Rivers of New South Wales
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This page discusses the rivers and hydrography of the state of New South Wales, Australia.
The principal topographic feature of New South Wales is the series of low highlands and plateaus called the Great Dividing Range, which extend from north to south roughly parallel to the coast of the Coral and Tasman seas of the South Pacific Ocean.
The two main categories of rivers in New South Wales, are those that rise in the Great Dividing Range and flow eastwards to the sea, the Coastal NSW Rivers; and those that rise on the other side of the crest of the range and flow westward, the Inland NSW Rivers. Most of the inland rivers eventually combine into the Murray-Darling network of rivers, which drains to the sea in South Australia.
Major rivers
The following rivers are the longest river systems, by length.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
| Order | River name | Length | Region(s) | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| km | mi | ||||
| Template:Dts | Murray | Template:Convert | Riverina | Approx. Template:Convert of the river course is located within NSW. Also Australia's longest river. | |
| Template:Dts | Murrumbidgee | Template:Convert | Riverina | Approx. Template:Convert of the river course is located within NSW. Also Australia's second longest river. | |
| Template:Dts | Darling | Template:Convert | Far West | Entire course of the river is located in NSW. Also Australia's third longest river. | |
| Template:Dts | Lachlan | Template:Convert | Central West and Riverina | Entire course of the river is located in NSW. Also Australia's fourth longest river. | |
| Template:Dts | Macquarie | Template:Convert | Central West | Entire course of the river is located in NSW. | |
| Template:Dts | Barwon | Template:Convert | North West Slopes | Entire course of the river is located in NSW. | |
Coastal rivers
Due to the relatively close proximity of the Great Dividing Range to the eastern coast of New South Wales, in general, the coastal rivers are short, navigable only in their lowest reaches, if at all, and subject to flooding in periods of high rainfall. The inland rivers have little water, are also subject to flooding, and their limited resources are extensively used for irrigation in the more arid inland agricultural districts of the State. On all of the significant inland rivers, large dams have been constructed to regulate the water flow, to facilitate irrigation, and in some cases, to generate hydro-power.
For administrative purposes, the rivers are generally grouped into four major catchments defined by their drainage basin, and then a series of sub-catchments. The following is a list of the coastal rivers in New South Wales, in order from north to south, grouped according to catchment and sub-catchments, from mouth to upper reaches, organised by tributary: Template:Col-begin Template:Col-4
Northern Rivers catchment
Tweed River sub-catchment
Brunswick River sub-catchment
Richmond River sub-catchment
- Coral Sea
- Evans River
- Richmond River
- Bungawalbin Creek
- Wilsons River
- Coopers Creek (designated as a river)
- Leycester Creek (designated as a river)
- Back Creek (designated as a river)
- Eden Creek (designated as a river)
- Sandy Creek (designated as a river)
- Shannon Brook (designated as a river)
Clarence River sub-catchment
- Coral Sea
- Clarence River
- Mann River
- Nymboida River
- Boundary Creek (Nymboida) (designated as a river)
- Blicks River
- Glen Fernaigh River
- Boundary Creek (Glen Fernaigh) (designated as a river)
- Clouds Creek (designated as a river)
- Boyd River
- Sara River
- Oban River
- Nowlands Creek (designated as a river)
- Guy Fawkes River
- Chandlers Creek (designated as a river)
- Sara River
- Little Murray River
- Bielsdown River
- Little Nymboida River
- Henry River
- Yarrow River
- Nymboida River
- Tooloom Creek (designated as a river)
- Beaury Creek (designated as a river)
- Cataract River
- Coldstream River
- Timbarra River
- Orara River
- Esk River
- Mann River
- Corindi River
- Maryland River
- Sandon River
- Wooli Wooli River
- Clarence River
Bellinger River sub-catchment
Nambucca-Macleay River sub-catchment
- Tasman Sea
- Nambucca River
- Taylors Arm (designated as a river)
- Macleay River
- Apsley River
- Chandler River
- Dyke River
- Gara River
- Commissioners Waters (designated as a river)
- Georges Creek (designated as a river)
- Blue Mountain Creek (designated as a river)
- Christmas Creek (designated as a river)
- Kunderang Brook (designated as a river)
- Nambucca River
Hastings River sub-catchment
Hunter and Central Rivers catchment
Manning River sub-catchment
- Tasman Sea
- Manning River
- Pigna Barney River
- Barnard River
- Nowendoc River
- Cooplacurripa River
- Rowleys River
