Turanganui River (Gisborne)

Turanganui River

This photo from Kaiti Hill shows more than half of the Turanganui River. The confluence of the Taruheru and Waimata is visible on the right upstream of the road bridge.
Country New Zealand
Basin
Main source confluence of Taruheru River and Waimata River
River mouth Poverty Bay
0 m (0 ft)
Physical characteristics
Length 0.9 km (0.56 mi)

The Turanganui River is a river in the city of Gisborne, New Zealand. Formed by the confluence of the Taruheru River and the Waimata River, it flows through downtown Gisborne to reach the Pacific Ocean at the northern end of Poverty Bay. A memorial to the first landing place in New Zealand by Captain James Cook is located close to the mouth of the river. The entire river is tidal.

The Turanganui River is sometimes referred to as the shortest river in the Southern Hemisphere.[1] The Gisborne Harbour basin is separated from the river channel by a concrete breakwater.

The water quality in this river is poor due to it being the drainage point for two very large catchments with various land uses. The fact that this river is tidal at this point improves water quality.

References

Coordinates: 38°40′27″S 178°01′20″E / 38.6742°S 178.0222°E / -38.6742; 178.0222

Template:Shortest River in the World


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.