The name derives from the language of the
Kaurna people, a word written as either Ngangkiparri or Ngangkiparingga (the -
ngga suffix means "at"). Translated, it means "place of the women’s river". circa 1869 On 13 April 1831, British military officer Captain
Collet Barker and his party arrived at Cape Jervis on the Isabella. He examined the east coast of
Gulf St Vincent and found the Onkaparinga River on 15 April. After anchoring and heading inland Barker then explored the ranges inland, north of the present site of Adelaide, and climbed Mount Lofty where he also sighted the Port River inlet, Barker Inlet and the future Port Adelaide. In 1837
Surveyor-General of South Australia Colonel
William Light named it Field's River, or the Field River, after Lieutenant William George Field RN (1804–1850) of the brig
Rapid (one of the
"first fleet"), who carried out the first surveys in the vicinity of its estuary, but subsequent Governor
George Gawler soon reinstated the Indigenous name. ==Course and features==