Murrumbidgee River

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Murrumbidgee
The Murrumbidgee at Gundagai
The Murrumbidgee at Gundagai
Origin Australian Alps
Mouth confluence with the Murray River
Length 900 km (mainstream)
Source elevation 1600 m
Basin area 80,000 km²

The Murrumbidgee River is a major river in the state of New South Wales, Australia, and the Australian Capital Territory. It is a major tributary of the Murray River.

The word Murrumbidgee means "big water" or possibly "track goes down here" or "a very good place" in the Wiradjuri language, the local Aboriginal language.[1]

Contents

The Murrumbidgee is a major tributary of the Murray River
The Murrumbidgee is a major tributary of the Murray River

Seasonally, this river system used to have large flows but now that it is a regulated stream, flows are only high when releases are made from upstream storages to supply downstream irrigators. The mainstream of the river system flows for 900 km.[2] The river's source in the Fiery Range of the Snowy Mountains, part of the Australian Alps near Mount Kosciuszko and it flows to a confluence with the Murray River. For 66 kilometres, the river flows through the Australian Capital Territory near Canberra.[3] The Murrumbidgee drains much of southern New South Wales and all of the Australian Capital Territory, and is an important source of irrigation water for the Riverina farming area.

The river system's current channels are relatively new with the Upper Murrumbidgee being an anabranch of the Tumut River (that once continued north along Mutta Mutta Creek) when geological uplift near Adaminaby diverted its flow. The contemporary Murrumbidgee starts at Gundagai but generally the stream that now includes the Upper Murrumbidgee is described as being part of the full river. [4]

The Murrumbidgee River was known to Europeans before it was actually discovered by them.  In 1820 the explorer Charles Throsby informed the Governor of New South Wales that he anticipated finding "a considerable river of salt water (except at very wet seasons), called by the natives Mur-rum-big-gee".  Throsby reached the river in April 1821.[5]

In 1823, Brigade-Major John Ovens and Captain Mark Currie came to the upper Murrumbidgee when exploring south of Lake George.[6]. In 1829, Charles Sturt and his party rowed and sailed down the length of the river from Narrandera to the Murray, and then down the Murray to the sea. They also rowed, sailing when possible, back up against the current.[7] The Murrumbidgee basin was opened to settlement in the 1830s and soon became an important farming area.

Charles Sturt Monument located at Wagga Beach in Wagga Wagga
Charles Sturt Monument located at Wagga Beach in Wagga Wagga

Ernest Favenc, when writing on Australian exploration, commented on the relatively tardy European discovery of the river and that the river retained a name used by Indigenous Australians:

Here we may remark on the tenacity with which the Murrumbidgee River long eluded the eye of the white man. It is scarcely probable that Meehan and Hume, who on this occasion were within comparatively easy reach of the head waters, could have seen a new inland river at that time without mentioning the fact, but there is no record traceable anywhere as to the date of its discovery, or the name of its finder. When in 1823 Captain Currie and Major Ovens were led along its bank on to the beautiful Maneroo country by Joseph Wild, the stream was then familiar to the early settlers and called the Morumbidgee. Even in 1821, when Hume found the Yass Plains, almost on its bank, he makes no special mention of the river. From all this we may deduce the extremely probable fact that the position of the river was shown to some stockrider by a native, who also confided the aboriginal name, and so it gradually worked the knowledge of its identity into general belief. This theory is the more feasible as the river has retained its native name. If a white man of any known position had made the discovery, it would at once have received the name of some person holding official sway.[8]

Flood marker on the Murrumbidgee River showing the height of the 1974 floods
Flood marker on the Murrumbidgee River showing the height of the 1974 floods

The most notable flood was in 1852 when the town of Gundagai was swept away and 89 people, a third of the town's population was killed. The town was rebuilt on higher ground.[9]

In 1925, four people died and the flooding lasted for eight days.[10]

