A little ray of sunshine from Australia

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jackspratt
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by jackspratt » September 2, 2021, 8:10 pm

tamada wrote:
September 2, 2021, 8:00 pm

I didn't know ostriches were indigenous to Perth.
But the Noisy Scrubbird is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noisy_scrubbird

While thought to be bordering on extinction, it seems to have migrated to Malaysia and offshore environs.



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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 2, 2021, 11:42 pm

jackspratt wrote:
September 2, 2021, 8:10 pm
tamada wrote:
September 2, 2021, 8:00 pm

I didn't know ostriches were indigenous to Perth.
But the Noisy Scrubbird is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noisy_scrubbird

While thought to be bordering on extinction, it seems to have migrated to Malaysia and offshore environs.
I'll have you know that some of my best ostrich mates are from down Margaret River way.

Meanwhile, the way things are over the border where pushing your luck costs a grand.
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by GT93 » September 3, 2021, 11:27 am

Those wishing to enter South Australia could have chosen to stay in unlucky places such as Florida, Texas, New South Wales or wherever they were coming from. I think there's something more important than luck also in play.
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 3, 2021, 11:58 am

ON THIS DAY – 3rd September

1855 – The Cambus Wallace ran aground off Stradbroke Island in southern Queensland in the first of two events which led to the island being broken into North and South.

1855 – All property of the Sydney Railway Company was transferred to the New South Wales government.

1873 – The town of Cooktown, Queensland was founded after gold is discovered at the Palmer River, sparking a gold rush.

1878 – The Main Southern railway line in NSW reached Wagga Wagga in an attempt to lure Riverina trade away from Victoria.

1879 – The town of Cunnamulla, Queensland was founded as a coach stop for Cobb & Co stagecoaches.

1901 – The Flag of Australia and Australian Red Ensign were adopted by the Government of Australia as official flags, following a national design competition. The flag was first flown from the Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne.

1926 – ‘The Canberra Times’ was first published.

1939 – World War II: Britain declared war on Germany after the invasion of Poland. France follows 6 hours later quickly joined by Australia, New Zealand, South Africa & Canada.

1940 – The heavy cruiser HMAS Australia took part in Operation Menace off Dakar.

1960 – St. George won the 1960 NSWRFL season, claiming their fifth premiership in a row by defeating Eastern Suburbs 31–6.

1970 – Bill Halley & Comets rejected $30,000 for a 15 date tour of Australia.

1997 – The Castle, a film that cost $700,000 to make and was shot in 11 days, passed $10 million at the box office.

2015 – ‘Chris the sheep’ broke the world record for the biggest shorn fleece 40kg (88lb) near Canberra, Australia.

Pictured:
The Cambus Wallace at anchor with sails furled, circa 1894 (City of Gold Coast) – Top
Locomotive No. 1 shown in Sydney yard with a frock-coated railway official, possibly a station master. Detail a stereoview published by William Hetzer, Sydney, 1858-1860. Powerhouse Museum collection P.3145-7. Gift of Royal Australian Historical Society, 1981. (Museum of Applied Art and Sciences) – Bottom Left
The edition of the Review of Reviews front cover signed by Egbert Nuttall, after the winning designers of the 1901 Federal Flag design competition were announced (Wiki) – Bottom Right
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 4, 2021, 3:51 pm

ON THIS DAY – 4th September

1884 – Britain ended its policy of penal transportation to New South Wales in Australia.

1897 – Essendon won the first Victorian Football League premiership.

1914 – William Henry Strahan published "The Bugle Call". William (Bill, Will) Henry Strahan (21 September 1869 – 25 April 1915) was a member of the Toodyay Road Board who served with the 16th Battalion of AIF. He was killed in action on 25 April 1915 (the first day of the Gallipoli Campaign). Prior to enlisting with AIF Strahan was a volunteer member of the Australian Light Horse and Guildford Rifles where he held the rank of sergeant major. On 4 September 1914, prior to departing for Blackboy Hill and joining the AIF, Strahan wrote The Bugle Call. After his death, the lyrics were published in various papers. Major General Sir Harry Barron, the Governor of Western Australia, sent a copy of the lyrics to an individual, eliciting the response "Evidently the writer by his gallant deeds acted up not to the letter only, but to the spirit of his utterances".

