The Port River (officially known as the Port Adelaide River) is part of a tidal estuary located north of the Adelaide city centre in the Australian state of South Australia. It has been used as a shipping channel since the beginning of European settlement of South Australia in 1836, when Colonel Light selected the site to use as a port. Before colonisation, the Port River region and the estuary area were known as Yerta Bulti (or Yertabulti) by the Kaurna people, and used extensively as a source of food and plant materials to fashion artefacts used in daily life.
The Port River dolphins are a popular tourist attraction.
Sections of the river bank are variously developed for shipping, industrial and increasingly, residential use. The rich ecosystem of the river, which includes , seagrass, , and abundant marine life, has been historically impacted by industrialisation and associated pollution. In the 21st century, reductions in pollution loads have allowed for environmental recovery aided by several restoration programs.
The estuary includes several overlapping , including the Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary and the Gulf St Vincent Important Bird Area, a number of ships' graveyards and other places of heritage interest.
There are three road bridges and two railway bridges over the river. Its southern end abuts the West Lakes recreational body of water.
The Kaurna people made use of the natural resources; for example, they used to trap and spear fish ( kuya), lobsters ( ngaultaltya) and birds ( parriparu), and also gathered bird's eggs, black river mussels ( kakirra, species Alathyria jacksoni), periwinkle ( kulutunumi), river crawfish ( kunggurla – probably common yabby), , native mud oysters and blue swimmer crabs. However, they did not kill the , as this was forbidden. The reeds, blue flax lily and rushes (probably Juncus kraussii, the salt marsh rush) were used for weaving baskets and nets – the latter used for not only fish, but game such as kangaroo and emu. Dolphins were known as yambo.
At that time, a large sand dune known as the Gillman Dunal system stretched inland across the southern part of the area, where the people camped for years even after European settlement.
The Lartelare Park, situated just north of the current Jervois Bridge on the western bank, in the suburb of New Port, was established in 2009 to commemorate the site of a Kaurna campsite which existed there for thousands of years until 1858, when it was relocated further south to the mouth of the Jervois Creek, where there was an oyster bed well known to both Kaurna and colonists. Numerous and tools were discovered during construction of the park. Jervois Creek was later filled in, and the current bridge (built 1969) was constructed over the oyster bed.
The McLaren Wharf was built in 1839, and the port was opened at its current location (now Port Adelaide) in October 1840.
Port Adelaide became a hub for the oyster trade, owing to the abundance of native mud oysters and other shellfish in the river. Aquaculture took place from the late 1850s to the 1910s around Jervois Bridge, and oysters were also shipped to the port from the Spencer Gulf.
Owing to the shallow depth of the river, a new harbour was authorised for construction at Outer Harbor in 1902, and completed in 1908. This new harbour allowed the larger that were then arriving at Adelaide to dock, with smaller steam vessels and sailboats able to use the old port facilities.
The river was first bridged in 1859 by the Port Bridge a wooden footbridge, which allowed people to move onto the Lefevre Peninsula.
The Port River is the western branch of the largest tidal estuary on the eastern side of Gulf St Vincent. It extends inland through the historic Inner Harbour of Port Adelaide, to the constructed salt-water West Lakes in the north-western suburbs of Adelaide. The lower reaches of the Port River flow between the Lefevre Peninsula, and the Section Banks and Torrens Island, and form the sea entrance to the port facilities of Adelaide.
Section Banks is artificial island made of seashell-grit, clay and sand, around long, created partly by natural processes but also by manmade construction, at the northern end of the Outer Harbor breakwater. It provides a nesting and breeding area for , and is known as Bird Island (or Northern Breakwater; see also below).
The Port River estuary connects to the Barker Inlet to the east via the North Arm to the south of Garden Island and Angas Inlet to its north. Light Passage lies between Pelican Point and Torrens Island.
In the 2000s, the Port River Expressway was constructed, with the road bridge across the Port River opening on 3 August 2008, named the Tom 'Diver' Derrick Bridge. The Expressway links Hanson Road, South Road and the Salisbury Highway with the port. A railway bridge was constructed as part of the project.
Today the river is crossed by Mary MacKillop opening rail bridge, the Expressway bridge, the Birkenhead Bridge, the Jervois Bridge, and a railway bridge carrying the Outer Harbor railway line. Bower Road crosses the southern extremity of the river, with West Lakes on the other side.
The shipping channel has been dredged at various instances since the establishment of Port Adelaide to accommodate larger vessels. Dredging occurred most recently between June and September 2019. That dredging widened the basin and deepened the channel in order to accommodate Post-Panamax container ships and larger to benefit the tourism industry.
ASC (formerly the Australian Submarine Corporation) has its construction and maintenance facility and dock at Osborne.
There is a heritage-listed former Quarantine Station on Torrens Island and a small timber jetty adjacent to it.
Torrens Island Power Station and the Pelican Point Power Station, draw seawater from the Port River for cooling purposes and return it at an elevated temperature.
