Power Outages
Fire Incidents
NSW SES Advice
Road Conditions
Map (List View)
Alert Level | Not Applicable |
Location | QUAMBY 441 BOYLE RD, KOONORIGAN 2480 |
Council Area | Lismore |
Status | Under control |
Type | Burn off |
Fire | Yes |
Size | 0 ha |
Responsible Agency | Rural Fire Service |
Updated | 30 Jan 2025 09:33 |
Location: (-28.69632530299998, 153.21276855500003)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.7365, 153.164)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.7561, 153.3955)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.7213, 153.3623)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.73287658, 153.225306)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.74600172, 153.3517401)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.87513201, 153.3677303)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.6412, 153.4116)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | 3m |
Moderate | 4.5m |
Major | 5m |
Location: (-29.03345558948, 153.27761472168)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-29.096030468402, 153.32625612653)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.795754714028, 153.24019647555)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.785411789772, 153.30253892785)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-29.084582388305, 153.3385605986)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.7396, 153.0769)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | - |
Moderate | - |
Major | - |
Location: (-28.845709492362, 153.2668938144)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | 3.2m |
Moderate | 3.7m |
Major | 4.2m |
Location: (-29.071149, 153.342364)
Current Level | -m |
Minor | 3.4m |
Moderate | 5m |
Major | 5.7m |
Location: (-28.983801959254, 153.28723404683)
Time Off: | 18/09/2024 09:00:00 |
Est. Time On: | 18/09/2024 14:00:00 |
No. of Customers affected: | 39 |
Reason: | Critical repairs |
Last Updated: | 18/09/2024 08:30:26 |
Incident ID | INCD-93606-r |
Category | CHANGED TRAFFIC CONDITIONS, null, Planned |
Advice | Check signage Use an alternative route A 2.8m height restriction is in place. |
Roads | Alexandra Parade, North Lismore |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.797535, 153.2736094)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Delay your journey Portable traffic lights will allow motorists to pass in one direction at a time. Traffic controllers will be on site during work times to direct motorists. |
Roads | Blue Knob Road, Blue Knob |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.570477, 153.2021305)
Category | HAZARD, null, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Reduce your speed Road surface damage from recent weather |
Roads | Whian Road, Eureka |
Organisation | Byron Shire Council 02 6626 7000 council@byron.nsw.gov.au http://www.byron.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.6718579, 153.430227)
Category | HAZARD, null, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Plan your journey |
Roads | Whian Road, Eureka |
Organisation | Byron Shire Council 02 6626 7000 council@byron.nsw.gov.au http://www.byron.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.6694126, 153.427527)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Expect delays Traffic controllers will be on site to direct motorists. |
Roads | Woodlawn Road, Woodlawn |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.7786104, 153.3150237)
Category | HAZARD, Road damage, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Reduced speed limit |
Diversions | Landslip occurred in February 2022 Flood. Road open to one lane of traffic, under giveway. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Koonorigan Road, Nimbin Road, Koonorigan |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.69231, 153.230717)
Category | CHANGED TRAFFIC CONDITIONS, Load limit, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Plan your journey 5T Load Limit Applied to Fernside Bridge |
Roads | Fernside Road, Fernside |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.794148, 153.1702227)
Category | HAZARD, Road damage, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Exercise caution Single lane traffic suitable for light vehicles past landslip. |
Diversions | Road damaged due to landslips in February 2022 Flood. |
Roads | Wallace Road, Tuntable Creek |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.652617, 153.2741417)
Category | HAZARD, Landslide, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Expect delays Landslip damage during 2022 natural disaster. Portable traffic lights will allow motorists to pass in one direction at a time. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Tuntable Creek Road, Tuntable Creek |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.6117986, 153.2691695)
Category | HAZARD, Landslide, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Exercise caution Landslip damage during 2022 natural disaster. Portable traffic lights will allow motorists to pass in one direction at a time. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Stony Chute Road, Zouch Road, Stony Chute |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.584952, 153.1589512)
Category | HAZARD, Landslide, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Exercise caution Landslip damage during 2022 natural disaster. Contraflow traffic conditions are in place to allow motorists to pass in both directions. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Johnston Road, Clunes |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.7459117, 153.3949237)
Category | HAZARD, Landslide, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Expect delays Landslip damage during 2022 natural disaster. Contraflow traffic conditions are in place to allow motorists to pass in both directions. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Oakey Creek Road, Georgica |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.660832, 153.1594184)
Category | HAZARD, Landslide, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Exercise caution Landslip damage during 2022 natural disaster. Contraflow traffic conditions are in place to allow motorists to pass in both directions. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Cawongla Road, Martin Road, larnook |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.6263803, 153.1210952)