1924 – The Commonwealth Citrus Research Station (subsumed in 1927 into the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)) opened at Griffith, New South Wales in the Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area (which is fed by the Murrumbidgee River).

1937 – Dawn Fraser AC, MBE, Australian freestyle champion swimmer and former politician, was born.

1977 – The Queensland government banned street marches and demonstrations.

1992 – Kerry Packer pulled the plug on Australia's Naughtiest Home Videos mid-air.

2006 – Steve Irwin, the Crocodile Hunter, died after being stung by a stingray.

Pictured:
Essendon Football Club 1897 Premiers (Wiki) – Top
William Henry Strahan (AWM) – Bottom Left
Dawn Fraser in 1958. (Dutch National Archives) – Bottom Right
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 4, 2021, 6:55 pm

GT93 wrote:
September 3, 2021, 11:27 am
Those wishing to enter South Australia could have chosen to stay in unlucky places such as Florida, Texas, New South Wales or wherever they were coming from. I think there's something more important than luck also in play.
Is this "zero Covid" straw clutch an antipodean thing then?
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by GT93 » September 5, 2021, 6:18 am

Readers who half follow your posts will know you are a keen student of China so you know the answer to your question is no it isn't just a downunder thing. After some half measures (and that's being generous) NSW threw in the towel very quickly.

The idea is to let Covid in when we're well placed to do that. Saint Cindy tells us the R number is currently under 1 in Auckland. We have our fingers crossed.
Lock 'em up - Eastman, Giuliani, Senator Graham, Meadows and Trump

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 5, 2021, 7:44 am

ON THIS DAY – 5th September

1880 – The first Salvation Army meeting in Australia was held in Adelaide.

1905 – Prominent men met in Sydney's Australia Hotel to found the National Defense League fuelled by fear of Japan after its victory over Russia.

1933 – Australia signed a trade agreement with New Zealand.

1984 – Western Australia became the last Australian state to abolish capital punishment for ordinary crimes (i.e. murder). New South Wales maintained it as a punishment for treason and piracy with violence until 1985 when capital punishment was finally abolished in Australia.

1994 – New South Wales state MP John Newman was shot outside his home, in Australia's first political assassination since 1977.

Pictured:
Salvation Army ministry in the Australia was born in a uniquely Army form: in the open air and, in a typically Aussie style, under a gum tree in a park (The Salvation Army Australia) – Top
Mr John Paul NEWMAN [1946 – 1994] (Parliament NSW) – Bottom
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 6, 2021, 6:53 am

ON THIS DAY – 6th September

1905 – Last sighting of the clipper ship Loch Vennachar which sunk off Kangaroo Island, killing 32 people. Only one body was found.

1933 – Windscreen wipers became compulsory on all Australian cars.

1940 – The British prison ship HMT Dunera docked in Sydney, carrying refugees and prisoners of war considered a danger to British security, for internment in Hay and Tatura. In September 1940, 2542 ‘enemy aliens’ from Britain disembarked HMT Dunera in Melbourne and Sydney. Most were Jewish refugees who had fled Nazi persecution in Germany and Austria. They were interned in camps near Hay and Orange in NSW and Tatura in Victoria. The ‘Dunera Boys’ as they became known included musicians, artists, philosophers, scientists and writers. Following their release in 1941 many chose to remain in Australia, making a significant contribution to the nation’s economic, social and cultural life.

1977 – Victoria experienced a statewide 24-hour stoppage of train, tram and tramway bus services due to a strike by 20,000 public transport workers - the third strike in a month.

1996 – The Wiggles' Wiggly Wiggly Christmas album was released.

