River Torrens

River Torrens

Infobox River
river_name = River Torrens



caption = View of Elder Park and Riverside Precinct from Torrens Lake.
origin = Mount Pleasant, Mount Lofty Ranges
mouth = Gulf Saint Vincent at Henley Beach South
basin_countries =
length = ~85 kilometres (53 mi)
elevation = 480 metres
discharge = 0.71 m³/s [Noted as 22.4GL per year in cite journal|coauthors= Adelade coastal waters study|year=Spring 2004 |title= Summary of the literature review and stormwater audit (pdf)|journal= City to Sea|volume= 1|issue= 4|pages= 2 |url= http://www.epa.sa.gov.au/pdfs/acwsnewsno6.pdf|accessdate= 2007-10-14 |format=PDF]
watershed = ~508 km² [cite web |url=http://www.bom.gov.au/hydro/wr/unesco/friend/torrens/torrens.shtml |title= Torrens River |publisher=Australian Government, Bureau of Meteorology |accessdate=2007-10-14 | year=2007]

The River Torrens is the most significant river of the Adelaide Plains and was one of the reasons for the siting of the city of Adelaide, capital of South Australia. It flows convert|85|km|mi|0 from its source in the Adelaide Hills near Mount Pleasant, across the Adelaide Plains, past the central business district and empties into Gulf St. Vincent at Henley Beach South. The upper stretches of the river and reservoirs in its watershed supply a significant part of the city's water supply. The river's long linear parks and a constructed lake in the lower stretch are iconic of the city.

At its 1836 discovery an inland bend was chosen as the site of Adelaide and North Adelaide. The river is named after Colonel Robert Torrens, a significant figure in the city's founding. At Adelaide, is also known its by native Kaurna name "Karra wirra-parri". The river and its tributaries are highly variable in flow, and together drain an area of 508 km². They range from sometimes raging torrents, damaging bridges and flooding city areas, to trickles or completely dry in summer. Winter and spring flooding has prompted the construction of flood reduction works. A constructed sea outlet, landscaped linear parks and three holding reservoirs contain peak flow.

The river's flora and fauna have been both deliberately and accidentally impacted since settlement. Native forests have been cleared, gravel removed for construction and many foreign species introduced. With construction of the linear parks, many species native to the river have been replanted and introduced species controlled as weeds. Since European settlement the river has been a frequently touted tourist attraction. The river formerly acted as the city’s primary water source and main sewer, leading to outbreaks of typhus and cholera.cite web|url = http://www.cwmb.sa.gov.au/kwc/section1/1-33.htm |title=A LITTLE CATCHMENT HISTORY | accessdate =2006-11-21 | author= KESAB |publisher=Catchment Boards of South Australia]

Physiography

Due to the faulting in the area creating grabens, this area is also known as the Torrens Graben, which is a distinct physiographic section of the larger South Australian Shatter Belt province, which in turn is part of the larger West Australian Shield division.

The River Torrens runs largely westward from the Adelaide Hills, through the centre of Adelaide to the Gulf Saint Vincent. It originates close to the eastern fault scarp of the Mount Lofty Ranges, near Mount Pleasant, approximately convert|480|m|ft|0 above sea level. It runs predominantly along faulted north-south ground structures, which were formed over 250 million years ago during the Paleozoic era then further dislocated during the Cretaceous and earliest Tertiary. There is a 400 metre subsidence along the Para Fault which also affects the rivers flow. This subsidence was formed in the last two million years, after the Pliocene era.Smith & Twidale 1987, p.v]

From its origin to Birdwood the river follows rolling, relatively level country before entering a hilly section that continues to Gumeracha. The river then follows sedimentary rock strata before entering a gorge after Cudlee Creek. It flows through the gorge to Athelstone, passing over the Eden Fault Zone of the Adelaide Hills face and associated escarpment. After the scarp it flows over sedimentary rocks of varying resistance to erosion, which has led to interspersed narrows and broad basins. From the base of the Adelaide Hills to Adelaide's central business district it runs in a shallow valley with a terraced floor, then down the slope of its own alluvial fan. The structure of this fan shows that the river formerly entered Gulf Saint Vincent via the Port River. Over time the Torrens deposited sediment, choking its own outflow; becoming locked behind coastal sand dunes and forming the swampy areas of the Cowandilla Plains and the reedbeds.

