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Macalister River

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- location
  
below Mount Howitt

- location
  
south of Maffra

Source
  
Great Dividing Range

Country
  
Australia

- elevation
  
1,550 m (5,085 ft)

- elevation
  
14 m (46 ft)

Mouth
  
Thomson River

Settlement
  
Maffra

Macalister River httpsiytimgcomviWM2uyq4v4IEhqdefaultjpg

- left
  
Caledonia River, Wellington River, Stony Creek 2 (Macalister River, Victoria), Main Northern Channel

- right
  
Peters Creek (Victoria), Coleman Creek (Victoria), Grimme Creek, Barkly River, Target Creek, Serpentine Creek, Mount Useful Creek, Cheyne Creek, Stony Creek 1 (Macalister River, Victoria), Glenmaggie Creek, Main Serpentine Drain

Swimming in lake glenmaggie on the macalister river gippsland victoria


The Macalister River, a perennial river of the West Gippsland catchment, is located in the Alpine and Gippsland regions of the Australian state of Victoria.

Contents

Map of Macalister River, Victoria, Australia

Location and features

The Macalister River rises below Mount Howitt, part of the Great Dividing Range in the southern portion of the Alpine National Park; and flows generally south by east in a highly meandering course. The river is joined by fifteen tributaries including the Caledonia, Wellington, and Barkly rivers, impounded by the Glenmaggie Dam that creates Lake Glenmaggie, before reaching its confluence with the Thomson River, south of Maffra. The river descends 1,530 metres (5,020 ft) over its 177-kilometre (110 mi) course. The fertile flats and valley floor of the Macalister River support agriculture around the town of Licola.

Etymology

In the Australian Aboriginal Brataualung language the river was named Wirnwirndook'yeerun, meaning the "song of some bird", purportedly an emu wren.

The river was named by explorer Angus McMillan after his then employer, Captain Lachlan Macalister.

References

Macalister River Wikipedia