Negri River

The Negri River is a river in Australia. It flows from the Northern Territory into Western Australia, where it merges with the Ord River to become part of the Ord River catchment. It is roughly 100 kilometres long.[1]

Negri River
Location
CountryAustralia
RegionWestern Australia
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationNorthern Territory
  coordinates17°04′S 128°54′E
Mouth 
  location
Confluence with the Ord River
Lengthapprox. 100 km (62 mi)

It was named by Alexander Forrest on 2 August 1879, the same day he named the Ord River.[2] The following is from his journal.

We started on again today, and steering N. E. and E.N.E. for about six miles, we came to a large river, very similar in character to the one we have been following down during the last week. I have named this river the Negri, after Commander Christopher Negri of Turin. In all probability it joins the one we have just left ; so, after crossing it, we turned Northwards, hoping again to come upon the larger stream.[2]

Environment

Many parts of the river's catchment suffered erosion and become degraded due to overgrazing in the first half of the 20th century.[3] The increased sediment load posed a long-term threat to the Ord River Dam that required a regeneration project which began in 1960.

gollark: It *cannot* compile really fast, the compiler is a horrible assemblage of broken regices, the automatic memory management just leaks, C to V translation has not been demonstrated to work usefully.
gollark: The claims they make are utterly lies.
gollark: The only significant issue I had was the recent oh bee kernel implosion one.
gollark: I can't because newer kernel versions completely stop my laptop from booting somehow!
gollark: I'll get back to you at some future time.

See also

References

  1. Bonzle.com
  2. "Exploration". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 27 February 1880. p. 3. Retrieved 8 January 2012.
  3. Novelly, P. E.; I. W. Watson (2007). "Successful Grassland Regeneration in a Severely Degraded Catchment: a Whole of Government Approach in North West Australia". In V. K. Sivakumar, Mannava; Ndiang'ui, Ndegwa (eds.). Climate and Land Degradation. Springer. p. 471. ISBN 3-540-72437-0. Retrieved 9 January 2012.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.