Nyaania Creek
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Nyaania was also a stopping place and locality name (31° 54ˡ S, 116° 06ˡ E) associated with the first route of the Eastern Railway between Bellevue and Mundaring
Nyaania Creek (31º 55' S, 116º 03' E) is an important tributary seasonal creek that flows into the Helena River with a catchment that moves through a number of hills suburbs just east of the Darling Scarp. Its source is in Mahogany Creek, and it flows through Glen Forrest, Darlington, and Boya before meeting the Helena River at Helena Valley.
It was originally known as the Smiths Mill Brook on maps between 1902 and 1920. In the 1920's it became known as Nyaania Brook, and in 1945 it officially took the current name.
Its importance stems from the fact that it flows through private land for most of its length, linked to issues that affect watercourses in the Darling Scarp region:
- usages of herbicides and other contaminants that can become waterborne
- excess nutrients from fertilisers used in domestic gardens
- inappropriate exotic weeds that flourish in difficult to access locations.
It has significant areas of reserves either adjacent, or within 100 metres either side of its main creek bed. It runs in a number of places along what was rail reserve of the Eastern Railway - which is now the southern part of the Rail Reserves Heritage Trail.
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[edit] Upper Reaches
The creek is small in size and width and moves through numerous private properties.
The upper portion of the creek has the Strettle Road Reserve on its north side - which is at the west end of Mahogany Creek which although completely a regenerated plot of land following extensive firing and logging in the last hundred years is a significant reserve.
Near the ex- Statham quarry in Glen Forrest it enters into its first reserve, the Thomas Park reserve.
In Glen Forrest the Glen Forrest Super Block is on its south side just prior to the border with Darlington and near Devil's Terror.
[edit] Devil's Terror Springs
Historically it achieved its significance in the construction of the Eastern Railway where a surveyed route of the railway encountered difficulties with the creek and creek bed, and it had to be diverted so as to allow for a more solid base for the railway line. The locality earned the name in the Perth newspapers of the 1880's as The Devil's Terror and they cite the example of workers sinking in mud.
For the duration of the Eastern Railway route usage (1880's to 1953) the Nyaania Creek/Eastern Railway/Devil's Terror location point of coincidence has had springs under or next to the railway line. The sleepers and rails were removed in the mid 1960's, and ever since they have subsisted even when the Nyaania Creek is dry in the middle of a drought. Many users of the subsequent Railway Reserve Heritage Trail have had a particular attraction to their persistence.
[edit] Lower Reaches
Having passed through the built up area of Darlington it proceeds into a steep valley south of the riding school in Glen Road, and enters Helena River in Helena Valley.
[edit] External links
- Street map from Street Directory, MSN Maps and Multimap.
- Satellite image from Google Maps, WikiMapia and Terraserver.
[edit] Reference
- Elliot, Ian (1983). Mundaring - A History of the Shire, 2nd ed., Mundaring: Mundaring Shire. ISBN 0-9592776-0-9.