Dungowan Station

16°52′26″S 132°15′07″E / 16.874°S 132.252°E / -16.874; 132.252 (Dungowan) Dungowan Station is a pastoral lease that operates as a cattle station in the Northern Territory of Australia, approximately 511 kilometres (318 mi) south of Darwin.

The property occupies an area of 4,370 square kilometres (1,687 sq mi) and is currently owned by the Consolidated Pastoral Company.

Over 13,000 head of cattle graze the property with approximately 5,000 claves being branded each year.

[1] It was owned in the 1980s by The Hon Charles Sweeney QC, an Australian pastoralist and later Chief Justice of Tuvalu, a major interest of whom was water security.

He was a relative of Michael and Paul Vandeleur who owned Mataranka Station.