Gypsum is transported on an isolated railway operated by
Aurizon to the port of
Thevenard. Normally three trains run each weekday, with fewer at weekends. It is further stockpiled at Thevenard, then loaded on ships to
Glebe Island in
Sydney for further processing. The railway's terminus is named Kevin – deriving from the
Hundred of Kevin, which was named after the adopted son of the 19th century South Australian politician
Charles Kingston. Originally part of the
Port Lincoln Division of the
South Australian Railways, the "station", comprising only a small corrugated steel waiting shed, was very rarely used because of the lack of nearby settlement. ==See also==