The Brisbane River is around 340 kilometres in length, from its source in the D'Aguilar Range near Moore and Harlin, to its mouth at Moreton Bay.
The Brisbane River reaches a width of around 300 metres within the city of Brisbane itself, at the point where the Victoria Bridge crosses it.
The Brisbane River runs through Brisbane. The river was actually named before the city which was, in turn, named after the river. The Brisbane River was named after Governor Thomas Makdougall Brisbane, Governor of the NSW colony at the time when John Oxley explored what is now southeast Queensland.
The Brisbane River.
Brisbane, the capital of the Australian state of Queensland, is on the Brisbane River.
Brisbane, the capital of Queensland, Australia lies on the Brisbane River. The river was discovered first, in 1824, and named the Brisbane River after Governor Brisbane, then Governor of New South Wales. When the city was built, it was named after the river.
The Brisbane River.
The Brisbane River.
The Brisbane floods of 1974 affected the Brisbane River and the Bremer River basin.
Brisbane is really the only city that relies on the Brisbane River. The nearby neighbouring city of Ipswich is reliant on the Bremer River, a tributary of the Brisbane River.
The headwaters of the Brisbane River are in the Upper Brisbane Valley, near the towns of Harlin and Moore.
John Oxley named the Brisbane River after Governor Brisbane, in June 1823.
The Singapore River in Singapore The Moscow River in Moscow The Brisbane River in Brisbane
Brisbane.