Pictured:
Dunera Boys Reunion, 1990 (NLA) – Top
Wiggly, Wiggly Christmas 1996 Australian Album (Wiggles Fandom) – Bottom
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by pipoz4444 » September 6, 2021, 2:24 pm

Australia Covid 19 Vaccination Rates 04 Sept 2021 \:D/ \:D/

50.9% First Dose
30.5% Second Dose

Australians Covid 19 Vaccination Rates 04 Sept 2021.PNG
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 7, 2021, 5:42 am

ON THIS DAY – 7th September

1790 – Governor Arthur Phillip was speared in the shoulder while speaking with a group of Indigenous Australians, due to a misunderstanding. Acting as interpreter, Bennelong prevented the situation from escalating and the Aboriginals left in peace.

1795 – HMS Reliance arrived in Sydney. Among the ship's passengers and crew were Bennelong returning from a visit to England, the surgeon and explorer George Bass, and midshipman Matthew Flinders.

1800 – Joseph Holt was arrested on suspicion of raising an Irish insurrection.

1815 – Australian explorer John McDouall Stuart was born.

1825 – Major Edmund Lockyer arrived in Brisbane to explore the upper reaches of the Brisbane River.

1902 – In Australia, the whole nation observed a 'day of humiliation' and prays for rain, as a terrible drought killed livestock and threatened crops. Rain began to appear on 10 September.

1917 – Birth of John Cornforth, Australian chemist, Nobel Prize laureate. Sir John Warcup Cornforth Jr., AC, CBE, FRS, FAA (7 September 1917 – 8 December 2013) was an Australian–British chemist who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1975 for his work on the stereochemistry of enzyme-catalysed reactions, becoming the only Nobel laureate born in New South Wales. Cornforth investigated enzymes that catalyse changes in organic compounds, the substrates, by taking the place of hydrogen atoms in a substrate's chains and rings. In his syntheses and descriptions of the structure of various terpenes, olefins, and steroids, Cornforth determined specifically which cluster of hydrogen atoms in a substrate were replaced by an enzyme to effect a given change in the substrate, allowing him to detail the biosynthesis of cholesterol. For this work, he won a share of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1975, alongside co-recipient Vladimir Prelog, and was knighted in 1977.

1936 – The last known thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) died at Hobart Zoo.

1996 – National Threatened Species Day was first held; the date was chosen in memory of the last Thylacine.

1997 – Pat Rafter won the US Open, defeating Britain's Greg Rusedski 6-3, 6-2, 4-6, 7–5 to claim Australia's first grand slam tournament title since Pat Cash won Wimbledon in 1987.

Pictured:
John McDouall Stuart 1865 (Wiki) – Bottom Left
Edmund Lockyer in the uniform of Captain of the Sydney Volunteer Rifle Corps (Wiki) – Bottom Middle
1975 Press Photo Professor John Warcum Cornforth (Wiki) – Bottom Right
Thylacinus cynocephalus. John Gould's lithographic plate from ‘The Mammals of Australia’ Vol. I Plate 54, 1863 – Top
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 8, 2021, 10:04 am

ON THIS DAY – 8th September

1792 – It is believed the first convict was buried in the Old Sydney Burial Ground. The Old Sydney Burial Ground is also known as the George Street Burial Ground, the Cathedral Close Cemetery or the Town Hall Cemetery. Bordered by George, Druitt, Bathurst and Kent Streets, it was laid out in 1793 by Governor Phillip and Reverend Johnson. Before it was officially set out, Phillip and Rev Johnson chose the site in September 1792, as it was far enough away from the main settlement to not pose a health hazard. The first interment was a convict named Michael Dunn, who was believed to have been buried at the site on 8 September 1792. Around 2300 people, both convicts and free settlers were interred at the Old Sydney Burial Ground before 1820, when a new burial ground was opened on Brickfield Hill, later the site of Central Railway Station. In 1869, the site needed to be cleared for the construction of the Sydney Town Hall, so the Old Burial Ground was moved to Haslem's Creek, to become the Rookwood Cemetery.

