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The Werribee River is a of the catchment that is located on the southwest of , Victoria, . The headwaters of a tributary, the , are north of Ballan near Daylesford and it flows across the basalt plain, through the suburb of Werribee to enter Port Phillip. A follows the Werribee River along much of its course. In total the Werribee River completes a journey of approximately .

The river flows through the Werribee Gorge State Park before being utilised for irrigation of at , then through Werribee where it is crossed by the Maltby By-pass. It then flows through the Werribee Open Range Zoo in , and finally the small coastal settlement of Werribee South before entering . The Western Treatment Plant, a sewage treatment site, is located near the mouth of the river, and supplies irrigation needs to the zoo.

The Werribee River Trail winds beside the Werribee River from Davis Creek in to the Princes Highway in Werribee.


Etymology
The Hume and Hovell expedition camped by the river on 15 December 1824 and named it the Arndell after Hovell's father-in-law. John Helder Wedge "re-discovered" the river in 1835 and initially called it the Peel, but then decided to call it the Ex or Exe. The name of the town of Exford, an early crossing place on the river, is derived from this name. One of the local -speaking tribesman that accompanied Wedge said the name for the stream was 'Weariby Yallock' ( yallock meaning 'stream'). The spelling changed to the present form of Werribee, the original Aboriginal root word meaning spine or backbone.


History
Before the arrival of settlers, the Werribee River was the boundary of the tribe whose six clans lived along the Victorian coast across the Mornington Peninsula, Bay to Wilsons Promontory.

In the late 1830s and 1840s, the Werribee River was the scene of conflict between the people and the European colonisers. The squatter Charles Franks and a shepherd were speared to death near in July 1836. This resulted in the Mount Cottrell Massacre – a punitive party led by which came upon a large party of Aboriginal people and indiscriminately shot and killed at least ten, There are accounts of arsenic-laced flour being given to them.

In 1851, a substantial timber bridge was built to cross the Werribee River to replace an earlier wooden bridge. In 1852, this bridge was washed away when the Werribee river flooded.

In August 2004, the Victorian Government pledged 300,000 () towards restoring the Werribee River, removing willows choking the river around the township and replacing them with native plants in a habitat restoration project.


Fishing
Werribee River holds fish all along its course, most of which are at the mouth of the river into Port Phillip Bay in the . This area is best fished for southern black bream.


Features and highlights
The Werribee River is a regulated river system, with two dams on the river itself (Pykes Creek Reservoir and Melton Reservoir) and one on a tributary (Merrimu Reservoir on Pyrites Creek). These supply irrigation water to and vegetable farming users in and .


Gallery
Ballan Werribee River 001.JPG|Running through parkland in Ballan Ballan Werribee River Melbourne Road 002.JPG|Under the old Western Highway at Ballan Bacchus Marsh Werribee River Ford.JPG|A ford across the river west of Bacchus Marsh BacchusMarshWerribeeRiver.JPG|Marking the boundary between Bacchus Marsh and Maddingley Werribee River in flood over cottrell street in Werribee.jpg|In flood over Cotrell Street in Werribee


See also
  • List of rivers of Australia


External links
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