Proserpine | |
---|---|
Location of Proserpine river mouth in Queensland | |
Location | |
Country | Australia |
Territory | Queensland |
Region | Whitsunday Region |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | Mount Quandong |
• location | Great Dividing Range, Whitsunday Region, Australia |
• elevation | 110 m (360 ft) |
Mouth | Repulse Bay |
• location | Coral Sea, Australia |
• coordinates | 20°26′25″S148°40′41″E / 20.44028°S 148.67806°E |
• elevation | 0 m (0 ft) |
Length | 69 km (43 mi) |
Basin size | 1,006.9 km2 (388.8 sq mi) [1] |
Discharge | |
• location | Near mouth |
• average | 13 m3/s (410 GL/a) [1] |
[2] |
The Proserpine River is a river in Whitsunday Region of Queensland, Australia.
The headwaters of the river rise below Mount Quandong in the Great Dividing Range and initially flow northwards while being fed by numerous creeks running from the Clarke Range to the west and the Normanby Range to the south. The river enters Lake Proserpine then exits in an easterly direction and flowing past to the south of Foxdale, then to the north of Proserpine. It continues east crossing the Bruce Highway then veers south through Melaleuca forests and discharges through estuarine wetlands and mangrove ecosystems [3] into Repulse Bay near Conway Beach and then onto the Coral Sea. [2]
The river has a catchment area of 2,494 square kilometres (963 sq mi) of which an area of 127 square kilometres (49 sq mi) is composed of estuarine wetlands. [4] The area is predominantly used for grazing cattle with extensive areas also used for sugar cane production.
The estuary functions as a result of river energy with a tide dominated delta. It is in a modified condition as a result of agriculture. It contains 34.7 square kilometres (13 sq mi) of mangroves and 8.1 square kilometres (3 sq mi) of intertidal flats. [5]
The Proserpine River is one of two major rivers whose catchment influences the coral reefs of the Whitsunday Islands. [6]
The traditional owners of the area are the Gia [7] and Ngaro [8] peoples, who have inhabited the area for thousands of years.
The name of the Proserpine first appeared in 1861 when the Emmerson family acquired the lease for a cattle station which they are thought to have named the Proserpine Creek Run near the river mouth. [9] It is generally believed that the explorer George Dalrymple named the river although it is likely that he would never have traversed the river. The name of the river is an anglicised version of the Roman Proserpina, a goddess of fertility. [10]
The Proserpine was rated as the river in Queensland where people were most likely to see a saltwater crocodile from 2000 to 2012, with 151 sightings recorded over the period. [11] In 2015 a nest of up to 30 baby crocodiles were thought to have been stolen from the river, despite crocodiles being a protected species in Queensland. [12] According to a survey conducted from 2016 to 2019, the Proserpine River had the highest density of crocodiles in Queensland, with 5.5 per kilometre (3.4 per mile). [13]
The Fitzroy River is a river in Central Queensland, Australia. Its catchment covers an area of 142,665 square kilometres (55,083 sq mi), making it the largest river catchment flowing to the eastern coast of Australia. It is also the largest river basin that discharges onto the Great Barrier Reef.
The Whitsunday Islands are 74 continental islands of various sizes off the central coast of Queensland, Australia, 900 kilometres north of Brisbane. The northernmost of the islands are off the coast by the town of Bowen, while the southernmost islands are off the coast by Proserpine. The island group is centred on Whitsunday Island, while the commercial centre is Hamilton Island. The traditional owners of the area are the Ngaro people and the Gia people, whose Juru people has the only legally recognised native title in the Whitsunday Region.
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The Ngaro are an Australian Aboriginal group of people who traditionally inhabited the Whitsunday Islands and coastal regions of Queensland, employing a seafaring lifestyle in an area that archaeologically shows evidence of human habitation since 9000 BP. Ngaro society was destroyed by warfare with traders, colonists, and the Australian Native Police. The Native Police Corps forcibly relocated the remaining Ngaro people in 1870 to a penal colony on Palm Island or to the lumber mills of Brampton Island as forced labourers.
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The Gia people, also known as Giya, Kia, Bumbarra, and variants, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the state of Queensland. Little is known of them.
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The Juru people, also known as Yuru, are a group of Aboriginal people of the state of Queensland, Australia.