Ginninderra Creek | |
Name Other: | Ginninderry Creek, Ginninginninderry Creek, Gingininderra Creek |
Name Etymology: | Aboriginal word meaning "sparkling" or "throwing little rays of light"[1] |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | Australia |
Subdivision Type2: | State/Territory |
Subdivision Type3: | IBRA |
Subdivision Name3: | South Eastern Highlands |
Subdivision Type4: | District |
Subdivision Name4: | Capital Country |
Subdivision Type5: | Town centres |
Length: | 23km (14miles) |
Source1: | Spring Range |
Source1 Location: | north-east of Hall, ACT |
Source1 Elevation: | 599m (1,965feet) |
Mouth: | confluence with Murrumbidgee River |
Mouth Location: | Ginninderra Gorge, Yass Valley, NSW |
Mouth Elevation: | 430m (1,410feet) |
River System: | Murrumbidgee River, Murray–Darling basin |
Custom Label: | Reservoirs |
Custom Data: | Gungahlin Pond, Lake Ginninderra |
Extra: | [2] |
Ginninderra Creek, a partly perennial stream of the Murrumbidgee catchment within the Murray–Darling basin, is located in the Capital Country region spanning both the Australian Capital Territory and New South Wales, Australia.
Ginninderra is derived from the Aboriginal word, meaning "sparkling" or "throwing little rays of light".[1] The traditional custodians of the land surrounding Ginninderra Creek are the Aboriginal people of the Ngunnawal tribe.
Ginninderra Creek rises on the northern border between the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) and New South Wales (NSW), sourced from the Spring Range, located north-east of Hall. The creek flows generally south-west across the Ginninderra Plain, through the Gungahlin and Belconnen regions in Canberra, and then heads west crossing the western border between the ACT and flowing into NSW, towards its confluence with the Murrumbidgee River. The creek descends over its course.[2]
Ginninderra Creek is impounded by Gungahlin Pond and Lake Ginninderra,[2] a man-made lake that was constructed in 1974 to act as a sedimentation pond. The creek flows over the Ginninderra Falls, descending, and through Ginninderra Gorge, to its confluence with the Murrumbidgee River.
The catchment of Ginninderra Creek covers approximately .
The Ginninderra Creek catchment carries approximately a quarter of Canberra's urban runoff, and there is considerable risk of runoff from urban areas harming aquatic ecosystems in the Murrumbidgee River system.
Ginninderra Falls was a popular scenic tourist destination,[3] opened initially as a private tourist park from the late 1990s.[4] John Gale argued that the Ginninderra Falls were so pretty that Canberra should be chosen as the capital city of Australia, rather than the proposal to choose Dalgety as the location for the national capital.[5] From mid-2011 onwards, advocacy began for the establishment of a national park containing the Ginninderra Falls, comprising and covering both ACT and NSW, inclusive of the existing Woodstock Nature Reserve in the ACT.[4] [6]