Before the port was established, the land was inhabited by the
Ngarluma, an
Aboriginal people. Early European exploration of northwest Western Australia commenced around the
Nickol Bay and Port Walcott areas, as colonial settlers established
pastoral and
pearling industries in the late-19th century. Early shipping links to the outside world centred on the port of
Cossack (formerly Tien Tsin), now a ghost town. In 1818, the explorer and surveyor
Captain Phillip Parker King, in the
Mermaid, charted Nickol Bay. Visits to the region by American whalers are recorded to have occurred from around the 1840–50s. In April 1861, a government-funded expedition sailed to Nickol Bay in the
Dolphin, while in 1862, Bateman (of John and
Walter Bateman) sent his vessel
Flying Foam to harvest
pearl shell in the area. In April 1863 Captain
Peter Hedland on the
Mystery came upon Mangrove Harbour (later renamed
Port Hedland) and Tien Tsin Harbour (later named Port Walcott). In August the same year the
Tien Tsin arrived, which together with
Mystery carried settlers and stock to the port, The Norwegian-owned iron
barque Solveig carrying
jarrah piles for the Point Samson jetty was anchored in Port Walcott when it was wrecked during a cyclone in 1907 The Department of Maritime Archaeology lists 14 such shipwrecks in the vicinity, lost between 1868 and 1970. == Geography ==