James Price Point
James Price Point, also known as Walmadany, is a headland in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. It is north of Broome.
History
The location of James Price Point is on the traditional lands of the Jabirr Jabirr / Ngumbarl people, whose name for it is Walmadany.James Price Point was probably named after James Price, Minister for Works in Western Australia, who died in May 1910. In 1909 a tour of north-west ports in was undertaken including Price, and the premier Sir Newton Moore.
Dinosaur footprints
The Aboriginal people recognise the fossilised footprints on the coast as being the footprints of Marella, the Emu Man, a creator being from the Dreamtime.A 2016 study of the footprints by the University of Queensland confirmed they are the largest collection of dinosaur footprints in the world and contain the world's largest single print. Indications of 21 separate dinosaur species from the Cretaceous period have been identified.
Browse LNG project
James Price Point was the proposed location of the Browse LNG gas terminal. The controversial proposal by Woodside Petroleum and its joint venture partners Royal Dutch Shell, BP, Mitsubishi Corporation and PetroChina divided the Broome community. It was opposed by the Goolarabooloo community and conservation groups Environs Kimberley, The Wilderness Society, Australian Conservation Foundation, WWF-Australia, Sea Shepherd and local organisations — Broome Community No Gas Campaign and Save the Kimberley. The Australian Greens also pushed for the protection of James Price Point. Support to protect the Kimberley coast was also provided by John Butler, Missy Higgins, Xavier Rudd, Jimmy Barnes, Rob Hirst, Paul Kelly, and The Pigram Brothers.After 5 years of intense opposition, the Woodside joint venture abandoned the
On 19 August 2013, the Supreme Court of Western Australia overruled Western Australian Environment Minister and the Western Australian Environmental Protection Authority's decision to recommend approval of the Browse LNG project at James Price Point after a legal challenge by Goolarabooloo custodian Richard Hunter and the Wilderness Society.