Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Bowes River

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Country
  
Australia

River mouth
  
Indian Ocean sea level

Basin area
  
714 km²

Main source
  
254 metres (833 ft)

Length
  
46 km

Mouth
  
Indian Ocean

Bowes River httpsim1mswmsmdimagephpid190084amptypePH

Basin size
  
714 square kilometres (276 sq mi)

Northampton v8 dirt drags bowes river 3rd nov 2012


The Bowes River is a river in the Mid West of Western Australia. It was named on 6 April 1839 by the explorer George Grey while on his second exploration expedition along the Western Australian coast. It was named for Mary Bowes, Dowager Countess of Strathmore, the wife of Sir William Hutt. Hutt was a British Liberal politician who was heavily involved in the colonization of New Zealand and South Australia, and the brother of John Hutt, the second governor of Western Australia. Sir William Hutt was a member of the 1836 select committee on Disposal of Lands in the British Colonies. Grey named the nearby Hutt River after Hutt.

Contents

The headwaters of the river rise approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) north-east of Northampton and flow in a south-westerly direction, crossing the North West Coastal Highway just north of Isseka. The river then continues in a westerly direction before discharging into the Indian Ocean south of Horrocks. The river drains into a small deadwater with a depth of less than 3 metres (10 ft), which is only open to the ocean for a few days a year, generally following rains between June and August.

The river has two tributaries: Sandy Gully and Nokanena Brook.

Contamination of Nokanena Brook from the nearby Uga mine group and Northampton State Battery tailings dam, 1.2 kilometres (1 mi) west of Northampton, has led to elevated lead and cadmium levels in stream water. Lead contamination from Nokanena Brook has also been recorded in Bowes River.

Northampton dirt drags tractor pull bowes river 7 november 2009


References

Bowes River Wikipedia