Tributaries

The Torrens is fed by numerous seasonal creeks, which are dry for most of the year. There are five main creeks that join from the south side as it crosses the Adelaide Plains east of Adelaide, and at least five more in its path through the Adelaide Hills. [Smith & Twidale 1987, Figure 1 (River Torrens Catchment)] The plains tributaries, known as First to Fifth Creeks, with First being the closest to Adelaide's city-centre and the rest numbered consecutively eastward, were originally named Greenhill, Hallett, Todd, Anstey and Ormsley rivulets respectively. They flow vigorously in winter and spring but are otherwise dry, except for small flows in limited areas upstream. [Warburton J.W. (editor) 1977, p.9] "Moriatta" a Kaurna word meaning "ever flowing" is now the official name of Fourth Creek. This name has been adapted to "Morialta" which is now the name of an electoral district, school and the Morialta Conservation Park through which the creek flows. [Warburton J.W. (editor) 1977, p.25]

First, Second and Third Creeks have been particularly heavily modified. Some sections have been converted to concrete channels; others run through landscaped private gardens and some run in underground pipes. Much of the original vegetation has disappeared from the creeks, particularly those closest to the city. Introduced species including Olives, bamboo, boxthorn, watsonia and blackberries have displaced native flora. [Warburton J.W. (editor) 1977, pp12-14,116-125]

Water flow

As discovered by Europeans, the river was a summertime chain of waterholes bounded by large gum trees. Flowing through the area where the city of Adelaide is sited the river was sometimes invisible beneath its gravel stream bed. It frequently flooded in winter and did not reach the sea, instead ending at coastal dunes where its waters created a vast but shallow freshwater wetlands. These wetlands, known as "The Reedbeds" after the dominant vegetation, occupied a large area of the western Adelaide Plains and was also fed by other waterways. The river only flowed to the sea through the Port River, Barker Inlet, and Patawalonga River following heavy rain.cite web| url= http://www.cwmb.sa.gov.au/torrens/projects/wetlands.htm |title = WETLANDS OF THE CATCHMENT | publisher = Torrens catchment water management board | accessdate = 2006-11-21 | date = 2005-07-05 ]

The river’s catchment area of approximately convert|500|km2|sqmi|0|abbr=on is the largest of any waterway within the Adelaide region. The upper reaches are used to create a potable water supply for metropolitan Adelaide with the river supplying three of Adelaide’s eight reservoirs. The upper catchment has an average annual rainfall of between convert|575|mm|in|1 at its eastern end to convert|1025|mm|in|1 near Uraidla. [cite book|author=Surface Water Group | title= Report DWLBC 20003/24, Surface Water Assessment of the Upper River Torrens Catchment (Figure 16) | location=Adelaide|publisher =The Department of Water, Land and Biodiversity Conservation |month = June | year = 2003] The Torrens has a very variable flow leaving early settlers to use trial and error in determining bridge heights, with many bridges consequently being washed away. [Smith & Twidale 1987, p.1] Due to the variability of Adelaide's climate, flow rates can change from a trickle to flood conditions quickly. On June 5 1889, prior to major flooding, the flow rate before it entered the suburbs was 0.7 m³/s(cubic metres per second), rising to 129.1 m³/s, 8 days later. [Smith & Twidale 1987, p.90]

Since settlement it has repeatedly flooded, sometimes with disastrous consequences. Adelaide's western suburbs were especially prone to flooding due to their location on the river's alluvial fan. [Smith & Twidale, July 1988, foreword] As development of Adelaide progressed the amount of rainfall required for flooding decreased and consequent damage increased. Increased stormwater runoff, modification of the river's banks and other changes all served to exacerbate the problem. Work done by various groups to minimise flooding was often counter productive with the creation of levees, moving and widening channels and other works simply shifting the flooding elsewhere.Smith & Twidale, July 1988, p.2]

Two early floods were, 18 September 1841 which resulted in two people drowning while trying to cross the river at Klemzig, and 22 September 1844, the largest recorded since settlement began, when "Shands' Brewery" was washed away after the river undermined its foundations. The 1899 flood was particularly widespread with extensive flooding of both the river and its tributaries, after a year with 785.6 millimetres of rain compared to the Adelaide average of 530 millimetres. The river flooded market gardens and farms throughout its hills course causing extensive damage. Norwood was inundated to The Parade, Adelaide to Pirie and Rundle Streets, and many areas west of the city were left in a shallow lake. [Smith & Twidale 1987, pp.69-78] The river ran 9 feet deep over the weir near Thorndon Park Reservoir, 3 feet over the Torrens Lake Weir and 1 foot over the Morphett Street Bridge. The Underdale (or Holbrooks) Bridge was destroyed, the Torrens Lake weir's bridge damaged, and the Felixstow Bridge over the Fourth Creek washed away. [Smith & Twidale 1987, pp.79-84]