Category | HAZARD, Landslide, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Exercise caution Landslip damage during 2022 natural disaster. Contraflow traffic conditions are in place to allow motorists to pass in both directions. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Tuntable Creek Road, Young Street, Tuntable Creek |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.600796, 153.2636179)
Category | HAZARD, Landslide, Unplanned |
Advice | Reduced speed limit Allow extra travel time Landslip. Proceed with caution. One lane open with traffic lights. |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Sneaths Road, Wollongbar |
Organisation | Ballina Shire Council 1300 864 444 council@ballina.nsw.gov.au http://www.ballina.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.8083392, 153.4231445)
Category | HAZARD, Road damage, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Flood restoration works are ongoing. |
Roads | Midginbil Road, Midginbil |
Organisation | Tweed Shire Council 02 6670 2400 tsc@tweed.nsw.gov.au http://www.tweed.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.5028756, 153.2655019)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, Maintenance, Planned |
Advice | Delay your journey Expect delays Traffic controllers will be on site to direct motorists. Alternating (stop/slow) traffic conditions will be in place to allow motorists to pass in one direction at a time. |
Roads | Blue Knob Road, Blue Knob |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.534714, 153.192368)
Category | HAZARD, Road damage, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Allow extra travel time Flood restoration. Drive to conditions and reduce speed. |
Roads | Kyogle Road, Lofts Pinnacle Road, Mount Burrell |
Organisation | Tweed Shire Council 02 6670 2400 tsc@tweed.nsw.gov.au http://www.tweed.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.5206764, 153.1605172)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Reduce your speed Check signage Jubilee Avenue closed to through traffic at the roundabout. A temporary detour is in place via Phillip Street, McDermott Avenue and Oliver Avenue. |
Schedule | Affected All directions Weekdays - (7:00am - 4:00pm) |
Roads | Rous Road, Oliver Avenue, Goonellabah |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.8237975, 153.3221407)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Check signage Expect delays Starting 27 January work will be starting on the reconstruction of a 2.9 km section of Booyong Road starting from the Bangalow/Booyong Road intersection. While road will be open to local traffic, there will be long delays for drivers at different times. |
Schedule | Affected Both directions Monday - (7:00am - 5:00pm) |
Roads | Booyong Road, Pearces Creek Road, clunes, Main Street |
Organisation | Byron Shire Council 02 6626 7000 council@byron.nsw.gov.au http://www.byron.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.7348561, 153.4248831)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Expect delays Reduce your speed Traffic controllers will be on site to direct motorists. |
Roads | Suffolk Road, blue knob |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.5479964, 153.1994227)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Expect delays Use diversions Traffic controllers will be on site to direct motorists. |
Roads | Skyline Road South, Wyrallah |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.8774444, 153.3109445)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Expect delays Traffic controllers will be on site to direct motorists. |
Roads | Stanger Road, Stony Chute |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.5790982, 153.1740116)
Category | HAZARD, Fallen tree, Unplanned |
Advice | Avoid the area Check signage Donaldson Street CORAKI |
Roads | Donaldson Street, Coraki |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.9955412, 153.2793996)
Category | HAZARD, Fallen tree, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Expect delays |
Roads | 2 main street, Alstonville |
Organisation | Ballina Shire Council 1300 864 444 council@ballina.nsw.gov.au http://www.ballina.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.8367189, 153.4348452)
Category | CHANGED TRAFFIC CONDITIONS, Load limit, Unplanned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Reduce your speed 5T Load Limit One Lane Closed - Alternate Traffic Flow |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Roads | Casino-Coraki Road, Tatham |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.927994, 153.1582704)
Category | HAZARD, Water over road, Unplanned |
Advice | Avoid the area Never drive through floodwater Road Closed - Water over Road |
Roads | Vidlers Road, Spring Grove |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.8362735, 153.1135112)
Category | HAZARD, Road damage, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Use an alternative route |
Speed Limit | 60 |
Roads | Bentley Road, Bentley |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.7892162, 153.1387672)
Category | HAZARD, Debris, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Reduce your speed Debris on the road. |
Roads | Koonorigan Road, Tuntable Creek Road, The Channon |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.6693641, 153.2781217)
Category | HAZARD, null, Unplanned |
Advice | Use an alternative route Exercise caution Trees and powerlines down along Cullen Street, Thorburn Street, Blue Knob Road and surrounding areas. Cullen Street closed between Thorburn and Sibley Street. Detours in place |
Roads | Cullen Street, Thorburn Street, Nimbin, Sibley Street |
Organisation | Lismore City Council 02 6625 0500 council@lismore.nsw.gov.au http://www.lismore.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.5938879, 153.2221268)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Exercise caution Check signage Bentley Road BENTLEY |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Schedule | Affected All directions Weekdays - (7:30am - 4:30pm) |
Roads | Bentley Road, Bentley |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.7565562, 153.0904891)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Check signage Exercise caution Coraki-Woodburn Road SWAN BAY |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Schedule | Affected All directions Weekdays - (7:30am - 4:30pm) |
Roads | Woodburn-Coraki Road, Swan Bay |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-29.0609204, 153.3094802)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Check signage Exercise caution Fig Tree Lane South MCKEES HILL |
Speed Limit | 40 |
Schedule | Affected All directions Weekdays - (7:30am - 4:30pm) |