- Burns Creek (designated as a river)
- Cells River
- Connollys Creek (designated as a river)
- Dingo Creek (designated as a river)
- Bobin Creek (designated as a river)
- Caparra Creek (designated as a river)
- Cedar Party Creek (designated as a river)
- Dawson River
- Lansdowne River
- Gloucester River
- Manning River
Great Lakes sub-catchment
Hunter River sub-catchment
- Tasman Sea
- Hunter River
- Pages Creek (designated as a river)
- Moonan Brook (designated as a river)
- Stewarts Brook (designated as a river)
- Paterson River
- Williams River
- Rouchel Brook (designated as a river)
- Pages River
- Goulburn River
- Munmurra River
- Cooba Bulga Stream (designated as a river)
- Cattle Creek (designated as a river)
- Krui River
- Bow River
- Merriwa River
- Worondi Rivulet
- Bylong River
- Growee River
- Lee Creek (designated as a river)
- Baerami Creek (designated as a river)
- Widden Brook (designated as a river)
- Blackwater Creek (designated as a river)
- Munmurra River
- Wollombi Brook
- Congewai Creek (designated as a river)
- Cedar Creek (designated as a river)
- Congewai Creek (designated as a river)
- Hunter River
Sydney basin catchment
Central Coast sub-catchment
Hawkesbury-Nepean sub-catchment
- Tasman Sea
- Hawkesbury River
- Grose River
- Nepean River
- Colo River
- South Creek
- Macdonald River
- Mangrove Creek (designated as a river)
- Mooney Mooney Creek (designated as a river)
- Berowra Creek
- Cowan Creek
- Pittwater
- Hawkesbury River
Sydney Metropolitan sub-catchment
- Tasman Sea
- Bilgola Creek
- Port Jackson
- Middle Harbour
- Parramatta River
- Iron Cove Creek
- Hawthorne Canal
- Lane Cove River
- Tarban Creek
- Powells Creek
- Haslams Creek
- Duck River
- A'Becketts Creek
- Duck Creek
- Little Duck Creek
- Duck Creek
- A'Becketts Creek
- Charity Creek
- Smalls Creek
- Archer Creek
- Subiaco Creek
- The Ponds Creek
- Vineyard Creek
- Darling Mills Creek
- Toongabbie Creek
- Blacktown Creek
- Whites Creek
- Johnstons Creek
- Botany Bay
- Port Hacking
Southern Rivers catchment
Illawarra sub-catchment
Shoalhaven River sub-catchment
Eurobodalla catchment
- Tasman Sea
- Clyde River
- Moruya River
- Deua River
- Araluen Creek (designated as a river)
- Majors Creek (designated as a river)
- Bettowynd Creek (designated as a river)
- Araluen Creek (designated as a river)
- Deua River
- Tomaga River
- Tuross River
Far South Coast sub-catchment
Snowy River sub-catchment
- Bass Strait
- Snowy River (mouth located in Victoria)
- Mowamba River
- Maclaughlin River
- Jacobs River
- Delegate River
- Pinch River
- Eucumbene River
- Gungarlin River
- Thredbo River
- Suggan Buggan River (river and mouth located in Victoria)
- Ingeegoodbee River (mouth located in Victoria)
- Snowy River (mouth located in Victoria)
Inland-flowing rivers
The inland-flowing rivers in New South Wales can be considered in two groups. In the northern half of the state, a series of rivers rise on the western side of the Great Dividing Range. These rivers flow west and northwest and eventually combine into the Barwon, which becomes the Darling River further west near Bourke. The waters of the Darling River then flow south through the arid far west of NSW.
The second group of inland-flowing rivers in NSW rise in the southern part of the state, sourced predominantly from the western and southern slopes of the Snowy Mountains and the western slopes of the Great Dividing Range, and combine directly with the Murray River, which forms the southern border of NSW with Victoria.
The two groups converge at Wentworth in the far south-west corner of the state, where the Murray River crosses the New South Wales/Victorian/South Australia border, east of Paringa in South Australia. Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2
North-western New South Wales
- Darling River in the northwestern sector of the state.
South-western New South Wales
In the southwestern sector of the state:
- Murray River also Lake Hume
- Murrumbidgee River also Burrinjuck Dam
- Lachlan River also Wyangala Dam
- Tumut River also Blowering Dam
- Goobarragandra River
- Doubtful Creek (designated as a river)
- Goodradigbee River
- Yass River
- Molonglo River also Cotter River and other rivers of the ACT
- Queanbeyan River
- Jerrabomberra Creek (designated as a river)
- Bredbo River
- Edward River
- Swampy Plain River
- Tooma River
- Tumbarumba Creek (designated as a river)
- Murrumbidgee River also Burrinjuck Dam
See also
- List of rivers of New South Wales (A-K) - Detailed listing of New South Wales rivers showing previous names and source locations for each river.
- List of rivers of New South Wales (L-Z) - Detailed listing of New South Wales rivers showing previous names and source locations for each river.
- List of rivers of Australia for an alphabetical listing including rivers in other Australian states