Coober Pedy, town and mining field in central South Australia, 590 miles (950 km) northwest of Adelaide, on the Stuart Highway. Most of the total world production of opals comes from the mining site, located in the Stuart Range on the edge of the Great Victoria Desert.
Opals were discovered there in February 1915 by a boy, Willie Hutchison, a member of a gold-prospecting party led by his father, James. A settlement was soon established and was named Coober Pedy by the local Progress and Miners Association in 1920. The name is a corruption of kupa piti, an Aboriginal phrase often translated as “water hole” or “white man in a hole.” Coober Pedy was designated a town in 1960 and underwent rapid development in the 1960s and ’70s. A local government council was established in 1987. In order to escape temperatures that often climb to 125 °F (52 °C) during the hottest three to four months of the year, residents often build their dwellings belowground, and Coober Pedy’s underground homes, churches, and other buildings, including hotels, have become a tourist attraction. Pop. (2006) local government area, 1,913; (2011) local government area, 1,695.