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Finke River

Finke (Larapinta)
River
FinkeR8.jpg
The Finke River after rain, Northern Territory
Name origin: William Finke
Country Australia
States Northern Territory, South Australia
Part of Lake Eyre Basin
Length 750 km (466 mi)
National parks West MacDonnell; Finke Gorge
Lake eyre basin map.png
Map of the Lake Eyre Basin showing the Finke River

The Finke River is an ephemeral river and one of the largest rivers in central Australia.

Its source is in the Northern Territory's MacDonnell Ranges, and the name Finke River is first applied at the confluence of the Davenport and Ormiston Creeks, just north of Glen Helen. From here the river meanders for approximately 600 km (370 mi) to the western edge of the Simpson Desert in northern South Australia. Usually the river is a string of waterholes, but it can become a raging torrent during rare flood events. In extreme events, water from the Finke River flows into the Macumba River, and thence into Lake Eyre, a total distance from headwater streams of around 750 km (470 mi). Major tributaries include Ellery Creek, and the Palmer and Hugh Rivers. The Finke River flows through the West MacDonnell and Finke Gorge National Parks.

The Finke River was named by John McDouall Stuart in 1860 after an Adelaide man, William Finke, who was one of the promoters of his expedition. The indigenous name for the river in parts of the Northern Territory is Larapinta, which lends its name to an Alice Springs suburb; Larapinta Drive, which runs west from Alice Springs; and the Larapinta Trail.

The Finke River has long been cited as "the oldest river in the world", particularly by tour operators, and in popular books and brochures. In places such as the James Range, the Finke flows through deeply incised meanders (see Google Maps image). Because meanders only form on flat plains, the river must have formed before the ranges were pushed up; this happened in a mountain building event referred to as the Alice Springs Orogeny which peaked between 400 and 300 million years ago (Devonian to Carboniferous Periods). Therefore, some parts of the river's course must have already existed around this time. But southern parts of its course must be much younger because the areas where the Finke now flows near the southern edge of the Northern Territory, and further south, were under the sea during the Mesozoic Era, part of the Great Artesian Basin.


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