Roads | Fig Tree Lane, McKees Hill |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.8771091, 153.1811305)
Category | CHANGED TRAFFIC CONDITIONS, Load limit, Unplanned |
Advice | Exercise caution Use an alternative route 5 Tonne Load Limit on Broadwater Bridge from 26/10/23 |
Roads | Broadwater Bridge Road, Broadwater |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-29.0131594, 153.4305964)
Category | CHANGED TRAFFIC CONDITIONS, Load limit, Unplanned |
Advice | Check signage Exercise caution 5 Tonne Load Limit - Light Vehicles Only |
Roads | Spring Grove Road, Spring Grove |
Organisation | Richmond Valley Council 02 6660 0300 council@richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au http://www.richmondvalley.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.8379765, 153.1228132)
Category | SCHEDULED ROADWORK, null, Planned |
Advice | Allow extra travel time Landslip rehabilitation - 500m south of intersection with Lillian Rock Road - 40km/h speed limit at work site - traffic control with one lane alternating while work underway - traffic lights outside of work hours |
Schedule | Affected Both directions Every Day - (all day - ) |
Roads | Kyogle Road, Lillian Rock Road, Lillian Rock |
Organisation | Kyogle Council 02 6632 1611 council@kyogle.nsw.gov.au http://www.kyogle.nsw.gov.au |
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Location: (-28.5339122, 153.1490953)
Location: (-28.81536, 153.286858)
No Road Closures to display
Wilsons River at Woodlawn College (203402)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 1 | 1.51m |
Location: (-28.7854117898, 153.3025389278)
Richmond River at Coraki (203403)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 2 | 1.446m |
Location: (-28.9838019593, 153.2872340468)
Richmond River at Woodburn (203412)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 1 | 1.217m |
Location: (-29.071149, 153.342364)
Wilsons River at East Gundurimba (203427)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 1 | 1.459m |
Location: (-28.8457094924, 153.2668938144)
Rocky Mouth Creek at Rocky Mouth Creek (203432)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 1 | 0.721m |
Location: (-29.0960304684, 153.3262561265)
Leycester Creek at Tuncester (203443)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 1 | 1.523m |
Location: (-28.795754714, 153.2401964755)
Richmond River at Bungawalbin (203450)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 1 | 1.39m |
Location: (-29.0334555895, 153.2776147217)
Tucombil Canal at Tucombil Highway Bridge (203480)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Level 1 | 1.227m |
Location: (-29.0845823883, 153.3385605986)
Huonbrook at Wilsons Creek Road (558049)
Measure | Value |
---|---|
Rain | last 3 hours: 0 last 6 hours: 0 last 24 hours: 0 last 96 hours: 0.5 |
Location: (-28.55212291, 153.3856478)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
No valid readings reported |
Location: (-28.5314, 153.3151)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:45:00 pm | 1.422 metres |
30/01/2025 1:30:00 pm | 1.475 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:00 pm | 1.51 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 1.538 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:00 pm | 1.553 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:00 pm | 1.543 metres |
30/01/2025 12:15:00 pm | 1.539 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 1.553 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:00 am | 1.519 metres |
30/01/2025 11:30:00 am | 1.479 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:00 am | 1.447 metres |
30/01/2025 11:00:00 am | 1.42 metres |
Location: (-29.0734, 153.3413)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:03:01 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 2:01:01 pm | 0.34 metres |
30/01/2025 1:59:00 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 1:53:03 pm | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 1:51:00 pm | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 1:49:00 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 1:47:01 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 1:45:01 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 1:43:00 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 1:39:00 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 1:37:00 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 1:35:00 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 1:33:00 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 1:31:00 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 1:29:00 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 1:27:00 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 1:23:00 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 1:19:00 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 1:09:00 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 1:07:00 pm | 0.41 metres |
30/01/2025 1:05:00 pm | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 1:03:00 pm | 0.4 metres |
30/01/2025 1:01:00 pm | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 12:59:00 pm | 0.41 metres |
30/01/2025 12:57:00 pm | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 12:55:00 pm | 0.44 metres |
30/01/2025 12:53:00 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 12:51:00 pm | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:00 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 12:43:00 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 12:41:00 pm | 0.34 metres |
30/01/2025 12:35:00 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 12:33:00 pm | 0.46 metres |
30/01/2025 12:31:00 pm | 0.41 metres |
30/01/2025 12:29:00 pm | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 12:25:00 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 12:22:59 pm | 0.47 metres |
30/01/2025 12:21:00 pm | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 12:19:00 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 12:16:59 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 12:13:00 pm | 0.34 metres |
30/01/2025 12:10:59 pm | 0.4 metres |
30/01/2025 12:09:00 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 12:07:00 pm | 0.33 metres |
30/01/2025 12:04:59 pm | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 12:03:00 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 12:01:00 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 11:59:00 am | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 11:57:00 am | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 11:55:00 am | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 11:53:01 am | 0.43 metres |
