remove fumes and dust
etc.
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Aerial
view of the Ron Smith
engineering facility.
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The
Electronics Workshop prototypes and constructs electronic
instrumentation for sub-sea deployment using various sensors, data
loggers and telemetry initiatives including real-time weather data
transmission.
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The
Mechanical Workshop designs and constructs sub-sea
instrumentation containers and prototype mechanical field
equipment such as sediment traps and respirometers. Both standard
and C.N.C machine tools are used. A pressurised test tank is also
used.>
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The
Metal Fabrication Workshop designs and constructs items such as
weather station reef towers, sub-sea equipment such as grabs,
corers, winches and ships gear.
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The
Carpenters Workshop designs and constructs field equipment,
mangrove access walkways, weather towers, concrete moorings as
well as timber and fibreglass structures. Minor repairs and
alterations to the complex are also provided.
The
mariculture facility
The
construction of a small experimental hatchery to culture prawn larvae
in 1987/88 marked the beginning of mariculture research at AIMS.
Current research is aimed to domesticate the Giant Tiger Prawn, Penaeus
monodon, and use genetic techniques to produce improved strains of
this species for the Australian prawn farming industry. (see research
projects). With a mix of industry and Government funding the
facility expanded rapidly and in 1990 the Maturation and Hatchery
facility was opened. Since then extra larval rearing rooms and a
nursery have been added.
The
facility, located to the south of the main complex, uses three
settling tanks before saltwater can be heated and filtered through
sand, ultraviolet and cartridge filters. The water is aerated with air
blowers.
The main
experimental areas are:-
- Spawning/hatching
room (separate batches of eggs are collected and spawned)
- Live
food production area (Algae and Artemia are cultured to
feed prawn larvae)
- Small
and large scale larval rearing areas (batches are reared to the
PL15 stage)
- Nursery
shed (up to 200 batches are reared from PL15 size to taggable
size)
- Maturation
Unit (can cater for up to 440 individually tagged broodstock)
- Laboratory
and Office Complex
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Mariculture
facilities at Cape Ferguson. |
The field
operations centre
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On
the tip of Cape Ferguson is a breakwater and jetty which faces
the protected Tickle Belly Bay. Research vessels use this
facility for loading and unloading of scientific equipment. A
floating pontoon and concrete boat ramp allows access for
smaller craft which often work in the area.
The
field operations centre is the hub of field operations and
scientific field trips on land and sea are controlled through
here.
The
Institutes three major vessels are the 27.4m RV Lady Basten, the
20.7m RV Harry Messel and the Barge, the RV Hercules. Smaller
trailer vessels including the 7.5m aluminium RV Titan are housed
at the field operations centre.
A
fleet of nine field vehicles along with the commuter fleet are
refuelled and maintained from here. Specialised diving and
scientific field loan equipment are issued and serviced at the
field operations centre. |

Field
operations facilities Cape Ferguson,
looking south-east towards Ayr and the sand
spit at the mouth of the Burdekin River.
Field
operations
Research
vessels
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The
canteen facility
Spotless
Services of Australia currently manage the catering, cleaning and
grounds maintenance contract. The canteen provides staff with meals
and refreshments each work day and also caters for official functions
and visitors. The canteen building is separate from the main complex
and contains facilities and amenities for people with disabilities .
Visitors are welcome to use the facility but groups need to book in
advance. (See
tours
section)
On site
accommodation
| As the
Institute is located 50 km from Townsville, on site
accommodation is available. Six self-contained houses and six
motel-style units are constructed in a way to capture the sea
breezes and the natural beauty of the surroundings.
The houses have
concrete cyclone shelters for bathrooms and laundries. Visiting
researchers, official guests and staff running overnight
experiments use these facilities. They are not
available to the
public. |
On-site
accommodation units.
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Cape
Ferguson looking north towards Cape
Cleveland. AIMS marine facilities
in the foreground.
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AIMS
marine facilities at Cape Ferguson.
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