The Fitzroy River Barrage is a dam type structure built as part of the Camballin Irrigation Scheme in Western Australia.[1]

It was a series of collapsible shutters which were designed to collapse when the river level was approximately twelve inches over the shutters. The structure was intended to divert the water in the Fitzroy River to be stored in the Seventeen Mile Dam, by flowing up Uralla Creek, unnaturally in the opposite direction.[2][3]

The barrage was built by the Public Works Department of Western Australia and was designed to hold 4.58 x 106 cubic metres of water.[4][5]

A small village was erected at the barrage site during the construction phase. Presently there is still the superstructure remaining along with the stilted shed which was used as a machinery shed. The Department of Water currently still maintains a small shed on the site for its stream gauging equipment.

Notes

  1. Not to be confused with the barrage of the same name in QueenslandReport On Model Investigations Into The Effect Of A Barrage In The Fitzroy River On The Flood Conditions In The Environments Of Rockhampton, St Lucia, 1963, retrieved 7 April 2012
  2. Wyatt, J. D, A preliminary investigation of the proposed Fitzroy River barrage site, 1963, retrieved 20 June 2023
  3. Kirby, Greg; Morgan, David; Thorburn, Dean (2009), Fitzroy River barrage fishway scoping study, Environs Kimberley Inc, retrieved 7 April 2012
  4. Godbehear, Harold S. (Harold Stephen) (1961), The Fitzroy River Barrage under construction, August 1961, retrieved 20 June 2023
  5. Hughes, John, (screenwriter,); Lawford, Ningali, (narrator.); Australian Film Finance Corporation; SBS Independent; Film Victoria; ScreenWest (1999), River of dreams, Early Works, ISBN 978-1-921895-14-2{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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