30/01/2025 11:49:00 am | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 11:47:00 am | 0.43 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:00 am | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 11:41:00 am | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 11:39:00 am | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 11:37:00 am | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 11:35:00 am | 0.44 metres |
30/01/2025 11:28:59 am | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 11:27:00 am | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 11:22:59 am | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 11:22:07 am | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 11:20:59 am | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 11:14:59 am | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 11:10:59 am | 0.43 metres |
Location: (-28.6792, 153.2775)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.5276, 153.1519)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:54:55 pm | 0.64 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.7278, 153.4622)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:45:00 pm | 1.478 metres |
30/01/2025 1:30:00 pm | 1.464 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:00 pm | 1.438 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 1.412 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:00 pm | 1.38 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:00 pm | 1.348 metres |
30/01/2025 12:15:00 pm | 1.314 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 1.281 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:00 am | 1.244 metres |
30/01/2025 11:30:00 am | 1.21 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:00 am | 1.173 metres |
30/01/2025 11:00:00 am | 1.138 metres |
Location: (-28.9883, 153.2883)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:02:55 pm | 0.56 metres |
30/01/2025 1:59:56 pm | 0.55 metres |
30/01/2025 1:55:55 pm | 0.54 metres |
30/01/2025 1:51:55 pm | 0.53 metres |
30/01/2025 1:47:55 pm | 0.52 metres |
30/01/2025 1:40:55 pm | 0.5 metres |
30/01/2025 1:37:55 pm | 0.49 metres |
30/01/2025 1:33:55 pm | 0.48 metres |
30/01/2025 1:29:55 pm | 0.47 metres |
30/01/2025 1:25:55 pm | 0.46 metres |
30/01/2025 1:22:55 pm | 0.45 metres |
30/01/2025 1:19:55 pm | 0.44 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:55 pm | 0.43 metres |
30/01/2025 1:11:55 pm | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 1:08:55 pm | 0.41 metres |
30/01/2025 1:05:55 pm | 0.4 metres |
30/01/2025 12:59:55 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 12:57:55 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 12:54:55 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 12:50:55 pm | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 12:47:55 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 12:42:55 pm | 0.34 metres |
30/01/2025 12:39:55 pm | 0.33 metres |
30/01/2025 12:36:55 pm | 0.32 metres |
30/01/2025 12:32:55 pm | 0.31 metres |
30/01/2025 12:29:55 pm | 0.3 metres |
30/01/2025 12:24:55 pm | 0.29 metres |
30/01/2025 12:21:55 pm | 0.28 metres |
30/01/2025 12:17:55 pm | 0.27 metres |
30/01/2025 12:14:55 pm | 0.26 metres |
30/01/2025 12:11:55 pm | 0.25 metres |
30/01/2025 12:07:55 pm | 0.24 metres |
30/01/2025 12:04:56 pm | 0.23 metres |
30/01/2025 12:01:55 pm | 0.22 metres |
30/01/2025 11:57:56 am | 0.21 metres |
30/01/2025 11:53:55 am | 0.2 metres |
30/01/2025 11:50:55 am | 0.19 metres |
30/01/2025 11:47:55 am | 0.18 metres |
30/01/2025 11:41:55 am | 0.16 metres |
30/01/2025 11:37:55 am | 0.15 metres |
30/01/2025 11:34:56 am | 0.14 metres |
30/01/2025 11:30:55 am | 0.13 metres |
30/01/2025 11:27:55 am | 0.12 metres |
30/01/2025 11:25:55 am | 0.11 metres |
30/01/2025 11:21:55 am | 0.1 metres |
30/01/2025 11:17:54 am | 0.09 metres |
30/01/2025 11:14:55 am | 0.08 metres |
30/01/2025 11:11:55 am | 0.07 metres |
30/01/2025 11:08:55 am | 0.06 metres |
30/01/2025 11:04:56 am | 0.05 metres |
Location: (-28.81, 153.2733)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:03:22 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 2:01:22 pm | 0.99 metres |
30/01/2025 1:59:22 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 1:39:20 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 1:29:20 pm | 0.99 metres |
30/01/2025 1:27:20 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 1:25:19 pm | 1 metres |
30/01/2025 1:19:18 pm | 0.99 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:57:19 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 12:54:29 pm | 0.99 metres |
30/01/2025 12:49:16 pm | 0.99 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:15 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 12:41:15 pm | 0.99 metres |
30/01/2025 12:27:15 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 12:15:14 pm | 0.97 metres |
30/01/2025 12:11:14 pm | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 11:27:14 am | 0.97 metres |
30/01/2025 11:21:13 am | 0.96 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:12 am | 0.97 metres |
30/01/2025 11:11:11 am | 0.97 metres |
30/01/2025 11:05:11 am | 0.96 metres |
Location: (-28.6069, 153.2083)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:45:00 pm | 1.482 metres |
30/01/2025 1:30:00 pm | 1.482 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:00 pm | 1.471 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 1.452 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:00 pm | 1.428 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:00 pm | 1.402 metres |
30/01/2025 12:15:00 pm | 1.371 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 1.339 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:00 am | 1.307 metres |
30/01/2025 11:30:00 am | 1.276 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:00 am | 1.241 metres |
30/01/2025 11:00:00 am | 1.206 metres |
Location: (-29.0333, 153.2783)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:58:33 pm | 1.11 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.7364, 153.1634)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:26:50 pm | 1.09 metres |
30/01/2025 12:52:55 pm | 1.09 metres |
30/01/2025 12:51:55 pm | 1.11 metres |
Location: (-28.7569, 153.3944)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:03:05 pm | 0.55 metres |
30/01/2025 1:59:05 pm | 0.54 metres |
30/01/2025 1:55:05 pm | 0.53 metres |
30/01/2025 1:51:04 pm | 0.52 metres |
30/01/2025 1:48:04 pm | 0.51 metres |
30/01/2025 1:45:04 pm | 0.5 metres |
