[1] Cardabia is currently owned by the Indigenous Land Corporation, who acquired the 2,000-square-kilometre (772 sq mi) property in 1997.
[2] The earliest recorded lease in the area was for 20,000 acres (8,094 ha), taken up by the Quailborough Squatting Company on New Year's Day in 1880.
[1] The Cardabia and Lyndon runs, with a total area of 428,000 acres (173,205 ha), were put up for sale in 1884; both were unstocked at the time.
[4] The area was struck by drought, with only 2 inches (51 mm) of rain falling through a 13-month period from mid-1918 to late 1919.
[5] In 2015 the station owners had to renegotiate the lease agreement with the state government, including having the government excise sections of pastoral land along the world-heritage listed Ningaloo Coast from the property, for conservation and tourism ventures.