Settlement Creek

The Settlement Creek (Ganggalida: Wollogorang[2]) is a creek located in the Northern Territory and the state of Queensland, Australia.

Settlement
Location of the Settlement Creek mouth
in Queensland
Native nameWollogorang
Location
CountryAustralia
Territory and StateNorthern Territory, Queensland
Physical characteristics
SourceCalvert Hills
  locationnorth of Jilundarina, Northern Territory
  elevation303 m (994 ft)
MouthGulf of Carpentaria
  location
Tully Inlet, Queensland
  coordinates
16°32′31″S 138°08′21″E
  elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length142 km (88 mi)
Basin size15,600 km2 (6,000 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average86.2 m3/s (3,040 cu ft/s)
[1]

Course and features

The headwaters of the creek rise between Calvert Hills and China Wall in the Northern Territory and flows in a north easterly direction. It flows through mostly uninhabited plains country through Wollogorang Station then crosses the border into the northwest region of Queensland and later discharges into the Tully Inlet and then the Gulf of Carpentaria.[1] As it flows through the savannah country it has carved out several waterholes that are critical habitat for many animals during the dry season.[2]

During the wet season the creek is transformed when the waters breach the banks filling the floodplains create immense wetland areas.

A total of eleven tributaries flow into Settlement Creek, including Bullet Creek, Nine Mile Creek, One Mile Creek, Tom (Magira) Creek, Redbank Creek and Camel Creek. The creek also flows through a number of permanent waterholes such as Gudindjina Waterhole, Baladana Waterhole and Dijwalnguna Waterhole. The creek descends 303 metres (994 ft) over its 142-kilometre (88 mi) course.[1]

The catchment area occupies a total area of 15,600 square kilometres (6,023 sq mi)[3] of which an area of 5,494 square kilometres (2,121 sq mi) is in the Northern Territory and the rest in Queensland. The watershed is wedged between the watersheds for the Calvert River to the west, the Nicholson River to the south and east.[3][4] The population living within the catchment area is less than 100. The catchment area is mostly devoted to pastoralism with many cattle stations. Other streams found in the catchment include James, Scrutton and Lagoon Creeks. Important wetlands found in the catchment include Wentworth Aggregation and sections of the Marless Lagoon and Southern Gulf Aggregation.[3]

The creek has a mean annual discharge of 2,720 gigalitres (5.983×1011 imp gal; 7.185×1011 US gal) per annum.[5]

Fauna

31 species of fish are found in the creek, including the glassfish, barred grunter, silver cobbler, milkfish, fly-specked hardyhead, treadfin silver biddy, golden goby goby, barramundi, oxeye herring, mangrove jack, chequered rainbowfish, bony bream, catfish, Hyrtl's tandan, freshwater longtom, seven-spot archerfish and the gulf grunter.[6]

History

The traditional owners of the area are the Ganggalida and Gananggallanda peoples who know the creek as Wollogorang which in their language means "happy running waters".[2]

The creek was later named by George De Lautour in 1873 when he travelled from Townsville to Port Darwin overlanding 100 head of cattle. Upon reaching the creek he sent two of his party back to Burketown as he considered them useless in the bush.[7]

The first Europeans to visit the area was the Ludwig Leichhardt expedition of 1845 from Queensland to Port Essington. The first pastoral leases were granted to settlers in 1881 when the Chisholm family took up Wollogorang Station in 1881.[8]

The river is prone to flooding following heavy rain events. In 2006 floodwaters from the creek and its tributaries closed the Carpentaria Highway, part of Highway One. The dirt road was closed for over a week and required major maintenance following the deluge.[9]

In 2006 the creek was also earmarked by the Queensland Government for declaration under the wild rivers legislation. Settlement Creek, Morning Inlet and the Gregory and Staaten rivers were all being considered for the extra level of protection with property owners being advised of the plan and given time to comment.[10] By 2007 all the waterways had been declared as wild rivers.[11]

gollark: They became sentient in late 2019. Most people haven't noticed.
gollark: Crimes are widely considered bad because they have bad effects on people/cause suffering. I don't agree with causing *more* of that.
gollark: That depends on how much people are committing crimes due to impulse things, and how salient that sort of thing actually is in decision-making wrt. criming crimes.
gollark: I mean that the "maximal punishment" thing is probably emotionally driven.
gollark: If you think it would reduce crime because something something deterrent then... maybe... but just punishing people for the sake of punishing them is not something I can agree with.

See also

References

  1. "Map of Settlement Creek". Bonzle Digital Atlas of Australia. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  2. "Settlement Creek". The Wilderness Society Australia. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  3. "The Land – Overview". Southern Gulf Catchments. Archived from the original on 11 April 2015. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  4. "Drainage Divisions" (PDF). Commonwealth of Australia. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2015. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  5. "Settlement Creek (NT)" (PDF). TRaCK. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  6. "Settlement River catchment". Fish Atlas of North Australia. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  7. "Place Names Register Extract – Settlement Creek". NT Place Names Register. Northern Territory Government. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  8. "17°S 138°E Redbank Creek – Queensland by Degrees". Royal Geographical Society of Queensland. 2009. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  9. Francis, Adrienne (21 March 2006). "Floodwaters cut Highway One". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  10. "More time for wild rivers legislation objections". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 30 January 2006. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  11. "Govt urged to name far north 'wild rivers'". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 17 July 2007. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
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