1855 – Queen Victoria signed an Order in Council to change the name of Van Diemen's Land to Tasmania.

1866 – The Blood or bread riots began as unemployed men attempt to storm the government Commissariat Store, Brisbane; the riots continue to the 10th of September. On the night of 11 September 1866, a crowd of more than 400 hungry men who had found their way into the town surged from the Dunmore Arms in George Street, with one reportedly shouting ‘Bread or blood’ as they headed towards the Commissariat Store in William Street. These men were the victims of the collapse of the British banking system that had brought work to a standstill. In response, hundreds of government officials were sworn in as special constables by Brisbane Police Magistrate Hugh Massie and artillery were set up at the gates of Government House further down George Street. The protest came to an end when a police baton charge pushed the mob back into Elizabeth Street. Magistrate Massie had to read the Riot Act twice before the crowd dispersed. He was hit in the eye by a stone on the second occasion.

1954 – Australia became a founding member of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO).

1990 – Collingwood drew its elimination final with the West Coast Eagles. The AFL finals schedule is thrown into chaos and the Grand Final is rescheduled to be played a week later than usual. Extra time is subsequently introduced for future finals matches.

1997 – New South Wales Premier Bob Carr opened a world-class cancer research institute in Camperdown, Sydney.

2006 – Motor racing champion Peter Brock died in a race in Perth.

Pictured:
John Rae, “George Street looking north, showing Jewish Synagogue, Police Officers, the Markets, Old Burial Ground, now the site of Town Hall”, 1842 (City of Sydney Civic Collection) – Top
Dunmore Arms Hotel, constructed 1865 and demolished 1887 to make way for the Treasury Hotel. In 2016 it is Irish Murphy’s hotel. From this building the crowd of 400 men surged (SLQ) – Middle
Peter Brock Holden Commodore at the Symmons Plains round of the 1982 Australian Touring Car Championship (Wiki) – Bottom
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 9, 2021, 4:48 am

ON THIS DAY – 9th September

1803 – The “Lady Nelson” arrived in Van Diemen’s Land, now Tasmania, in preparation for the first British settlement.

1839 – Port Darwin was named by John Lort Stokes on HMS Beagle.

1914 – The light cruiser HMAS Melbourne captured the German radio station in Nauru.

1946 – Trans Australia Airlines made its first flight.

1951 – Australia signed the Treaty of San Francisco, formalising peace with Japan.

1967 – Proposed changes to Queensland laws governing public demonstrations resulted in 3,500 people protesting in the streets of Brisbane. Queensland Police arrested 114 people.

2004 – Bomb exploded outside the Australian embassy in Jakarta, killing 10 Indonesians and injury 100.

Pictured:
Print from an engraving by Samuel John Neele appearing in James Grant's The Narrative of a voyage of discovery, performed in His Majesty's vessel the Lady Nelson, of 60 tons burthen, with sliding keels, in the years 1800, 1801, and 1802, to New South Wales, published July 1803, by T. Egerton, Whitehall, London – Top
Engraving of Port Darwin 1873 (RTPA) – Middle
Trans Australia Airlines - Skymaster "John Eyre" – c. 1946 (NAA) – Bottom
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 10, 2021, 9:58 am

ON THIS DAY – 10th September

1858 – Fitzroy, Victoria became a municipality in its own right, after separating from the City of Melbourne.

1906 – The first Australian licence plates and drivers licence were issued.

1919 – J. F. Archibald, founding editor of The Bulletin died, bequeathing money that would be used to award the Archibald Prize for portraiture.

1967 – John Newcombe won the men's singles at the US Open, defeating the USA's Clark Graebner 6–4 6–4 8–6.

1988 – Brisbane's TVQ-0 became TVQ-10. On the same day, Toowoomba's DDQ-10 became DDQ-0.

