Go To AlphaSearch - to my Fitzroy River (Queensland) Favoriten.de - Socail Bookmarks
Fitzroy River (Queensland) - Fitzroy, cotton, Nogoa
frequent searched
  Fitzroy River (Queensland)
  Fitzroya
  Fitzsimons Army Medical Center
  Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire
  Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge
  Fitzwilliam Museum
  Fiume Isonzo - Soča River
  Five-Year Plan (USSR)
  Five-card draw
  Five-card stud
 
Navigation
  Home
  Sitemap
  Kontakt
 
Search
 
Goodi's
  Kamine
  Gesundheit, Wellness
  Webverzeichnis
  Branchenbuch
  Sportwetten
  Bilder hochladen
  Krankenversicherung
  Hotelbewertungen
  Schilder
Fitzroy River (Queensland)
The Fitzroy River lies in Central Queensland, Australia. Its catchment covers an area of 150,000 square kilometres, making it the second largest river catchment in Australia, after that of the Murray Darling system. The river is formed by the joining

The Fitzroy River lies in Central Queensland, Australia. Its catchment covers an area of 150,000 square kilometres, making it the second largest river catchment in Australia, after that of the Murray Darling system.
The river is formed by the joining of the Mackenzie and Dawson rivers. The catchment stretches from the Carnarvon Ranges in the west to the rivermouth in Keppel Bay, near Rockhampton. It is bounded to the north by the Burdekin River catchment area and to the south by the Burnett River catchment area.

Predominant industries in the catchment are coal mining, grazing and cotton.

The lower reaches of the river are home to salt water crocodiles, a recently captured example (2003) being in excess of 4 metres long. The prized Australian fish, the barramundi, also breeds in the river.

The Fitzroy was named by Charles and William Archer on May 4th, 1853 in honour of Sir Charles Fitzroy, Governor of the Colony ofNew South Wales, as Queensland wasn't to become a separate colony until 1859.

The city of Rockhampton is situated 40 kilometres from the coast on the river. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, the city was a major port, however rocky bars in the river prevented the Fitzroy from being used for navigation any further inland. As ships became larger, the lower reaches became less viable for commercial traffic, and today only pleasure craft and small commercial fishing boats use the river. Wharves which once lined the town reach at Rockhampton have now almost all disintegrated or been removed.

Nowadays, the river has a number of dams and weirs along its length. The Fitzroy River barrage at Rockhampton provides fresh water to city and surrounds, while the Fairbairn Dam, on the Nogoa River (a tributary), provides water for irrigating cotton and domestic use for the town of Emerald.

Tributaries of the Fitzroy include
* Mackenzie River
** Nogoa River
** Comet River
** Isaac River
***Connors River
* Dawson River
** Don River
*** Dee River
**** Fletchers Creek

References

*McDonald L. (1981) Rockhampton: A History of City and District. University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Qld. ISBN 0702216208

External links

*Map of the Fitzroy River catchment area, from Australia's Bureau of Meteorology

Category:Rivers of Queensland

Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel Fitzroy River (Queensland) aus der freien Enzyklo. Wikipedia und steht unter der GNU Lizenz für freie Dokumentation. Die Liste der Autoren ist in der Wikipedia unter dieser Seite verfügbar, der Artikel kann hier bearbeitet werden.
Fitzroy, cotton, Nogoa
Kontakt