Discovery and naming

The first European sighting of the river was in November 1836 by an exploration party comprising Lieutenant W.G. Field, John Morphett and George Strickland Kingston. The river was named "The Yatala" by the partyAltmann et al. 1999, p.2] but later renamed by William Light after Colonel Robert Torrens, chairman of the South Australian colonisation commissioners. On December 29 1836 Light announced the location of the new city of Adelaide, 6 miles inland on the river's banks .

In recent years the river has been dually known by the indigenous Kaurna people’s name of "Karra wirra-parri" (meaning river of the Red Gum forest), referring to the dense eucalyptus forest that lined its banks prior to clearing by early settlers. This name, alternatively "Karra-weera", only referred to the lake section of the river, between Adelaide and North Adelaide. It was known as "Karrundo-ingga" at Hindmarsh , "Witoingga" near the reed beds, and "Yertala" everywhere when in flood. "Yertala" has been translated as "water running by the side of a river" and has survived as Yatala in the naming of various places in Adelaide.

Changes after 1836

During early years of colonisation, the surrounding trees were cut down and the river’s gravel used in road making and construction of buildings. As the natural environment was removed, the banks were eroded and the riverbed gradually levelled as waterholes filled. By 1878 the river was noted to be a malodorous, black sewer rather than the sylvan stream of the 1830s.cite web |url=http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/manning/pn/t/torrens.htm | title= An Essay on the River Torrens | publisher =State Library of South Australia, The Manning Index of South Australian History |accessdate = 2006-11-21] Much of the river's catchment area consists of cleared farmland with run-off captured in private dams to sustain farming over Adelaide's dry summer. Combined with the river's use for potable water this has greatly reduced the overall flow especially in the lower river.

Flood mitigation

A flood mitigation bill was passed in 1917 to not only combat the damage floods caused but also the public health risk due to the lack of mains sewerage in the western suburbs. Popular opinion was to divert the flood waters into their "natural" outlets of the Port and Patawalonga Rivers. The chief engineer of the department of works favoured a cutting through sand dunes near Henley Beach; allowing the river an outlet, mitigating floods and preventing silting of the Port River. He also advocated the construction of a reservoir where the Kangaroo Creek Reservoir is now, to both mitigate floods and provide summer irrigation water for market gardens. Unfortunately the bill lapsed with no action as government and local councils were unwilling to fund the works. [Smith & Twidale, February 1988, p.2] The Millbrook Reservoir opened in 1918 as a summer water source, and flood mitigator if required. A bill was passed in 1923 to enact the earlier plan of cutting through the dunes and adding an upstream regulating weir. Again the bill lapsed due to a lack of commitment from parties on payment.Smith & Twidale, July 1988, p.4]

A major flood in 1931 and another in 1933 lead to the latest in a line of government enquiries. In 1934 the "Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works" recommended that an outlet for the river be created to accommodate flows of up to 370 m³/s (cubic metres per second) (13,000 ft³/s), covering a 1 in 60 year flood. The work was partly financed by a Commonwealth Government grant with the State Government arranging for the balance. The State Government, western and eastern local councils and the Municipal Tramways Trust shared interest costs. The scheme was enacted in 1935 and largely completed by 1939 with the creation of the "Breakout Creek" channel. [Smith & Twidale 1989, p.1] The scheme involved diversion of the river at Lockleys (near Adelaide Airport), with the original channel blocked and a new channel created to the sea. The reedbeds and swamps were subsequently drained and some of their area is now the site for the suburb of West Lakes.

