, are 1 kilometre (0.6 mile) before the Berrimah passenger terminal and before the extreme end of the line at
East Arm wharfs , south of Darwin, built for rail and road traffic by the Alice Springs–Darwin railway project in 2003 Under the provisions of the
Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910, the
Commonwealth Railways assumed responsibility for the
South Australian Railways' narrow gauge lines in the
far north of South Australia and the
Northern Territory. The Act mandated the building of a south–north railway although, crucially, no date was specified. Two routes were considered: a standard gauge line branching off the
Trans-Australian Railway at
Tarcoola or a cheaper extension, from
Oodnadatta, of the narrow gauge
Central Australia Railway (CAR) line that had opened in 1891. Eventually the latter was chosen, and the extension to
Alice Springs was opened in 1929. Meanwhile, the
North Australia Railway (NAR) opened in stages south from
Darwin to
Birdum, the latter being reached in 1929. In the late 1940s, the
South Australian Government developed the
Leigh Creek coalfields, 271 km (168 mi) north of
Port Augusta to provide coal for a power station in Adelaide and, later, for a new power station built at the port. The infrastructure of the CAR was inadequate for the increased tonnages to be carried, so the
federal government funded a
new standard gauge line from
Stirling North to the coalfields, and on to
Marree to provide cattle transport. The northernmost two-thirds followed an alignment generally within of the narrow-gauge line. The southern third avoided the impediments of the mountainous section near
Quorn and
Hawker. The new standard-gauge line covered one-third of the distance to Alice Springs, and a Commonwealth Railways booklet mentioned its "special importance to the Northern Territory as it is the first stage in the ultimate conversion of the narrow-gauge railway to Alice Springs to standard 4 ft in gauge". ==Tarcoola to Alice Springs==