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Wenlock River

River in Queensland, Australia

Wenlock River

Summary

River in Queensland, Australia

FieldValue
nameWenlock
name_etymologyIn honour of Baron Wenlock
imageCrossing the Wenlock River. Hope there are no crocodiles.jpg
image_size280
image_captionCrossing the Wenlock River on a makeshift vehicle raft in Wet Season, 1988. This was the only safe way to cross the river until the installation of a bridge in 2001.
pushpin_mapAustralia Queensland
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the Wenlock River mouth in Queensland
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1Australia
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Queensland
subdivision_type3Region
subdivision_name3Far North Queensland
length322 km
source1Great Dividing Range
source1_locationbelow Jacks Knob
source1_elevation215 m
mouthPort Musgrave, Gulf of Carpentaria
mouth_location
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation0 m
basin_size7526 km2
custom_labelWaterfall
custom_dataWenlock Falls
extra

The Wenlock River is a river located on the Cape York Peninsula in Far North Queensland, Australia.

Course and features

The river has a large population of saltwater crocodiles

The river rises on the western slopes of the Great Dividing Range below Jacks Knob, west of Nundah homestead. The river flows generally north-west through tropical savanna plains and wetlands, joined by fifteen minor tributaries, before reaching its mouth and joining with the Ducie River on the western side of the peninsula at Port Musgrave, just north of Mapoon. Finally, the Wenlock River enters the Gulf of Carpentaria and descends 215 m over its 322 km course.

The river has no water storage facilities built on it and there is little development within the drainage basin, resulting in a low population. In 2010, the Queensland Government declared the river a "wild river", one of thirteen Queensland rivers that are free of dams, weirs, irrigation schemes and industrial development, and remain largely intact.

Much of the river is bordered by gallery rainforests which provide habitat for animals such as the white-tailed rat, spotted cuscus and palm cockatoo. During the wet season the river floods, replenishing the wetlands. With some 48 species, the river contains the highest diversity of freshwater fish of all Australian rivers, many of which are shared with the rivers of southern New Guinea. They include Buffon's river garfish and fimbriate gudgeon, as well as the freshwater sawfish and more common species such as the sooty grunter, saratoga and barramundi. The river is also home to one of Queensland’s largest breeding populations of the saltwater crocodile.

Originally named the Batavia River, the river was renamed in 1939, reportedly in honour of Baron Wenlock.

References

References

  1. "Map of Wenlock River, QLD". Bonzle Digital Atlas of Australia.
  2. "Water resources - Overview - Queensland - Basin & Surface Water Management Area: Wenlock River". [[Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts]].
  3. Williams, Brian. (16 November 2008). "Australian Wildlife Conservancy in huge land buyout". [[The Courier-Mail]].
  4. "Queensland's Wild Rivers". [[The Wilderness Society (Australia).
  5. {{cite QPN. 36991. Wenlock River
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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