The worst environmental disaster to occur in South Australian marine waters was the St Kilda salt fields brine spill, which killed of hectares of mangroves, samphires and other vegetation. As of 2022, elevated salinity levels in the estuary near the salt fields remain problematic.
A fishing fleet operates out of the North Arm, which also has a motorboat club. Recreational boating are located in the Angas Inlet and on the Lefevre Peninsula.
The Port Adelaide Rowing Club, established around 1877, and was situated at Inner Harbour until 1957, when it moved to Largs North. and the river was formerly a frequent venue for the Intervarsity eights race.
After water pollution levels were shown to have improved in December 2016, the annual "Long Swim" recommenced in the Inner Harbour, after a hiatus of some years.
Tam O'Shanter Creek is on the Port Adelaide side of the river here, and further north on the Glanville side is Hawker Creek.
Mutton Cove Ships' Graveyard is within the Mutton Cove Conservation Reserve. The wreck of the former steel steamship Excelsior, later used as a coal hulk, lies at the northern end of the cove, near Pelican Point. The former iron barge, later paddle steamer, known as Jupiter lies overgrown with mangroves towards the southern end of the park.
The North Arm contains another significant ships graveyard, now known as Garden Island Ships' Graveyard, which includes 25 identified wrecks. It was also used to house explosives stores from the 1880s. The remains of the iron and wooden ships that were abandoned between 1909 and 1945 are now bird roosts and a canoeing attraction.
are over , and at low tide, mudflats are exposed near the outlet of the river.
Since settlement and industrialisation, stormwater has caused water pollution in the estuary. Industrial enterprises variously impacted the ecology, with nutrients boosting the growth of , various contaminants reducing water quality. Temperature changes caused by from gas-fired power stations at Torrens Island and Pelican Point persist. Sometimes high loads of solid materials have also been discharged into the river, and hyper-saline brine from adjacent saltfields.
Since construction of the Breakout Creek outlet in 1937 to drain the Reedbeds (see above), and the closure of the former Port Adelaide Wastewater Treatment Plant with the diversion of wastewater to Bolivar Waste Water Treatment Plant in 2005, the upper reaches of the Port River now receive only limited amounts of locally derived stormwater, and are now largely marine. Flushing of West Lakes occurs through a one-way system that draws in seawater from the Gulf through an inlet off the coast at the southern end. The Lakes discharge into the upper reaches of the Port River at Ethelton.
The water quality has improved since the reduced flows and improved quality of Bolivar sewerage, and since the closure of Penrice soda ash plant in Osborne in 2014. The soda ash plant was a major ammonia pollution source.
Regular testing by the Environmental Protection Authority took place until 2008, after which only informal testing has occurred. In December 2016, SA Health testing showed very low counts of bacteria, enabling the annual "Long Swim" in the Inner Harbour to recommence after many decades of absence.
Fish and prawn species found in the estuary include western king prawns, King George Whiting, mullets, bream, and snapper. Attempts are being made to restore the once extensive reefs of shellfish, including native mud oysters ( ostrea angasi), cockles, and razorfish ( pinna bicolor
It is estimated that less than one percent of shellfish reefs around South Australia remain, compared with the 1940s. Around 1969, ( Magallana gigas) were introduced for aquaculture in South Australia. After an outbreak of disease in this species, in 2018 the Government of South Australia banned the collection of all shellfish in the Port River. This ban, combined with growing populations of native oysters and razorfish, has led to benefits, such as improving the water quality due to their filter feeding, and providing habitat favoured by other species, such as whiting, bream, and blue swimmer crabs.
The Hercules club mud whelk ( Pyrazus ebeninus), which is most abundant in tropical or subtropical waters off Queensland and New South Wales, had not been detected in the Port River since the last ice age around 10,000 years ago. In 2023, recent sightings there were confirmed by researcher Brad Martin. Scientists surmise that they were seeded there by ballast water brought in by ships, and the razorfish and oyster beds provide a nursery for breeding. One sighting was posted on iNaturalist on 28 September 2022. The Sydney cockle is another species which has only recently appeared in the Port River, resulting from warming temperatures.
The Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary is a dolphin sanctuary which was enacted by the Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary Act 2005, covering all of the Barker Inlet and the Port River. Bottlenose dolphins are often seen in the river, examining and following small boats and have become a well known tourist attraction with dolphin cruises departing from Queens Wharf. The industrialised nature of the Port River has led to concern for the welfare of the bottlenose dolphin population and studies have shown that some of the dolphins have very high heavy metal burdens in comparison to dolphins elsewhere.
After 1834
Course and features
Bridges
Shipping and industrial use
Recreational use and attractions
Port Adelaide Kaurna Cultural Heritage Trail
Ships' graveyards
Estuarine environment
Ecology
Changes over time
Species
Protected areas
Future environmental risks
See also
Further reading
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