Baffle Creek

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Baffle
Creek
Name origin: Baffle (verb)[1]
Country Australia
State Queensland
Region Central Queensland
Tributaries
 - left Island Creek (Queensland), Euleilah Creek
 - right Granite Creek (Queensland), Three Mile Creek (Queensland), Scrubby Creek, Grevillea Creek
Source Great Dividing Range
 - location Arthurs Seat
 - elevation 282 m (925 ft)
 - coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Mouth Mouth of Baffle Creek Conservation Park
 - elevation 0 m (0 ft)
 - coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Length 124 km (77 mi)
Basin 4,084 km2 (1,577 sq mi)
Islands Grants Island; Long Island
Protected area Mouth of Baffle Creek Conservation Park
Location of Baffle Creek river mouth in Queensland
[2]

The Baffle Creek is a creek located in Central Queensland, Australia.

Course and features

The Baffle Creek rises near Arthurs Seat in the Eurimbula State Forest and just south of the Eurimbula National Park in the Great Dividing Range. The 124-kilometre (77 mi) creek flows initially southward, hemmed to the west by the Westwood Range and to the east by Mount Dromedary. The creek continues south crossed by the Bruce Highway just east of Miriam Vale and then turns south east forming braided channels near Sonoma and hemmed to the east by the Gwynne Range resulting in the formation of one named island, Grants Island. It then is crossed by the Bruce Highway again and turns east under Mount Maria then north and flows through the Mouth of Baffle Creek Conservation Park and finally discharges into the Coral Sea south of Rules Beach and northeast of Winfield. At its mouth the creek again forms an anabranch around Long Island.[2]

The catchment area of the creek occupies an 4,084 square kilometres (1,577 sq mi) of which an area of 134 square kilometres (52 sq mi) is composed of estuarine wetlands.[3]

Etymology

The creek was named in the 1850s by the pastoralist and politician, William Henry Walsh, during an expedition led by him to track an Aboriginal raiding party into the bush. The footprints of the raiders disappeared in the dense bush along the creek banks leading the party unable to follow them further and leading Walsh to name the creek as Baffle Creek.[1]

See also

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References

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