The 18 719-km2 Ramu drainage basin has a water quality regime largely unaffected by mining operations. The Ramu River Communities believe that this may change over the coming months and years, and have initiated their own state-of-the-art monitoring of the main river. These observations have centred on high-frequency (10-minute) observations of turbidity and flow giving possibly the first such annual data at this sampling frequency on New Guinea Island. The first year of monitoring has demonstrated a marked seasonality in the delivery of suspended sediment from the 5866 km2 Upper Ramu basin, with considerably more natural variability in response within the 6-month wet season. Were new mining operations to release fine sediment (contaminated...