Based on recommendations in a 1925 report on flood mitigation, work began in the 1960s on the building of the Kangaroo Creek Reservoir, opened in 1969 with a capacity of 24.4 megalitres [Smith & Twidale 1989, p.104] It remains the only reservoir damming the river rather than being fed from weirs. The "River Torrens Committee" was formed in 1964 to advice the minister of works on; preserving and enhancing the rivers natural beauty, and developing it for recreational uses. The "River Torrens Acquisition Act 1970-72" was passed authorising the purchase of land, in some cases 60 metres back from the top of the river's banks. [Smith & Twidale 1989, p.103]

By 1980, further development along the riverbanks and removal of levées had reduced the outlets capacity to a 1 in 35 year flood. A study showed that a 1 in 200 year flood would inundate 13,000 properties, so the Kangaroo Creek dam's level was raised, its spillway modified, the breakout creek channel capacity increased and some bridges reinforced. [Smith & Twidale 1989, p.2] A development plan was approved in 1981 to purchase land along the length of the river, create a flood mitigating linear park and also to modify the Kangaroo Creek dam further. The sea outlet was enlarged to a capacity of 410 m³/s which now covered a 1 in 200 year flood. [Smith & Twidale 1989, p.125] When the O-Bahn Busway was opened the bridges were designed to cope with this scale of flood, although the two bridges in St Peters would likely be awash. [Smith & Twidale 1989, p.132]

Torrens Lake

The 470 megalitre [cite web|url=http://www.amlrnrm.sa.gov.au/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=IlFVOCzep9E%3D&tabid=598 |date=2007-04-18 |title=Torrens taskforce, storage options |publisher=Adelaide and Mount Lofty ranges natural resources management board |accessdate=2007-10-14] Torrens Lake was created in 1881 with the construction of a weir, landscaping of Elder park and modification of the river’s bank and surrounds into an English formal park. The lake forms a centrepiece of many Adelaide events and postcard scenes. Elder Park with its iron rotunda was opened on November 28 1882. The Rotunda is a largely Glasgow built 9 metre high iron bandstand which was funded by Sir Thomas Elder Smith, the park being named after him. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.4]

In 1867, prison labour from Adelaide Gaol was used to build a wooden dam near the site of the current weir. The dam was poorly constructed and almost immediately the Torrens washed it away. Construction of a permanent concrete weir was begun in November 1880 and completed, at a cost of £7,000, in 1881. The sluice gates were closed to begin filling the convert|12|ha|acre|0|sing=on Torrens Lake on July 1 1881. At the lake's official opening on July 21 1881 an estimated 40,000, almost the entire population of Adelaide, attended. During the 1889 flood, the weir was overwhelmed, its gates jammed, and in trying to free them the weir's designer John Langdon was crippled. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.19] The weir was rebuilt from 1928 to 1929 with its footbridge relocated and the centre section replaced. The gates can now be fully raised and the river allowed to flow unimpeded. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.20] The "Popeye" boats are privately owned recreational ferries that operate on the lake between Elder Park and the Adelaide Zoo. The first boat was launched on the Torrens Lake by Gordon Watts in 1935. It was a 25 foot boat, built on the banks of the Torrens to hold up to 20 passengers and named "Popeye 1". Watts purchased a former Glenelg cruise boat in 1948 and placed it in service as "Popeye 2". Over the next two years three new jarrah hulled boats were built at Port Adelaide; carrying 40 passengers each they were numbered "Popeye 3" through "Popeye 5". Trips on the Popeyes from Elder Park to the zoo became a treasured family outing and the boats hosted weddings and other events. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.21] In March 1962 Keith Altman, owner of riverside eatery "Jolley's Boathouse", took over the Popeyes and introduced recreational paddle boats to the river. The Popeyes had a brush with royalty in March 1977 with "Popeye 5" ferrying Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip followed by a choir in "Popeye 4". Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser officially launched three new fibreglass models named Popeyes I, II and III in 1982 as the wooden boats' replacements. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.22]

Water use

In the early days of Adelaide, the Torrens was used for bathing, stock watering, rubbish disposal, water supply and as a de-facto sewer and drainage sump. This led to a range of health issues until finally, in 1839, when a dysentery outbreak killed 5 children in one day, Governor Gawler forbid bathing, clothes washing and the disposal of animal carcases in the Torrens within 1 mile of town. The quality of the river's water was not helped by water supply methods. Carters used to drive water carts into the Torrens to refill. To prevent this the State Government built a facility with steam powered pumps and water storage in 1852, from which the carters then filled.Altmann et al. 1999, p.6]

