Cabramatta Creek Explained

Cabramatta Creek
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Australia
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:New South Wales
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:Sydney Basin (IBRA), South Western Sydney
Subdivision Type5:Local government areas
Subdivision Name5:Liverpool, Fairfield
Length:16km (10miles)
Source1:Denham Court
Source1 Location:near Leppington
Mouth:confluence with the Georges River
Mouth Location:Warwick Farm
Basin Size:74km2

Cabramatta Creek, an urban watercourse of the Georges River catchment, is located in the South Western Sydney, in New South Wales, Australia. The catchment area of the creek is approximately, and within the catchment area are the Cabramatta Creek, Hinchinbrook Creek, Maxwells Creek, and Brickmakers Creek.

History

The area around the creek was home to the Darug Aboriginal people. European settlement began on the site in the 1790s when they found good quality soil.

A concrete beam road bridge that carries the Hume Highway over Cabramatta Creek, constructed in 1951 and commonly known as Ireland's Bridge, is listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register.[1]

Throughout the 1990s to present, substantial residential development have occurred in the west of Cowpasture Road. A number of detention basins have also been constructed in conjunction with the development.

Course

Cabramatta Creek flows through established residential suburbs, including Miller, Cartwright, Sadlier, Ashcroft, Liverpool, Mount Pritchard and Warwick Farm.[2]

Cabramatta Creek rises in the rural/residential suburb of Denham Court, east south-east of Leppington, within the Liverpool local government area. From here the creek flows in a northerly direction under Camden Valley Way towards Hoxton Park, and its junction with Hinchinbrook Creek.

Below Hoxton Park Road, Cabramatta Creek starts to flow in an easterly direction the Fairfield local government area, towards its confluence with the Georges River, to the east of Warwick Farm.

Features

A more prominent creek "corridor", up to wide, becomes more evident throughout the lower catchment. This primarily consists of public open space, playing fields and golf courses. The Elouera Nature Reserve, which is an important pocket of native bushland, also forms part of this corridor.

In the area surrounding Cabramatta Creek is a large flying fox population; located behind the Sunnybrook Motel and called the Cabrammatta Creek Flying Fox Reserve.[3] The Inghams poultry farm also occupies a significant landholding in the area. Major transport routes that cross the catchment includes Hoxton Park Road, Elizabeth Drive, Orange Grove Road (the Cumberland Highway), the Hume Highway and the Main Southern railway line.

External links

-33.9333°N 202°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cabramatta Creek Bridge. Heritage and conservation register. Roads & Maritime Services. 30 September 2004. 10 April 2013.
  2. Web site: Cabramatta Creek Floodplain Management Study and Plan. Liverpool City Council and Fairfield City Council. Bewsher Consulting. October 2004. 10 April 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130426080005/http://www.liverpool.nsw.gov.au/media/documents/FormsPublicationsandPolicies/Cabramatta-Creek-Floodplain-Risk-Management-Study-and-Plan.PDF. 26 April 2013. dead.
  3. Book: Protecting and restoring grey-headed flying-fox habitat. Department of Environment & Climate Change. October 2008. 978-1-74122-973-8.