The river has risen above 23 feet at Gundagai eighty times between 1852 and 2002, an average of just under once every eleven years. Since 1925, flooding has been minor with the exception of floods in 1974. In the 1852 disaster, the river rose to just over forty feet. The following year the river again rose to just over forty-one feet. The construction of Burrinjuck Dam from 1907 has significantly reduced flooding but, despite the dam, there were major floods in 1925 and 1974.[11]

The reduction in floods has consequences for wildlife, birds and trees. There has been a decline in bird populations and black box flood plain eucalypt forest trees are starting to lose their crowns.[12]

Major wetlands along the Murrumbidgee or associated with the Murrumbidgee catchment include:[13]

  • Lowbidgee Floodplain, 2,000 km² between Maude and Balranald
  • Mid-Murrumbidgee Wetlands along the river from Narrandera to Carathool
  • Tukerbill Swamp
  • Tomneys Plain
  • Micalong Swamp
  • Lake George
  • Yaouk Swamp
  • Black Swamp & Coopers Swamp
  • Big Badja Swamp

Bridge over the Murrumbidgee at Carrathool, New South Wales.
Bridge over the Murrumbidgee at Carrathool, New South Wales.

The list below notes past and present bridges that cross over the Murrumbidgee River. There were numerous other crossings before the bridges were constructed and many of these still exist today.

  • Tharwa Bridge 1895 - present
  • Near the confluence with the Cotter River
  • Wee Jasper: Taemas Bridge 1930 -
  • Gobarralong : Gobarralong Bridge
  • Gundagai
    • Prince Alfred Bridge 1867 -
    • Railway bridge 1902 -
    • Sheahan Bridge 1977 -
  • Wagga Wagga
  • Narrandera
    • Rail bridge
  • Darlington Point
    • concrete bridge
  • Yanco: Euroley Bridge 2003 - (1929 Dare truss bridge was replaced by a concrete bridge in 2003)
  • Carrathool - the last surviving example of a bascule lift span in a timber truss road bridge


  1. ^ Murrumbidgee River. Geographical Names Register Extract. Geographical Names Board of New South Wales. Retrieved on August 7, 2006.; About Wagga Wagga - Murrumbidgee River & Floods. Wagga Wagga City Council. Retrieved on July 13, 2006.; and A History of Australia, Macmillan Education Australia, © Stephen Gard 2000, MacquarieNet 2002 (online edition) retrieved through the ACT Public Library Service and accessible only to subscribers.
  2. ^ Murrumbidgee River Catchment. Catchment Case Studies. NSW Department of Environment and Conservation (1995). Retrieved on July 13, 2006.
  3. ^ Environment ACT - Murrumbidgee River Corridor]
  4. ^ Sharp, K.R. Cenzoic volcanism, tectonism, and stream derangement in the Snowy Mountains and northern Monaro of New South Wales, in Australian Journal of Earth Sciences(2004)51,67-83
  5. ^ Reed, A. W., Place-names of New South Wales: Their Origins and Meanings, (Reed: 1969).
  6. ^ Discovery of the Manaro
  7. ^ Sturt, Charles [1833] (2004). Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia (txt), Project Gutenberg EBook. Retrieved on August 26, 2006. 
  8. ^ Favenc, Ernest [1908] (2004). "Chapter 4", The Explorers of Australia and their Life-work (txt), Project Gutenberg EBook. Retrieved on August 26, 2006. 
  9. ^ Historic emegencies in NSW, Emergency NSW database
  10. ^ Australian Government Emergency Management database
  11. ^ Butcher, Cliff (2002). "Chapter 9 Floods", Gundagai: A track winding back. Gundagai, NSW, Australia: A. C. Butcher, pages 84 - 98. ISBN 0-9586200-0-8. 
  12. ^ ABC television transcript: Report warns of damage to Murrumbidgee River from 2001 7:30 Report program
  13. ^ NSW Separtment of Natural Resources Murrumbidgee Region

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