The "Waterworks Act" of 1856 was passed to enable damming of the upstream Torrens for water supply purposes.Altmann et al. 1999, p.3] The resulting "Water Commission" arranged the following year for foundations to be laid for a water supply weir. Poor construction materials and techniques lead to them being washed away, and the weir not completed. Government then created a Waterworks Department, which started construction of a weir and reservoir in 1859, at Thorndon Park partway through the river’s suburban flow. The weir was completed on June 4 1860 and the reservoir began supplying piped water in December. The water was captured at the weir, piped for storage to the Thorndon Park Reservoir then to a water tank at Kent Town. Water from Kent Town storage was distributed via a manually controlled water system, unmetered for its first six years. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.7] Within six years 20,000 citizens in Adelaide and Port Adelaide were connected to reticulated water from the Torrens. [Hammerton M. 1986, p.25] By 1872, the 2840 megalitre Hope Valley Reservoir in the foothills of the Adelaide Hills was completed as a storage reservoir, supplied via an aqueduct and tunnel. [cite web|url= http://www.atlas.sa.gov.au/go/resources/atlas-of-south-Australia-1986/environment-resources/water-supply | title = Water Supply | publisher = Government of South Australia | accessdate = 2006-11-21 ]

Public baths were built in 1861 just north of the current Parliament House. They were supplied with reticulated water from the Torrens and progressively upgraded with the last change a 1940 remodelling including an Olympic size swimming pool and diving tower. The baths were demolished in 1970 to make way for the Adelaide Festival Centre. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.8] The 16,500 megalitre Millbrook Reservoir was constructed high in the Adelaide Hills from 1913 to 1918 submerging the town of Millbrook. An earth bank dam fed by mile long tunnel from a weir on the river at Gumeracha, its elevation allows gravity supply of water to Adelaide's eastern suburbs. [Hammerton M. 1986, pp.155-156]

Bridges

Due to the river's path through the centre of Adelaide, transport necessitated the construction of many bridges. Prior to the bridges all crossings had been via fords which proved a dangerous practice in spring and winter. The first bridge was one of timber built in 1839 approximately 500 metres west of the current City bridge, but destroyed by floods in September 1844. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.4] In 1849 £6000 was allocated to bridge the Torrens. Within four years three wooden bridges had been built and subsequently destroyed in floods. In June 1856 the English manufactured, iron City Bridge was opened, extending King William Street to North Adelaide. It was widened in 1877 then converted into a two-lane bridge in 1884. The bridge was replaced in 1931 with a concrete arch structure. [Altmann et al. 1999, pp.3,15]

The Victoria Bridge extends from Morphett Street and crosses the rail lines from the Adelaide Railway Station and the river. The first bridge was opened on June 21 1871, and over time various bridges have been built on the same site. The current bridge, a prestressed concrete box girder bridge, was opened in March 1968 by Don Dunstan and Lord Mayor Walter Lewis Bridgland. The bridge is constructed as two bridges joined to appear continuous. The first spans North Terrace and the rail lines, and the second the river. The bridge was designed without a central pillar in the river, allowing three lanes of rowers to compete without interference. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.18]

The Albert Bridge is adjacent to the Adelaide Zoo and carries Frome Road over the river. A timber bridge was constructed in 1859, west of the current bridge, and named the "Old Frome Bridge". The current bridge was named after Prince Albert, later King Edward VII, and opened in his presence on May 7 1879.Altmann et al. 1999, p.9] The wrought iron structure is made from three parallel, scalloped girders that were manufactured in England. It is convert|120|ft|m|1 long with a cantilevered span of 60 feet. The bridge is 43 feet wide and originally had a timber deck, which was replaced with concrete in 1922. The bridge is listed on the "City of Adelaide Heritage Register", the "South Australian Heritage Register" and the "Register of the National Estate". A complete restoration was finished in 1982, with the bridge now appearing as it did at the 1879 opening. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.10]

The Hackney Bridge was first known as the "Second Company Bridge" as the South Australia Company built it. It was built so that wheat farmers from the northern side could access the South Australian Company's flour mill which stood where the Hackney Hotel was later built.Lewis H. John 1985, p.57] The current bridge is the third at the same site; in 1845 "Prescott's Crossing" was built as a timber beam bridge, 1860 saw it replaced with a four span, trussed timber bridge and December 5 1885 with a 126 foot long, 34 foot wide truss arch bridge. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.11]

