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Franklin River

River in western Tasmania, Australia


River in western Tasmania, Australia

FieldValue
nameFranklin
name_etymologySir John Franklin
imageFranklin River Tasmania.jpg
image_size280
image_captionFranklin River near the Lyell Highway
pushpin_mapAustralia Tasmania
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the Franklin River mouth in Tasmania
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1Australia
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Tasmania
subdivision_type3Region
subdivision_name3Central Highlands, Western
length129 km
source1Mount Hugel
source1_locationFranklin-Gordon Wild Rivers National Park
source1_coordinates
source1_elevation951 m
mouthGordon River
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation11 m
river_systemGordon River
tributaries_leftSurprise River, Loddon River, Jane River
tributaries_rightCollingwood River, Lucan River, Andrew River
custom_labelReservoirs
custom_dataLake Undine; Lake Dixon
extra
Note

The Franklin River is a major perennial river located in the Central Highlands and western regions of Tasmania, Australia. The river is located in the Franklin-Gordon Wild Rivers National Park at the mid northern area of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area. Its source is situated at the western edge of the Central Highlands and it flows west towards the West Coast.

The river is named in honour of Sir John Franklin, a Governor of Tasmania, who later died searching for the Northwest Passage.

Location and features

The river rises below Mount Hugel west of Derwent Bridge on the western slopes of the Central Highlands and flows generally west and south through remote and rugged mountainous country until meeting its confluence with the Gordon River. From source to mouth the river is joined by sixteen tributaries including the Surprise, Collingwood, Lucan, Loddon, Andrew and the Jane rivers. In its upper reaches, the Franklin is impounded by two reservoirs, Lake Undine and Lake Dixon. The river is crossed by the Lyell Highway, also in its upper reaches. There are some archaeological sites that have identified pre-European activity. The upper reaches of the Franklin River were traversed by explorers in the nineteenth century, in their attempts to access Frenchmans Cap.

In the early twentieth century, access to the river was mostly pine logging in the lower reaches.

In the middle of the century, adventurous canoers sought to conquer the river's formidable challenges. The book Shooting The Franklin : Early canoeing on Tasmania's wild rivers identifies three trips in the 1950s.

Named places on the Franklin

In the case of earlier travellers, few locations of the river were named at all. During his initial journeys down the river, Bob Brown submitted names for some features. Before and since, rafters and canoers have added names for many of the bends and rapids on the river:

LocationCoordinatesLocationCoordinates
Livingstone CutPig Trough
The ForceitRock Island Bend
SidewinderShower Cliff
ThunderrushNewland Cascades
The SanctumConfluence of Jane River
The CauldronFlat Island
MouseholeBlackmans Bend
Deliverance ReachDouble Fall
The BiscuitBig Fall or Devils Hole
Rafters BasinGalleon Bluff
Confluence of Andrew RiverVerandah Cliffs
Propsting GorgeShingle Island
Glen CalderPyramid Island
Gaylard RapidsConfluence into Gordon River

Franklin River conservation battle

Main article: Franklin Dam controversy

In the 1980s, the Franklin River become synonymous with Australia's largest conservation movement of the time, the movement battled to block Hydro Tasmania's proposed hydro-electric power plan, from building on the Franklin.

The focus on the dam and the issues of wilderness experience led to the development of people utilising the river at levels never previously experienced. The result of a drowning on the river led to stricter guidelines for users of the river. Richard Flanagan's Death of a River Guide is a fictional account of a drowning, by a writer with an academic and historical understanding of the area.

References

References

  1. (2015). "Map of Franklin River, TAS". Bonzle Digital Atlas of Australia.
  2. "The Huon pine story: the history of harvest and use of a unique timber". Mainsail Books.
  3. "A terrible beauty: history of the Gordon River country". Greenhouse.
  4. "Shooting the Franklin: early canoeing on Tasmania's wild rivers". J. and S. Dean.
  5. "Death of a river guide". McPhee Gribble.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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