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Peel River (New South Wales)

Peel River
Cockburn River
Watercourse
Peelrivernundle.jpg
Peel River at Nundle
Name origin: in honour of Sir Robert Peel
Country Australia
State New South Wales
Region IBRA: New England Tablelands
District Northern Tablelands
Municipalities Tamworth, Gunnedah
Part of Murray–Darling basin
Source Liverpool Range, Great Dividing Range, and Mount Royal Range
 - location south of Nundle
 - elevation 743 m (2,438 ft)
Mouth confluence with the Namoi River
 - location south of Keepit Dam
 - elevation 286 m (938 ft)
Length 210 km (130 mi)
Reservoir Chaffey Dam

Peel River, a watercourse that is part of the Namoi catchment within the Murray–Darling basin, is located in the Northern Tablelands district of New South Wales, Australia.

The river rises on the northern slopes of the Liverpool Range, at the junction of the Great Dividing Range and Mount Royal Range, south of the village of Nundle, and flows generally north, west and north west and emerges into the Liverpool Plains near Tamworth. The Peel River is joined by thirteen tributaries, including the Cockburn River, and flows through Chaffey Dam before reaching its mouth at the confluence with the Namoi River; dropping 457 metres (1,499 ft) over its course of 210 kilometres (130 mi).

From source to mouth, the river passes through or near the villages of Nundle, Woolomin and Piallamore.

The Peel River was first discovered by European settlers in 1818 by John Oxley and named by Oxley in honour of Sir Robert Peel, an important British politician at the time of its discovery by British settlers in Australia.


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