Burrum River

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Burrum
River
Name origin: Kabi: rocks interrupting river flow[1]
Country Australia
State Queensland
Region Wide Bay-Burnett
Source Lake Lenthall
 - location Lake Lenthall
 - elevation 24 m (79 ft)
Mouth Hervey Bay, Coral Sea
 - location [[Burrum Heads, Queensland|Burrum Heads]]
 - elevation 0 m (0 ft)
 - coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Length 31 km (19 mi)
Basin 3,371 km2 (1,302 sq mi)
National park Burrum Coast National Park
Reservoir Lake Lenthall
Location of Burrum River mouth in Queensland
[2]

The Burrum River is a river located in the Wide Bay-Burnett region of Queensland, Australia.

Course and features

The river rises within Lake Lenthall, impounded by Lenthalls Dam at the confluence of several smaller watercourses including Harwood Creek, Woolmer Creek and Duckinwilla Creek, near the town of Burrum. The river flows in northerly direction and is crossed by the Bruce Highway near Howard. The river flows past Pacific Haven before the Isis River joins with the Burrum River at the southern edge of the Burrum Coast National Park. Together, the rivers together with the Gregory River discharge into the Burrum Fish Habitat Area in Hervey Bay that flows out to the Coral Sea, at [[Burrum Heads, Queensland|Burrum Heads]]. The river descends 27 metres (89 ft) over its 31-kilometre (19 mi) course.[2] An estuary is formed at the mouth of the river. The Isis and Gregory Rivers also discharge into the 12 kilometres (7 mi) long and between 2 kilometres (1 mi) and 500 metres (1,640 ft) wide estuary. The area includes intensive inter-tidal flats, shallow sand banks, a meandering main channel with small patched of fringing mangroves.[3]

The catchment area of the river occupies an 3,371 square kilometres (1,302 sq mi) of which an area of 108 square kilometres (42 sq mi) is composed of riverine wetlands.[4] The catchment area is generally low and flat and is situated between the Burnett and Mary River catchments.[3]

The river has a mean annual discharge of 153 gigalitres (200,116,445 cu yd).[3]

Etymology

The river draws its name from the indigenous Australian Kabi language for a word meaning rocks interrupting river flow.[1]

See also

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References

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