The Normanby River is a major river in northern Queensland, located on the edge of the Wet Tropics and flowing in a generally north-northwestward direction through seasonally flooded savanna grassland to Princess Charlotte Bay about 150 kilometres from Cooktown.

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:Place/elevation
  • 1000
dbpedia-owl:Place/length
  • 350000
dbpedia-owl:River/discharge
  • 390
dbpedia-owl:River/maximumDischarge
  • 390
dbpedia-owl:River/mouth
dbpedia-owl:River/watershed
  • 24408
dbpedia-owl:discharge
  • 390
dbpedia-owl:elevation
  • 1000
dbpedia-owl:length
  • 350000
dbpedia-owl:maximumDischarge
  • 390
dbpedia-owl:mouth
dbpedia-owl:watershed
  • 24408
dbpprop:abstract
  • The Normanby River is a major river in northern Queensland, located on the edge of the Wet Tropics and flowing in a generally north-northwestward direction through seasonally flooded savanna grassland to Princess Charlotte Bay about 150 kilometres from Cooktown. It is probably the largest river flowing into the east coast of Australia, and the third largest river in all of Australia, though with less than half the flow of the Murray and Mitchell Rivers - though data regardings its flow are sparse with less than a third of the catchment ever gauged. It is the largest river flowing into the Great Barrier Reef and consequently almost all scientific research into the flow and hydrology of the Normanby basin has been done with the health of the reef rather than the river per se in mind. The fact that the Normanby is completely free of dams means that Australian government studies have used it as a model for the behaviour of rivers further south when they were in something closer to a virgin state. The Normanby basin is almost entirely used for the grazing of beef cattle on large stations - mostly worked by Aborigines. The density of cattle is very low, as are rents. The soils, being mostly ancient lateritic Orthents, are totally unsuitable for the growing sugar cane, which is the principal crop in tropical Australia. The most notable attraction within the basin of the Normanby is Lakefield National Park, which covers as much as a fifth of the river's basin and is completely impassable during the wet season between November and May. Lakefield consists of large wetlands which possess a high diversity of fish species. Near its mouth, the Normanby flows very slowly and forms a large delta, which is almost inaccessible even during the dry season as there are no roads - even unsealed ones. This land, though, is still dry enough during the dry season that tropical rainforests cannot grow.
dbpprop:basinCountries
dbpprop:discharge
  • 390 m³/s (river extremely seasonal)
dbpprop:display
  • title
dbpprop:elevation
  • 1000m (3100 ft) at source
dbpprop:hasPhotoCollection
dbpprop:length
  • 350 km (217 mi)
dbpprop:mouth
dbpprop:origin
dbpprop:riverName
  • Normanby River
dbpprop:watershed
  • 24,408 km²
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
georss:point
  • -14.416666666667 144.13333333333
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • The Normanby River is a major river in northern Queensland, located on the edge of the Wet Tropics and flowing in a generally north-northwestward direction through seasonally flooded savanna grassland to Princess Charlotte Bay about 150 kilometres from Cooktown.
rdfs:label
  • Normanby River
owl:sameAs
geo:lat
  • -14.416667 (xsd:float)
geo:long
  • 144.133331 (xsd:float)
skos:subject
foaf:name
  • Normanby River
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