Ducie | |
River | |
Name origin: In honour of the Earl of Ducie | |
Country | Australia |
---|---|
State | Queensland |
Region | Far North Queensland |
Tributaries | |
- right | Dulhunty River |
Source | Richardson Range, Great Dividing Range |
Source confluence | Palm Creek and South Palm Creek |
- location | west of Bramwell Roadhouse |
- elevation | 30 m (98 ft) |
- coordinates | 12°06′47″S 142°25′08″E / 12.11306°S 142.41889°E |
Mouth | Gulf of Carpentaria |
- location | Port Musgrave |
- elevation | 0 m (0 ft) |
- coordinates | 12°03′S 142°01′E / 12.050°S 142.017°ECoordinates: 12°03′S 142°01′E / 12.050°S 142.017°E |
Length | 69 km (43 mi) |
Basin | 6,746 km2 (2,605 sq mi) |
Location of Ducie River mouth in Queensland
|
|
The Ducie River is a river located on the Cape York Peninsula in Far North Queensland, Australia.
Formed by the confluence of the Palm Creek and South Palm Creek, the headwaters of the Ducie River drain the Richardson Range, part of the Great Dividing Range. The river flows generally west through stringybark woodlands, tropical savanna plains and wetlands, and enters the Gulf of Carpentaria on the western side of the Cape York Peninsula at Port Musgrave just north of Mapoon. The river descends 31 metres (102 ft) over its 69-kilometre (43 mi) course.
The catchment covers 6,746 square kilometres (2,605 sq mi) There are no major towns or water storage facilities in the watershed.
Much of the river is bordered by gallery rainforest. In its lower reaches it supports extensive tidal mangrove forest with stands of Nipa Palms.
The river was named in 1886 by Francis Lascelles Jardine, a pastoralist, reportedly after the Earl of Ducie, presumably a relative of the Jardine family.