Australia A number of the rivers that flow inland from Australia's
Great Dividing Range form distributaries, most of which flow only intermittently during times of high river levels and end in shallow lakes or simply peter out in the deserts.
Yarriambiack Creek, which flows from the
Wimmera River into Lake Coorong, and Tyrrell Creek, which flows from the
Avoca River into
Lake Tyrrell, are two distributaries in
Victoria. The
Narran River flows from the
Balonne River in
Queensland into
Narran Lake in
New South Wales.
Papua New Guinea Many of Papua New Guinea's major rivers flow into the
Gulf of Papua through marshy, low-lying country, allowing for wide, many-branched deltas. These include the
Fly River, which splits into three major and several minor rivers close to its mouth. The
Bamu River splits into several channels close to its mouth, among them the
Bebea,
Bina,
Dibiri, and
Aramia. The
Kikori River also splits into a multitude of channels as it crosses the plains close to the Gulf of Papua. The
Purari River splits into three major channels as it approaches its mouth.
New Zealand New Zealand's second-longest river, the
Clutha River, splits into two arms, the
Matau and the
Koua, some 10 kilometres from the South Island's Pacific Coast. A large island,
Inch Clutha, lies between the two arms. Many of the rivers crossing the
Canterbury Plains in the central South Island are
braided rivers, and several of these split into separate branches before reaching the coast. Notable among these is the
Rangitata River, the two arms of which are separated by the low-lying
Rangitata Island. ==References==