30/01/2025 1:41:04 pm | 0.49 metres |
30/01/2025 1:37:05 pm | 0.48 metres |
30/01/2025 1:34:04 pm | 0.47 metres |
30/01/2025 1:31:04 pm | 0.46 metres |
30/01/2025 1:27:05 pm | 0.45 metres |
30/01/2025 1:20:05 pm | 0.43 metres |
30/01/2025 1:16:05 pm | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 1:13:04 pm | 0.41 metres |
30/01/2025 1:10:05 pm | 0.4 metres |
30/01/2025 1:06:05 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 1:02:04 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 12:59:04 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 12:55:04 pm | 0.36 metres |
30/01/2025 12:48:04 pm | 0.34 metres |
30/01/2025 12:44:04 pm | 0.33 metres |
30/01/2025 12:41:04 pm | 0.32 metres |
30/01/2025 12:37:04 pm | 0.31 metres |
30/01/2025 12:34:04 pm | 0.3 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:04 pm | 0.29 metres |
30/01/2025 12:26:04 pm | 0.28 metres |
30/01/2025 12:22:04 pm | 0.27 metres |
30/01/2025 12:18:04 pm | 0.26 metres |
30/01/2025 12:14:04 pm | 0.25 metres |
30/01/2025 12:11:04 pm | 0.24 metres |
30/01/2025 12:07:03 pm | 0.23 metres |
30/01/2025 12:02:03 pm | 0.22 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:05 pm | 0.21 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 11:53:03 am | 0.19 metres |
30/01/2025 11:50:03 am | 0.18 metres |
30/01/2025 11:47:03 am | 0.17 metres |
30/01/2025 11:43:03 am | 0.16 metres |
30/01/2025 11:40:03 am | 0.15 metres |
30/01/2025 11:37:03 am | 0.14 metres |
30/01/2025 11:35:25 am | 0.13 metres |
30/01/2025 11:34:03 am | 0.13 metres |
30/01/2025 11:31:03 am | 0.12 metres |
30/01/2025 11:28:03 am | 0.11 metres |
30/01/2025 11:25:03 am | 0.1 metres |
30/01/2025 11:22:03 am | 0.09 metres |
30/01/2025 11:20:03 am | 0.08 metres |
30/01/2025 11:17:04 am | 0.07 metres |
30/01/2025 11:14:03 am | 0.06 metres |
30/01/2025 11:11:03 am | 0.05 metres |
30/01/2025 11:08:03 am | 0.04 metres |
30/01/2025 11:05:03 am | 0.03 metres |
Location: (-28.7967, 153.2386)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:53:03 pm | 0.52 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.7406, 153.075)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:25:31 pm | 0.85 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.7231, 153.3614)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.8305, 153.2601)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 11:09:39 am | 0.77 metres |
Location: (-28.6408, 153.4131)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:56:04 pm | 0.51 metres |
30/01/2025 1:48:02 pm | 0.49 metres |
30/01/2025 1:40:02 pm | 0.47 metres |
30/01/2025 1:36:01 pm | 0.45 metres |
30/01/2025 1:32:02 pm | 0.44 metres |
30/01/2025 1:28:02 pm | 0.43 metres |
30/01/2025 1:24:02 pm | 0.42 metres |
30/01/2025 1:20:03 pm | 0.41 metres |
30/01/2025 1:16:03 pm | 0.4 metres |
30/01/2025 1:12:02 pm | 0.39 metres |
30/01/2025 1:08:02 pm | 0.38 metres |
30/01/2025 1:04:02 pm | 0.37 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:04 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 12:56:02 pm | 0.34 metres |
30/01/2025 12:52:03 pm | 0.33 metres |
30/01/2025 12:40:02 pm | 0.29 metres |
30/01/2025 12:36:02 pm | 0.28 metres |
30/01/2025 12:32:02 pm | 0.27 metres |
30/01/2025 12:28:02 pm | 0.26 metres |
30/01/2025 12:16:03 pm | 0.22 metres |
30/01/2025 12:12:02 pm | 0.21 metres |
30/01/2025 12:08:02 pm | 0.2 metres |
30/01/2025 12:04:03 pm | 0.19 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:02 pm | 0.17 metres |
30/01/2025 11:56:03 am | 0.16 metres |
30/01/2025 11:52:02 am | 0.15 metres |
30/01/2025 11:44:05 am | 0.14 metres |
30/01/2025 11:43:55 am | 0.12 metres |
30/01/2025 11:36:03 am | 0.12 metres |
30/01/2025 11:32:03 am | 0.11 metres |
30/01/2025 11:28:03 am | 0.1 metres |
30/01/2025 11:24:02 am | 0.09 metres |
30/01/2025 11:16:02 am | 0.07 metres |
30/01/2025 11:12:03 am | 0.05 metres |
30/01/2025 11:08:03 am | 0.04 metres |
30/01/2025 11:04:01 am | 0.03 metres |
Location: (-28.785, 153.3036)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.6056, 153.0892)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.6756, 153.3225)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.5925, 153.4194)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:45:00 pm | 1.318 metres |
30/01/2025 1:30:00 pm | 1.276 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:00 pm | 1.234 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 1.193 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:00 pm | 1.152 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:00 pm | 1.108 metres |
30/01/2025 12:15:00 pm | 1.065 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 1.02 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:00 am | 0.975 metres |
30/01/2025 11:30:00 am | 0.931 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:00 am | 0.885 metres |
30/01/2025 11:00:00 am | 0.843 metres |
Location: (-28.8472, 153.2644)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
No valid readings reported |
Location: (-28.5639, 153.3806)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:45:00 pm | 0.696 metres |
30/01/2025 1:30:00 pm | 0.689 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:00 pm | 0.68 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0.673 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:00 pm | 0.664 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:00 pm | 0.656 metres |
30/01/2025 12:15:00 pm | 0.647 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0.639 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:00 am | 0.63 metres |
30/01/2025 11:30:00 am | 0.622 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:00 am | 0.613 metres |
30/01/2025 11:00:00 am | 0.605 metres |
Location: (-29.0982, 153.3226)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
No valid readings reported |
Location: (-29.0982, 153.3226)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:45:00 pm | 1.415 metres |
30/01/2025 1:30:00 pm | 1.467 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:00 pm | 1.506 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 1.52 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:00 pm | 1.521 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:00 pm | 1.517 metres |
30/01/2025 12:15:00 pm | 1.512 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 1.494 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:00 am | 1.471 metres |
30/01/2025 11:30:00 am | 1.445 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:00 am | 1.418 metres |
30/01/2025 11:00:00 am | 1.385 metres |
