Port Hacking
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- This article is about the estuary of Port Hacking. For the suburb that takes its name from that estuary, see Port Hacking, New South Wales.
Port Hacking ([1]) is an Australian estuary, located about 24km south of Sydney, and fed by the Hacking River and several smaller creeks, including Bundeena Creek and The Basin. It is a ria, a river basin which has become submerged by the sea.
The local aboriginal people call it Deeban. Matthew Flinders and George Bass (with Bass's servant William Martin) explored there in early April 1796. They called it Port Hacking after the pilot Henry Hacking who was the principal game hunter in the colony and who first told them of a large river he'd seen inland on kangaroo hunting expeditions.[2][3]
Port Hacking effectively forms the southern boundary of Sydney's suburban sprawl. Working inland from the sea, the indented north bank of Port Hacking is formed by the suburbs of Cronulla, Woolooware, Burraneer, Caringbah, Dolans Bay, Port Hacking, Lilli Pilli, Yowie Bay, Miranda, Gymea Bay and Grays Point. The southern bank is largely undeveloped land within the Royal National Park, although the small communities of Bundeena and Maianbar can also be found there. A passenger ferry service crosses Port Hacking, connecting Cronulla and its railway station to Bundeena.
Port Hacking is a drowned river valley, with a water surface area of 11 sq-km. With very little industrial and no agricultural inputs, the water quality is categorised as 'extremely good', and the extensive inter-tidal shoals provide opportunity for wading birds.[4]
[edit] References
- ^ Port Hacking. Geoscience Australia. Retrieved on July 7, 2006.
- ^ A Voyage to Terra Australis by Matthew Flinders, available freely at Project Gutenberg
- ^ Miriam Estensen, The Life of George Bass, Allen and Unwin, 2005, ISBN 1-74114-130-3.
- ^ Estuaries of New South Wales - Port Hacking. New South Wales Department of Infrastructure, Planning and Natural Resources. Retrieved on September 6, 2005.