Barcoo River

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Barcoo River
Barcoo river, Tambo.JPG
Barcoo River at Tambo, 2012
Country Australia
State Queensland
Part of Cooper Creek, Lake Eyre basin
City Blackall, Isisford, Tambo, Queensland
Source Warrego Range
 - location east of Tambo, Central Queensland
Mouth confluence with the Thomson River
 - location north of Windorah
Map of the Lake Eyre Basin showing Barcoo River
Wikimedia Commons: Barcoo River
File:StateLibQld 1 101164.jpg
House flooded by the Barcoo River, 1906.
File:StateLibQld 1 120612 Flood in the Barcoo River, Blackall district, February 1941.jpg
Flood in the Barcoo River, Blackall district, February 1941

The Barcoo River in western Queensland, Australia rises on the northern slopes of the Warrego Range, flows in a south westerly direction and unites with the Thomson River to form Cooper Creek. The first European to see the river was Thomas Mitchell in 1846, who named it Victoria River,[1] believing it to be the same river as that named Victoria River by J C Wickham in 1839. It was renamed by Edmund Kennedy after a name supplied by local Aborigines.[2]

The waters of the river flow towards Lake Eyre in central Australia while those of rivers further east join the Murray-Darling basin and reach the sea in South Australia. The river forms a boundary between outback Australia and the "Far Outback"; legend has it that west of the Barcoo there is very little in the way of civilisation.

Tributaries include the Alice River, Torrens, Landsborough and Towerhill Creeks.[3] Towns situated on the banks of the Barcoo River include Blackall, Isisford, Tambo and Retreat. The southern boundary of Welford National Park is marked by the Barcoo River and Isisford Weir has been constructed on the Barcoo.

Barcoo Grunter

Barcoo Grunter, also known as Jade Perch (Scortum barcoo), is a native Australian freshwater fish found in the eastern Northern Territory rivers of Limmen, Roper, Macarthur; the Barkley Basin, and between the Gilbert River in Northern Queensland and the Lake Eyre drainage of central Australia. Barcoo Grunther is an excellent food fish, and is often farmed in intensive grow-out ponds or tanks in aquaculture.[4]

Disease

The river, or at least the district, also gives its name to several diseases, once widespread in outback Australia but now largely unknown. One is "Barcoo Rot", a skin disease, perhaps similar to "Desert Sore", and characterised by crusted impetiginous skin sores and occurring in association with heat, dirt, minor traumas and a diet chronically deficient in fresh fruit and vegetables. A second is "Barcoo Fever", in which the sufferer experiences fever, nausea and vomiting which was exacerbated by the sight or smell of food, and constipation. This disease, once common in the outback, has also vanished. It may have been due to drinking water contaminated by cyanobacterial (blue-green algal) toxins. Provision of more reliable food supplies and safer sources of water in the "Far Barcoo" may explain why these diseases have now all but disappeared.

The name also appears in the phrase "the Barcoo Salute" – brushing the ever present bush-flies from the face with either hand. Some diseases are no longer found but flies are still abundant in outback Australia.

Cultural references

The Barcoo is mentioned in the poems of Banjo Paterson. Examples are in the second stanza of Saltbush Bill[5] and the first stanza of A Bush Christening.[6]

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Now Saltbush Bill was a drover tough as ever the country knew,
He had fought his way on the Great Stock Routes from the sea to the big Barcoo;
He could tell when he came to a friendly run that gave him a chance to spread,
And he knew where the hungry owners were that hurried his sheep ahead;
He was drifting down in the Eighty drought with a mob that could scarcely creep
(When the kangaroos by the thousand starve, it is rough on the travelling sheep),
And he camped one night at the crossing-place on the edge of the Wilga run;
"We must manage a feed for them here," he said, "or half of the mob are done!"

Saltbush Bill

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On the outer Barcoo where the churches are few,
And men of religion are scanty,
On a road never cross'd 'cept by folk that are lost,
One Michael Magee had a shanty.

A Bush Christening

See also

References

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