Drysdale River

Drysdale River is a river in the Kimberley region of Western Australia.

Drysdale River
A canoeing expedition on the Drysdale River
Location
CountryAustralia
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationCaroline Ranges
  elevation329 metres (1,079 ft)
Mouth 
  location
Napier Broome Bay
  elevation
sea level
Length432 kilometres (268 mi)
Basin size26,019 square kilometres (10,046 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average1,080,553 ML/a (34.2407 m3/s; 1,209.197 cu ft/s)

The river rises in the Caroline Ranges, flows in a northerly direction and discharges into Napier Broome Bay near Kalumburu. The river contains several permanent pools, some of which have several examples of Indigenous Australian art known as Bradshaw paintings that can be found along the cliff faces.

Notable waterfalls on the river are the Eagle Falls, which are regularly visited by Kimberley coastal cruise ships, Solea Falls north of the Johnston Creek fork, and Bango Falls on the tributary Bango Creek.

There are 19 tributaries of the Drysdale, including Gibb River, Woodhouse River, Barton River, Tadarida Creek, Wax Creek, Curlew Creek, King David Creek, Ubach Creek and Damper Creek.

15% of the river's catchment area lies within Drysdale River National Park.

The river was named after a director of the Victorian Squatting Company, Thomas Andrew Drysdale, by the company's surveyor Charles Burrowes, in 1886.

The traditional owners of the area that the river flows through are the Ngarinjin, Miwa and Wilawila peoples.

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