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Brown Hill Creek

Brown Hill (Kaurna: Willawilla)
Creek
Brownhill.creek.view.jpg
View of the Brown Hill Creek
Country Australia
State South Australia
Region Metropolitan Adelaide
Part of Patawalonga River
Town Brown Hill Creek
Source Mount Lofty Ranges
Mouth Patawalonga River
 - location south of Mitcham
 - coordinates 34°59′02″S 138°39′04″E / 34.984°S 138.651°E / -34.984; 138.651Coordinates: 34°59′02″S 138°39′04″E / 34.984°S 138.651°E / -34.984; 138.651
Nature reserve Brownhill Creek Recreation Park
Brown Hill Creek is located in South Australia
Brown Hill Creek
Location of the creek mouth in South Australia

The Brown Hill Creek, also known as Willawilla in the Kaurna language, part of the Patawalonga River catchment, is a watercourse located in the western suburbs of the Adelaide metropolitan area, in the Australian state of South Australia.

The creek rises on the western slopes of the Mount Lofty Ranges and flows generally in a west-north-west direction. The creek runs through the suburb of Brown Hill Creek with the area around the mouth of creek in the suburb of Mitcham. This area was known to the Kaurna people of the Adelaide Plains as Wirraparinga, meaning "creek and scrub place". After the proclamation of Adelaide on 28 December 1836, one of the earliest outlying communities to spring up was that of Mitcham, in 1840.

The dominating hill behind Mitcham is called Brown Hill, along with two other significant hills in the Adelaide hills face, Greenhill and Black Hill. It was grazed early on in the history of Adelaide's white settlement, and has since retained a cover of grass, with few trees or shrubs, thus appearing brown in summer, and green in winter.

The creek valley behind the hill has contained some form of park for many years; a stone plaque declaring a "pleasure resort" from the early part of the 20th century still stands at the entrance to the valley. Today, there is a popular caravan park in the mouth of the valley, and a recreation reserve extending several kilometres up the main creek valley behind it. The upper reaches of the creek are utilised especially for market gardening, and also some pasture. In the 1870s, some of the upper gullies of the creek were considered as a possible location for a reservoir, to supply Adelaide's growing population with water. Thorndon Park reservoir was eventually built instead.


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