University Footbridge connects Victoria Drive, at the rear of University of Adelaide, with University Oval, War Memorial Drive. [http://adelaide-in-photos.blogspot.com/2008/04/popeye-on-torrens.html] cite web | last = Kemp | first = Deane | coauthors = Pickles John | url = http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A140147b.htm | title = Fargher, John Adrian (1901 - 1977) | format = HTML | work = Australian Dictionary of Biography | accessdate = 2006-06-18 ] The bridge was conceived in 1928 by an engineering undergraduate at the university and funded with a £26,000 grant from Adelaide City Council. It was designed by university staff under the supervision of Robert Chapman, chief engineer of the South Australian Railways. Construction was delayed until 1937 due to the economic effects of the Great Depression. The bridge has an arch spanning 152 ft, 20 ft over the river, and was the first welded bridge in South Australia. [Altmann et al. 1999, p.12] A murder that occurred in the vicinity of the bridge on 10 May 1972 resulted in calls to reform South Australia's laws regarding homosexuality. University of Adelaide law lecturer Dr George Duncan was thrown into the river. A plaque on the bridge commemorates his death and the subsequent decriminalisation of homosexuality in South Australia. [cite news |url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200205/s553159.htm |title=Call for release of documents relating to professor's death |date=May 10 2002 |accessdate=2007-03-07 |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation]

Various other bridges have spanned the Torrens including:
*Railway Bridge, Built in 1856 to carry the Port and Gawler Town railway lines. The bridge was constructed 1.5 km from Adelaide Railway Station. [Thompson & Sampson 2006, p.24]
*Felixstowe Bridge, built in 1873 on OG Road and reconstructed in 1892, 1901, 1924 and 1961. The first bridge was narrow, and hay-laden carts often damaged posts while brushing past them.
*Tennyson Bridge, built 1877 on Stephen Terrace, St Peters, replacing a ford at the same site.
*Ascot Bridge, built in 1970 to connect Ascot Avenue and Lower Portrush Road.
*Dickson's Crossing, built on Darley Road in 1977 to replace a ford.

Flora and fauna

The river was formerly a food source with yabbies, mussels and small fish, however the reduction in water quality, changing of the river’s habitat, and introduction of European fish species has led to a reduction in fauna quantity and diversity. Exotic pest species such as the European Carp, Redfin Perch and trout have greatly reduced native fish populations like the Big Headed gudgeon ("Philypnodon grandiceps") but native waterfowl are common along the river with Pacific Black Ducks, Australian Wood Ducks, Black Swans, ibis, egrets and herons amongst the more than 100 species seen. The number of exotic waterfowl species such as Mallards has reduced in recent years. In places the steep banks of the river are an ideal habitat for long-necked tortoises.

The river, and its tributaries, had a population of Water Rats (Hydromys chrysogaster) and Australian Swamp Rats ("Rattus lutreolus"). Water rats remain in reduced numbers, but the introduced Black Rat ("Rattus rattus") and Brown Rat ("Rattus norvegicus") have largely supplanted the natives. The House Mouse ("Mus musculus") is now the most common mammal of the Torrens environ. [Warburton J.W. (editor) 1977, p.23]

Widely found native reeds, sedges and rushes along the upper river are bulrush, knobby club rush, spike rush, common reed, sea rush and pale rush. River Red Gum ("Eucalyptus camaldulensis") and Blue Gum ("Eucalyptus leucoxylon") trees are found along the riverbanks, although sparser than the forest that was seen by European discoverers. Still present are many of the original vegetation species like: Sheoak ("Casuarina Stricta"), Native Cherry ("Exocarpos cupressiformis"), Native Pine ("Callitris preissii") and Australia's floral emblem the Golden Wattle ("Acacia pycnantha") [Warburton J.W. (editor) 1977, p.11-14]

Today's river

From its source the river flows westwards through Birdwood and Gumeracha . It then continues down through Torrens Gorge entering suburban Adelaide at the suburb of Athelstone with some of its path paralleled by the O-Bahn Busway. It passes between the city-centre and North Adelaide, forming the Torrens Lake between the Adelaide Zoo and a weir opposite Adelaide Gaol. The river then continues the remaining eight kilometres to the sea at Henley Beach South, emptying into Gulf St. Vincent via a constructed outlet.

