Download coordinates as: The County of Jervois is a cadastral unit in the Australian state of South Australia that covers land on the east coast of the Eyre Peninsula.
[2] The principal land use is primary industry, which is represented by broadacre farming of wheat and livestock, the mining of jade, and aquaculture at Arno Bay and in Franklin Harbor on the coast of Spencer Gulf.
It covers an area of 227.3 square kilometres (87.75 sq mi) and its name was derived from an Aboriginal word for “mallee scrub.” It is entirely occupied by the locality of Boonerdo.
It covers an area of 290 square kilometres (113 sq mi) and was named after Thomas Wilde Boothby, a member of the South Australian Parliament from 1873 to 1875.
It covers an area of 290 square kilometres (113 sq mi) and was named after Thomas Henry Brooker, a member of the South Australian Parliament from 1890 to 1902.
It covers an area of 297 square kilometres (114.5 sq mi) and was named after Richard Butler, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 260 square kilometres (99 sq mi) and was named after David Charleston, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 260 square kilometres (101 sq mi) and was named after Hugh Robert Dixson, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 260 square kilometres (100 sq mi) and was named after Patrick McMahon Glynn, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 380 square kilometres (147 sq mi) and was named after George Charles Hawker, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 250 square kilometres (98 sq mi) and was named after Percy Heggaton, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 257.1 square kilometres (99.25 sq mi) and was named after David James, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 253 square kilometres (97.5 sq mi) and was named after William Jamieson, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 260 square kilometres (100 sq mi) and was named after Charles Mann, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 260 square kilometres (100 sq mi) and was named after Gregor McGregor, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 300 square kilometres (117 sq mi) and was named after David Moody, a former member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 210 square kilometres (82 sq mi) and was named after Robert Nicholls, a member of the South Australian Parliament.
It covers an area of 260 square kilometres (101 sq mi) and was named after Thomas Pascoe, a member of the South Australian Parliament from 1900 to 1933.
It covers an area of 403 square kilometres (155.5 sq mi) and was named after E Alfred Roberts, a member of the South Australian Parliament from 1898 to 1908.
It covers an area of 351 square kilometres (135.5 sq mi) and was named after Samuel Bruce Rudall, a member of the South Australian Parliament from 1906 to 1915.
It covers an area of 250 square kilometres (97 sq mi) and was named after Thomas Hyland Smeaton, a member of the South Australian Parliament from 1905 to 1921.
It covers an area of 380 square kilometres (146 sq mi) and was named after John Warren, a member of the South Australian Parliament from 1888 to 1912.