A tropical cyclone crossed Cape York and became very severe in Gulf. This was the so-called 'Douglas Mawson' cyclone as it sunk that vessel with the loss of 20 lives in the Gulf of Carpentaria where it also generated a 7 metre storm surge at Groote Island. The cyclone tracked directly from Coen towards Groote Eylandt at 5 to 6 knots. Large waves hit Karumba and a storm surge inundated the flats for miles on 30th and 31st. At Burketown a storm surge of 9 feet was reported and at Port McArthur a storm surge of between 18 feet and 8 feet was reported. A more accurate storm surge height was obtained from the Mission house on Groote Island.

At 9am 30th they recorded 6.4 inches (163 mm) of rain over the previous 24 hr. At 4pm the wind turned southerly and increased to force 8 and reached hurricane force southwesterly at 6pm with torrential rain. At this time flooding combined with storm surge caused the water to reach the top of the river bank (12 feet above both the mean tide level and the predicted tide level). By 9pm the roof and the front wall blew off and the rain gauge overflowed (more than 10 inches of rain). At 10pm the east wall was blown out and the water reached up stairs (20 feet above mean tide level and 18.5 feet above predicted tide. At midnight the water level peaked at 23 feet above the mean and 21.5 feet above that predicted. The wind then turned westerly with stronger gusts. At 4am the building collapsed as the water receded. At 6am the wind was down to gale force and the water level was 15 feet above mean. The ground became visible at 10am. Few trees were left standing. At Roper River roofs were blown off and trees felled.

The abnormal sea conditions in the Gulf led to the loss of a well-found Gulf steamer, the Douglas Mawson, with the loss of 20 lives. The eastern islands of Torres Strait (usually cyclone free) were badly damaged. Darnley, Coconut, Mabuiag and Murray Islands suffered much damage - houses unroofed, trees down, gardens damaged, luggers dismasted and Darnley settlement was virtually destroyed and banks of living coral 4 to 5 feet high were dashed up by the waves.

Rockhampton Regional Council in partnership with the Queensland a…

Douglas Mawson Cyclone 1923 track

Douglas Mawson Cyclone 1923 mean sea level

Douglas Mawson Cyclone 1923 graph of storm surge

Douglas Mawson Cyclone 1923 plan of Emerald River