Location: (-29.0833, 153.3389)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.7853, 153.4739)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:52:30 pm | 0.35 metres |
30/01/2025 12:03:30 pm | 0.36 metres |
Location: (-28.8017, 153.4744)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.8306, 153.4444)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:02:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 2:01:30 pm | 0.94 metres |
30/01/2025 1:57:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:55:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:50:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:48:29 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:46:30 pm | 0.94 metres |
30/01/2025 1:43:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:40:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:34:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:33:30 pm | 0.91 metres |
30/01/2025 1:31:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:30:29 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:29:30 pm | 0.9 metres |
30/01/2025 1:28:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:27:29 pm | 0.95 metres |
30/01/2025 1:22:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:21:30 pm | 0.95 metres |
30/01/2025 1:20:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:15:29 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:13:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:11:30 pm | 0.95 metres |
30/01/2025 1:08:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:06:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:04:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 1:02:31 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 1:01:30 pm | 0.95 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:58:30 pm | 0.94 metres |
30/01/2025 12:56:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:53:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:51:31 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:49:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:48:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:46:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:45:29 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:44:30 pm | 0.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:43:30 pm | 0.94 metres |
30/01/2025 12:42:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:41:30 pm | 0.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:40:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:39:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:37:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:34:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:32:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:27:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:26:30 pm | 0.91 metres |
30/01/2025 12:21:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:20:20 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:18:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:12:29 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:11:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:09:29 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:08:29 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:06:29 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:02:30 pm | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 12:01:30 pm | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 11:58:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:57:30 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:56:30 am | 0.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:55:30 am | 0.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:52:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:48:29 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:47:30 am | 0.94 metres |
30/01/2025 11:46:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:45:29 am | 0.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:44:30 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:42:29 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:40:30 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:39:31 am | 0.89 metres |
30/01/2025 11:37:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:36:28 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:35:30 am | 0.94 metres |
30/01/2025 11:33:30 am | 0.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:31:30 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:29:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:28:30 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:25:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:24:29 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:23:30 am | 0.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:21:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:20:30 am | 0.89 metres |
30/01/2025 11:19:31 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:18:30 am | 0.95 metres |
30/01/2025 11:17:30 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:15:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:13:30 am | 0.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:12:30 am | 0.93 metres |
30/01/2025 11:09:30 am | 0.92 metres |
30/01/2025 11:08:30 am | 0.94 metres |
Location: (-28.7488, 153.218)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:56:07 pm | 1.34 metres |
30/01/2025 1:51:07 pm | 1.33 metres |
30/01/2025 1:43:37 pm | 1.32 metres |
30/01/2025 1:38:37 pm | 1.31 metres |
30/01/2025 1:33:37 pm | 1.3 metres |
30/01/2025 1:26:07 pm | 1.29 metres |
30/01/2025 1:21:11 pm | 1.28 metres |
30/01/2025 1:21:06 pm | 1.27 metres |
30/01/2025 1:16:07 pm | 1.27 metres |
30/01/2025 1:13:37 pm | 1.26 metres |
30/01/2025 1:06:07 pm | 1.25 metres |
30/01/2025 1:03:37 pm | 1.24 metres |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:56:07 pm | 1.23 metres |
30/01/2025 12:51:07 pm | 1.21 metres |
30/01/2025 12:48:37 pm | 1.2 metres |
30/01/2025 12:41:07 pm | 1.19 metres |
30/01/2025 12:36:07 pm | 1.17 metres |
30/01/2025 12:31:07 pm | 1.16 metres |
30/01/2025 12:28:37 pm | 1.15 metres |
30/01/2025 12:23:37 pm | 1.14 metres |
30/01/2025 12:16:07 pm | 1.12 metres |
30/01/2025 12:13:37 pm | 1.11 metres |
30/01/2025 12:08:37 pm | 1.1 metres |
30/01/2025 12:06:07 pm | 1.09 metres |
30/01/2025 12:03:37 pm | 1.08 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 11:56:07 am | 1.07 metres |
30/01/2025 11:53:37 am | 1.06 metres |
30/01/2025 11:48:37 am | 1.05 metres |
30/01/2025 11:46:07 am | 1.04 metres |
30/01/2025 11:41:07 am | 1.03 metres |
30/01/2025 11:38:37 am | 1.02 metres |
30/01/2025 11:33:37 am | 1.01 metres |
30/01/2025 11:28:38 am | 1 metres |
30/01/2025 11:23:37 am | 0.99 metres |
30/01/2025 11:21:07 am | 0.98 metres |
30/01/2025 11:16:07 am | 0.97 metres |
30/01/2025 11:08:37 am | 0.95 metres |
Location: (-28.9619, 153.3066)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 2:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.588, 153.2989)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
Location: (-28.676, 153.1538)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:58:01 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 1:56:04 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 1:50:03 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 1:48:02 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 1:42:01 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 1:40:02 pm | 1.89 metres |
30/01/2025 1:26:01 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 1:22:00 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 1:16:02 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 1:14:00 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 12:48:00 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:44:00 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 12:32:01 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:30:00 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 12:26:01 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:24:00 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 12:22:01 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:20:00 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 12:14:01 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:12:02 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 12:10:03 pm | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 0 mm |
30/01/2025 12:00:00 pm | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:52:00 am | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:44:02 am | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:41:59 am | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:34:00 am | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:32:00 am | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:24:00 am | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:22:00 am | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:18:00 am | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:17:09 am | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:14:00 am | 1.91 metres |
30/01/2025 11:06:00 am | 1.9 metres |
30/01/2025 11:04:00 am | 1.91 metres |
Location: (-28.8081, 153.2818)
Date | Observation |
---|---|
30/01/2025 1:51:41 pm | 4.76 metres |
Location: (-28.8058, 153.2775)
No Water Outages to display
No Gas Outages to display
No Air Quality to display
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1874 detected by Yamba receiver at 11:26:54 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 12:00:18 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 28-April-2023(AEST) at Main Beach, Yamba.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1874 detected by Yamba receiver at 11:35:34 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 11:26:54 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 28-April-2023(AEST) at Main Beach, Yamba.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 11:52:59 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 12:15:33 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 01:20:49 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 11:52:59 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 01:28:54 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 01:20:49 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:03:03 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 01:28:54 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:30:43 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 02:03:03 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 03:42:47 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 02:30:43 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1324 detected by Yamba receiver at 04:43:40 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 02:46:16 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Evans Head receiver.Tagged and released 23-March-2022(AEDT) at Airforce Beach, Evans Head .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:38:37 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 03:42:47 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1324 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:43:25 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 05:12:41 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 23-March-2022(AEDT) at Airforce Beach, Evans Head .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1874 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:44:59 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 11:38:16 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 28-April-2023(AEST) at Main Beach, Yamba.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1874 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:53:10 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 05:44:59 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 28-April-2023(AEST) at Main Beach, Yamba.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1874 detected by Yamba receiver at 07:30:26 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 05:54:21 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 28-April-2023(AEST) at Main Beach, Yamba.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 10:08:53 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 05:38:37 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1226 detected by Yamba receiver at 11:12:34 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025. Last detected at 12:52:15 AM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 09-October-2021(AEDT) at Palm Islands.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1723 detected by Yamba receiver at 12:54:50 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 03:44:45 AM (AEDT) on 20-January-2025 by Evans Head receiver.Tagged and released 05-December-2022(AEDT) at Iluka Beach, Iluka.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:25:32 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 10:14:06 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:42:46 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 02:25:32 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
No SMART drumlines at Kingscliff today.
