Lake Alexandrina is a lake in South Australia, Australia. A lake is a body of water surrounded by land. ... Motto: United for the Common Wealth Other Australian states and territories Capital Adelaide Governor Marjorie Jackson-Nelson Premier Mike Rann (ALP) Area 1,043,514 km² (4th) - Land 983,482 km² - Water 60,032 km² (5. ...
Lake Alexandrina is located adjacent to the coast of the Southern Ocean, about 100 kilometers south-east of Adelaide. The Murray River is the major river to flow into Lake Alexandrina. Others include the Angas River, Bremer River and Finniss River, all from the eastern side of the Mount Lofty Ranges. The lake is shallow and contains a number of islands. The lake empties into the sea near Goolwa (the channel is known as the Murray Mouth), but when the river flow is low the entrance is often blocked by a sand-bar. The water in the lake is maintained as fresh water by a series of barrages across the islands near the Murray Mouth. Hindmarsh Island is reputed to be the largest island in the world with salt water on one side and fresh water on the other. Adelaide is the capital city of the Australian state of South Australia. ... A branch of the Murray in its middle reaches, near Howlong, New South Wales. ... A barrage may be a weir at the mouth of a slow-flowing river such as the Murray River to maintain a separation between fresh and salt water or reduce the risk of tidal flooding up the river a large amount of coordinated artillery or depth charge fire The name...
In Australian AboriginalDreamtime the lake is inhabitated by a monster known as the Muldjewangk. Australian Aborigines are the indigenous peoples of Australia. ... The word Dreamtime has several meanings: Dreamtime is the mythology of Australian Aborigines. ... Saint George versus the Dragon, by Gustave Moreau (1880) Monster (lat. ... The Muldjewangk is a water-creature Australian Aboriginal mythology that inhabitated the Murray River, particularly Lake Alexandrina. ...
The literature is catalogued in Gill's Bibliography of SouthAustralia (Adelaide, 1885), and that of the Lake Eyre basin and its adjacent islands in J. Gregory, The Dead Heart of Australia (1906).
SouthAustralia was founded when the tide of the laissez-faire regime was running high, and a patriotic bias in the customs tariff was regarded as an unwarrantable restriction; it is therefore not surprising that free trade should at the outset have received many adherents.
SouthAustralia holds in reverent and loving memory the name of John Anderson Hartley, the originator of the state school system, who died in 1896, and to whose character as a man and genius as an organizer the schools of SouthAustralia will remain as a perennial monument.