One important responsibility that may have been overlooked above, is that wherever you are in outback WA you are almost certainly on land that is actually part of somebody's operating cattle station. Common sense should dictate that gates are closed after passing through them, campsites are left clean and tidy (with all rubbish removed), foraging stock are avoided and as far as possible you stay well away from stock watering places (dams and windmills with water troughs).
As prospectors, it is your responsibility to contact station managers to notify them of your presence on their land. This is more than just a courtesy, it is an important requirement for safe station management. If there's a muster underway, they don't want to stumble on an unexpected campsite in the middle of where they're trying to drive cattle. Stations also undertake shoot-on-sight operations against feral camels (and donkeys), which cause massive damage to fences, gates and stock watering infrastructure. Such use of high-powered rifles could prove tragically deadly to any unexpected prospectors in the vicinity.
The following recent video from Erlistoun Station, north of Laverton, shows what such activities look like from the shooter's perspective - you wouldn't want to be anywhere nearby unannounced when panicked camels are rampaging and bullets are flying: