Strzelecki | |
Name Etymology: | Paul Edmund de Strzelecki |
Pushpin Map: | Australia South Australia |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of the river mouth in South Australia |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | Australia |
Subdivision Type2: | State |
Subdivision Name2: | South Australia |
Subdivision Type3: | Region |
Subdivision Name3: | Far North |
Subdivision Type5: | Municipality |
Subdivision Name5: | unincorporated area |
Length: | 200km (100miles) |
Source1: | Cooper Creek |
Source1 Location: | south of Innamincka |
Source1 Elevation: | 52m (171feet) |
Mouth: | Lake Blanche |
Mouth Location: | west of Montecollina |
Mouth Coordinates: | -29.3643°N 139.8302°W |
Mouth Elevation: | 1m (03feet) |
River System: | Lake Eyre Basin |
Custom Label: | protected areas |
Custom Data: | Strzelecki Regional Reserve |
Extra: | [1] |
The Strzelecki Creek, part of the Lake Eyre basin, is an ephemeral watercourse located in the Australian state of South Australia.
The Strzelecki is a distributary of Cooper Creek and branches off near the town of Innamincka and flows in a southerly direction thought the Strzelecki Desert for about towards Lake Blanche. While being feed by the Cooper Creek, it does have its own catchment and can flow independently after ‘heavy localised storms.’ Flows on ‘exceptional’ occasions can reach Lakes Blanche, Callabonna, Frome and Gregory. Its watercourse is lined by trees, bordered by “large parallel sand ridges” and includes “a series of waterholes.”
Parts of the creek system are within the protected area known as the Strzelecki Regional Reserve. The creek system is also within the boundaries of the non-statutory Strzelecki Desert Lakes Important Bird Area .[2] The former pastoral lease property Tinga Tingana straddled the creek which also passes through Blanchewater Station.
It was named by the British explorer, Charles Sturt on 18 August 1845 after Paul Edmund de Strzelecki, the Polish scientist and explorer.[3] Explorer Augustus Charles Gregory and his party found that following Strzelecki Creek proved to be the best way to travel through the interior from the Pacific to the Southern Ocean.[4]