bridge over the Field River in
Reynella In the 1840s the mouth of the Field River was used to land contraband goods for market in Adelaide. In 1850 a State Government Commission examining locations for secure anchorage suggested that the mouth of the river was a suitable site for a harbour. The discovery of copper in the 1840s at the
Worthing Mine (on the south eastern side of Lonsdale Road) promoted interest in using the Field River as a means of transporting the copper ore from the mine to the sea. By 1856 mining had ceased due to the lack of further investment money. The majority of the Field River runs along steeply inclined undeveloped land which was quarried during the early 20th century. The importance of the coastline to the
Kaurna people, the indigenous inhabitants of the region, is clearly demonstrated with large quantities of cultural material collected from areas adjacent to the outflow of the Field River. In 1992 the fossil remains of the world's largest marsupial, the
Diprotodon, were discovered on the bank of the river by Trevor Westlake. The fossil, which is at least 70,000 years old, is now in the care of the
South Australian Museum. ==Etymology==