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Lunenburgh River

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Country
  
Australia

Length
  
16 km (10 mi)

Main source
  
Worsley, Western Australia 187 m (614 ft)

River mouth
  
Brunswick River 74.8 m (245 ft)

Basin size
  
56.3 square kilometres (22 sq mi)

Tributaries
  
Left: Otho River, Sophia River

The Lunenburgh River is a perennial river in the South West region of Western Australia.

The river rises in the Darling Range near the abandoned timber mill town of Worsley, then flows north-west discharging into the Brunswick River at Beela. The river's catchment of 56.3 square kilometres (22 sq mi) receives a mean annual rainfall of 1,004 millimetres (40 in) with mean annual runoff of 206 millimetres (8 in). Vegetation is 100% jarrah-marri forest (severely affected by dieback disease), of which 15% is cleared. Land use is part state forest reserve, part private timber leases, with a few small mixed farms. The Lunenburgh's two tributaries are the Otho and the Sophia.

The river was named in March 1830 by Lieutenant-Governor James Stirling after Prince Ernest Augustus I, Duke of Brunswick and Lüneburg and King of Hanover, the fifth son and eighth child of George III. Over a period of 5 days in December 1813, while in command of H. M. Sloop Brazen, Captain Stirling had taken the Duke and his entourage to Wijk aan Zee in Holland.

In the period since 1813, Prince Ernest Augustus had greatly increased in importance. In 1813 he was fifth in line to the throne. Upon William IV's succession as King in June 1830, he was second in line to the throne after Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent. Following exploration of the Brunswick River and its tributaries by boat, Stirling named a number for Prince Ernest Augustus: the Brunswick; the Ernest; the Augustus; the Frederic (after his wife Frederica); the Otho (after Otho I, the first Duke of Brunswick and Lüneburg); and the Sophia and the Matilda (after Prince Ernest's sister Princess Sophia Matilda).

References

Lunenburgh River Wikipedia