Kikori River

Coordinates: 7°43′00″S 144°16′46″E / 7.71667°S 144.27944°E / -7.71667; 144.27944
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Kikori
Kikori River is located in Papua New Guinea
Kikori River
Physical characteristics
SourceSouthern Highlands
 • locationConfluence of Hegigio and Mubi
 • coordinates6°47′33″S 143°36′55″E / 6.79250°S 143.61528°E / -6.79250; 143.61528
 • elevation52 m (171 ft)
MouthGulf of Papua
 • location
Kikori Delta, Papua New Guinea
 • coordinates
7°43′00″S 144°16′46″E / 7.71667°S 144.27944°E / -7.71667; 144.27944
 • elevation
0 ft (0 m)
Length445 km (277 mi)
Basin size23,309 km2 (9,000 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • locationKikori Delta, Gulf of Papua
 • average3,274 m3/s (115,600 cu ft/s)[1]
Discharge 
 • locationKaiam, West Kikori Rural LLG
 • average2,571 m3/s (90,800 cu ft/s)[2]
 • minimum670 m3/s (24,000 cu ft/s)[2]
 • maximum4,414 m3/s (155,900 cu ft/s)[2]
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftMubi, Sirebi
 • rightHegigio

The Kikori River is a major river in southern Papua New Guinea on the island of New Guinea. The river has a total length of 445 km (277 mi) and flows southeast into the Gulf of Papua, with its delta at the head of the gulf. The settlement of Kikori lies on the delta.[3]

Geography

The catchment area extends from alpine grasslands of the Southern Highlands to mangrove wetlands of the mouth at Papua Gulf. The Kikori arises at the confluence of the Hegigio with the Mubi (river) or Digimu, into which Lake Kutubu drained. The average rainfall in the Kikori catchment is 5,900 millimetres or 230 inches.

The city of the same name is located on the right bank just before its confluence with the delta.

Economy

The Kikori river basin is home to large oil and gas fields that have been mined since the 1990s. A pipeline for oil and gas transport ( Papua New Guinea LNG Project) runs in the Kikori River system from Lake Kutubu over to Papua Gulf.

Biodiversity

The Kikori river system is known for its biodiversity.

turtles.[4]

See also

References

External links