Hope Valley, Millbrook and Kangaroo Creek Reservoirs, which provide water storage for Adelaide, capture the river’s flow. These reservoirs form part of the Adelaide Hills catchment, which supplies 60% of Adelaide's water needs in an average year. Adelaide City Council uses water from the lower river to irrigate the city's surrounding parklands. [cite web |url=http://www.sawater.com.au/NR/rdonlyres/89168780-C8FA-4132-916E-4429C08D5F0F/0/WPA_Exploring_Issues.pdf |publisher=Government of South Australia |accessdate=2007-03-22 |title =Water Proofing Adelaide, Exploring the issues - a discussion paper (pdf)|format=PDF] Rubbish accumulation in the lower river is controlled with numerous collection racks, and sediments and other pollutants are filtered through constructed wetlands. [Signage by the Torrens water catchment board (at breakout creek near henly beach) shows four constructed wetlands and 12 (existing or in construction) trashracks as of 2006] The earliest linear river park in Australia bounds the suburban end of the river. The park is 35 km long with numerous playgrounds walkways and bicycle tracks. On the south bank of the lake, adjacent to the Adelaide Festival Centre, Elder Park is used for the annual Tasting Australia festival, mass singing of Christmas carols by candlelight and other public events throughout the year. The Popeye tourist boats, small paddle boats and Black Swans of the lake are icons of the area and frequently featured in postcard photographs of the city. Due to now-limited natural river flow and stormwater born organic material the lower river, particularly the lake, is often polluted with algal blooms and significant levels of E. coli bacteria in spring and summer. Numerous taskforces have been formed to improve the river’s water quality, with the latest created by the Minister for the Environment and Conservation in 2006. cite news |first= Michael|last= Owen|title= Taskforce to look at ailing Torrens |work=The Advertiser, Adelaide| publisher= News Limited|date= 2006-09-16]

The river is a used by many for recreation, with the footpaths on the riverbanks often filled with cyclists and joggers. Rowers use the lake for training all year round, and many clubs such as the Adelaide University Boat Club and the Adelaide Rowing Club are located upon its banks. Several rowing regattas are held on the Torrens Lake course in the summer months of each year, contested by both club and school crews.

Notes

References


*cite book |last=Altmann |first=Keith |coauthors =Butcher M, Rodda L, Stacey B, Stewien R, Venus R |location=North Adelaide | year=1999 |publisher=Institution of Engineers Australia, South Australian Division |title=Ponds, ponts & Pop-eye : notes for an afternoon afloat on Adelaide's River Torrens
*cite book |last=Lewis |first=H. John |title=Enfield and the northern villages |publisher=Corporation of the City of Enfield |year=1985 |location=Enfield, South Australia | isbn=0-85864-090-2
*cite book |last=Hammerton |first=Marianne |title=Water South Australia, A History of the Engineering and Water Supply Department |publisher=Wakefield Press |location=Adelaide | year=1986 |isbn=0-949268-75-5
*cite book|last=Payne |first=Pauline |year=1996 |title=Thebarton Old and New |location=Adelaide, South Australia |publisher=Thebarton City Council |isbn= 0-646-30157-8
*cite book |title=An Historical account of flooding and related events in the torrens river system from first settlement to 1986 |edition=volume 1, 1836-1899 |last =Smith |first=Derek L. |coauthors =Twidale C.R. |publisher=The engineering and water supply department |location=Adelaide |year=1987 |isbn=0-72434-248-6
*cite book |title=An Historical account of flooding and related events in the torrens river system from first settlement to 1986 |edition=volume 2, 1900-1917 |last =Smith |first=Derek L. |coauthors =Twidale C.R. |publisher=The engineering and water supply department |location=Adelaide |month=February |year=1988
*cite book |title=An Historical account of flooding and related events in the torrens river system from first settlement to 1986 |edition=volume 3, 1918-1930 |last =Smith |first=Derek L. |coauthors =Twidale C.R. |publisher=The engineering and water supply department |location=Adelaide |month=July|year=1988
*cite book |title=An Historical account of flooding and related events in the torrens river system from first settlement to 1986 |edition=volume 4, 1931-1988 |last =Smith |first=Derek L. |coauthors =Twidale C.R. |publisher=The engineering and water supply department |location=Adelaide |year=1989
*cite book |last = Thompson |first = Malcolm |coauthors = Sampson Bob |title = 150 years of the Port Adelaide Railway 1856 to 2006 |publisher =National Railway Museum |location =Port Adelaide | year = 2006
*cite book |title=Five creeks of the River Torrens |last =Warburton| first=J.W. (editor)| year=1977| publisher=Department of adult education, University of Adelaide |location=Adelaide |isbn=0-85578-336-2

External links

* [http://www.cwmb.sa.gov.au/torrens/index.htm Torrens Catchment Water Management Board]
* [http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/manning/pn/t/torrens.htm State Library Manning Index: River Torrens]


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