Wooroloo Brook is a watercourse that runs through the Darling Range in Western Australia. It is a tributary which converges with the Avon River to form the Swan River.

The name of the brook is also the name of a number of features and organisations, including the Wooroloo Brook Landcare Group, the Wooroloo Brook Land Conservation District Committee.[1]

The brook alignment had been considered a possible route for the connection of the railway routes occurring at the time of the development of the Trans-Australian Railway.[2][3]

The locality of Wooroloo is in the upper reaches of the catchment.[4]

The catchment runs through the locality of Gidgegannup and the confluence with the Avon River is where the Swan River commences.

Notes

  1. Swan (W.A. : Municipality). Council; Wooroloo Brook Landcare Group (2004), Environmental weeds : Eastern Plains & Hills Region, Wooroloo Brook Land Conservation District Committee and the City of Swan, retrieved 7 June 2018
  2. "Trans-Australian Railway". Sunday Times (Perth). No. 797. Western Australia. 13 April 1913. p. 1 (First Section). Retrieved 7 June 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  3. "TRANS-AUSTRALIAN LINE". The West Australian. Vol. XXIX, no. 3, 431. Western Australia. 12 April 1913. p. 11. Retrieved 7 June 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  4. "WOOROLOO". The Swan Express. Vol. XVI, no. 48. Western Australia. 18 December 1914. p. 37. Retrieved 7 June 2018 via National Library of Australia.
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