Lake Torrens National Park

Lake Torrens National Park

Infobox_lake
lake_name = Lake Torrens
image_lake =
caption_lake =
image_bathymetry =
caption_bathymetry =
location = South Australia
coords = coord|31|02|40|S|137|51|35|E|type:waterbody_region:AU|display=inline,title
type = dried, endorheic saline rift lake
inflow =
outflow =
catchment =
basin_countries = Australia
length = 240 km
width =
area = 5,700 km²
depth =
max-depth =
volume =
residence_time =
shore =
elevation =
islands =
cities =

Lake Torrens is a 5,700 square kilometre endorheic saline rift lake in South Australia. It forms part of the same rift valley that includes Spencer Gulf to the south and is approximately 240 km long. It is in the Lake Torrens National Park, and a permit is required to visit.

Lake Torrens is usually a dry salt flat. It has only been filled with water once in the past 150 years. It lies 345 km north of Adelaide. Discovered by Edward John Eyre in 1839, for the following twenty years it was believed that Lake Torrens was an enormous horseshoe-shaped saltpan encircling the northern Flinders Ranges and blocking any path to the interior. The first European to penetrate the mythical barrier was A. C. Gregory from the north in March 1858; later the same year, an expedition under B. H. Babbage and Major Warburton in the north-west also crossed the non-existent barrier near modern Marree. Eyre's horseshoe lake was actually composed of Lake Frome, Lake Callabonna, Lake Blanche, Lake Gregory, Lake Eyre South, and Lake Torrens itself.

ee also

* Protected areas of South Australia


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