The place is situated on a ridge at the head of a
gully, about south of the Palmer River, at co-ordinates 16.06.01S - 144.19.00E. The mine workings and battery are closely confined on a terraced bench. The site of the managers house is evident alongside the road on top of the ridge and comprises a broken cement surface. A grinding pan has been removed to the house site. The mine workings are aligned along the strike of the reef and include, on the terrace level, a caved main shaft and an earlier shaft. An adit has been driven in from the gully to meet the main shaft. A single cylinder portable
steam engine is located alongside the main shaft. (Since a survey of the site in 1982 a pump arm has been placed alongside the main shaft). Mullock has been dumped into the gully to form a dam. The watercourse now bypasses the dump. Another group of workings comprising a shaft and mullock dumps is located about south-east on a spur of the ridge. The battery plant includes a
Cornish boiler in a brick mount with a
flue leading to an intact nine metre high metal
chimney. Immediately alongside the boiler is the body of a single cylinder horizontal engine. Alongside the engine are two mortar boxes which appear to have remained in situ although the stamper frame has been removed. Seven of the ten stamper rods are still standing in the mortar boxes. The camshaft is nearby. The surviving plant includes: • Cornish boiler - J.W.Sutton & Co
Brisbane • One-cylinder portable steam engine - no brand (Clayton & Shuttleworth ?) • One-cylinder horizontal steam engine - no brand. • Boiler casing (converted to a water tank) - no brand. • Pump arm (not in situ) • 2 Five-stamp mortar boxes - no brands • Grinding pan (at manager's house site, not part of battery) • Langlands Foundry == Heritage listing ==