Beach: Kingscliff Beach
Suburb: KINGSCLIFF
Location: (-28.25433, 153.577255)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 06:56:04 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 02:46:10 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 10:17:30 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 06:56:04 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 10:33:44 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 10:21:12 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 11:23:01 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 10:34:44 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 11:43:24 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 11:23:01 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:24:27 PM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 11:43:24 AM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 08:19:04 PM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 02:24:27 PM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1226 detected by Yamba receiver at 08:44:11 PM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 11:25:27 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 09-October-2021(AEDT) at Palm Islands.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1226 detected by Yamba receiver at 10:44:45 PM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025. Last detected at 08:50:19 PM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 09-October-2021(AEDT) at Palm Islands.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 01:36:10 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 08:19:04 PM (AEDT) on 24-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 04:13:29 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 01:40:02 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 04:59:00 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 04:14:37 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:12:15 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 04:59:00 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
No SMART drumlines at Ballina today
Beach: Shelly Beach
Suburb: BALLINA
Location: (-28.862078, 153.595421)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 07:39:11 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 05:12:15 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 08:01:23 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 07:46:41 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 08:15:28 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 08:04:54 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1324 detected by Ballina receiver at 08:41:40 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 05:49:39 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 23-March-2022(AEDT) at Airforce Beach, Evans Head .
Beach: Lighthouse Beach
Suburb: BALLINA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-28.869367, 153.600374)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 09:25:12 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 08:17:24 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 10:57:12 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 09:27:59 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1324 detected by Seven Mile/Lennox receiver at 11:11:11 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 08:41:40 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Ballina receiver.Tagged and released 23-March-2022(AEDT) at Airforce Beach, Evans Head .
Beach: SEVEN MILE/LENNOX HEAD
Suburb: Lennox Head
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-28.789698, 153.604131)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 12:24:42 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 10:58:34 AM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:05:29 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 12:24:42 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1874 detected by Yamba receiver at 03:49:52 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 07:30:26 PM (AEDT) on 23-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 28-April-2023(AEST) at Main Beach, Yamba.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 08:27:32 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 06:40:35 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 08:54:11 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 08:27:32 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 04:12:29 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 02:05:29 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 09:24:11 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 09:01:11 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:15:42 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 04:51:45 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 04:51:45 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 04:18:54 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 06:32:55 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025. Last detected at 05:15:42 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #2145 detected by Yamba receiver at 12:23:37 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 09:01:26 PM (AEDT) on 22-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 29-February-2024(AEDT) at Iluka Beach, Iluka.
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 01:46:55 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 09:24:11 PM (AEDT) on 25-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:02:36 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 01:46:55 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:16:50 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 02:02:36 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 02:50:27 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 02:19:13 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 03:14:35 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 03:06:25 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 03:56:27 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 03:18:10 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:12:58 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 03:56:27 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 05:27:25 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 05:12:58 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
DPI Fisheries advise: tagged Bull Shark #1277 detected by Yamba receiver at 07:22:43 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025. Last detected at 05:29:18 AM (AEDT) on 26-January-2025 by Yamba receiver.Tagged and released 14-January-2022(AEDT) at Main Beach, Yamba .
Beach: Yamba Beach
Suburb: YAMBA
About Tagged shark detection shark
Stocky shape. Flat snout.
Alternative names: river whaler, freshwater whaler, Swan River whaler.
The bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, is found along coastlines in tropical and subtropical oceans, and in Australia occurs from central NSW coast, across the northern coast to Perth, Western Australia.
It is the only widely distributed shark that penetrates far into fresh water for extended periods where it sometimes breeds. Females normally give birth in estuaries and river mouths and the young can remain in the river for up to 5 years.
It is a dangerous shark due to its aggressive nature, powerful jaws, broad diet, abundance, and its habitat preference for shallow, murky inshore waters. It has a short snout which is wider than it is long, hence the name. Adults can range from 2 to 3.5 metres in length and up to 230 kg in weight. Bull sharks will eat almost anything including fish, other sharks and rays, turtles, birds, molluscs, crustaceans and dolphins. The teeth are triangular, saw-edged and very sharp. The belly is usually off-white, the top surface grey and the eyes small.
Length: 2.4 m
Weight: 130 kg
Location: (-29.433999, 153.371168)
Data Authorities: Rural Fire Service NSW (RFS) , State Emergency Service NSW (SES) , Manly Hydraulics Laboratory (MHL) , Transport NSW , Jemena , Geoscience Australia , NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment (DPIE) , SharkSmart , Essential Energy
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Data Authority: Bureau of Meteorology (BOM)
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