Pictured:
Driver's licence belonging to SA scientist Dr William Hargreaves, which was the first one to be issued in Australia in 1906 (The Advertiser) – Top
J. F. Archibald [left] with Henry Lawson (Wiki) – Bottom Left
John Newcombe 1967 US Open Winner (Tennis Forum) – Bottom Right
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 11, 2021, 3:18 pm

ON THIS DAY – 11th September

1795 – Floods devastated the farms at Hawkesbury.

1803 – Rear-Admiral John Bowen with a party of forty-eight founded the first settlement in Van Diemen's Land near the Derwent River.

1863 – Bushranger Captain Thunderbolt escaped from the supposedly escape-proof Cockatoo Island gaol.

1876 – The SS Dandenong sunk; 40 lives were lost.

1877 – Ships Avalanche and Forrest collided off Portland, Victoria, only 3 of the 107 passengers were saved.

1914 – WWI - Australian troops landed in German New Guinea in the first significant Australian action of World War I.

1922 – One of the ‘Herald Sun’ of Melbourne, Australia's predecessor papers ‘The Sun News-Pictorial’ was founded.

1928 – Charles Kingsford Smith completed the first flight across the Tasman landing at the Wigram Aerodrome.

1943 – WWII - US & Australian troops joined in Salamaua, New Guinea.

1947 – The first radioisotopes exported from the United States arrived in Canberra.

1967 – The children's television show ‘Adventure Island’ began airing on the ABC.

1988 – Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs defeated Balmain 24–12 to win the 81st NSWRL premiership. It is the first Grand Final played at the S.F.S. & the last game for Steve Mortimer. The Grand Final was played early so that Channel Ten could broadcast the 1988 Seoul Olympics. Bulldogs prop Paul Dunn was awarded the Clive Churchill medal for man of the match.

1997 – BHP announced plans to cut over 800 jobs from coal mines in Illawarra.

2000 – The World Economic Forum was held in Melbourne. The S11 movement organised protests that overshadowed the meeting.

Pictured:
Portrait of John Bowen [1780-1827] (Wiki) – Bottom Left
Member of the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force Pictured in Papua New Guinea, WWI (AWM) – Top
Kingsford Smith in his flying gear (SLNSW) – Bottom Right

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by GT93 » September 11, 2021, 4:26 pm

A little ray of sunshine picked up one of Australia's worst former PMs without a mask. Bye bye $500. 8)
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 12, 2021, 6:30 pm

ON THIS DAY – 12th September

1824 – Lieutenant Henry Miller was formally appointed to establish a penal colony at Moreton Bay resulting in the founding of Brisbane on the Brisbane River (Miller had arrived in Moreton Bay a couple of months prior to the formal appointment).

1844 – The Royal Society of Tasmania was formed. It was the first branch of the Society established outside Britain.

1854 – Lieutenant-Governor of Victoria Charles Hotham opened Flinders Street station, the first city railway station in Australia.

1892 – Ambulance services commenced in Queensland, Australia, the first such service anywhere in the world.

2001 – Ansett Australia, Australia's first commercial interstate airline, collapsed due to increased strain on the international airline industry leaving 10,000 people unemployed.

2005 – England won back The Ashes from Australia for the first time since 1987.

Pictured:
Flinders Street in 1854, ST Gill (SLV) – Top
Horse pulling an ambulance through Brisbane streets ca. 1897 (John Oxley Library, SLQ) – Bottom
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 13, 2021, 9:42 am

ON THIS DAY – 13th September

1824 – The first convict colony in what is now Queensland was founded at Redcliffe.

1828 – In the first bank robbery in Australia, robbers broke into the vault of the Bank of Australasia in Sydney.

1861 – Howitt's expedition to rescue missing explorers Burke and Wills arrived at the 'Dig' Tree.

1926 – Twenty-six people were killed in the Murulla railway accident.

Pictured:
Bourke and Wills at the Dig Tree (Australian Traveller) – Top
Murulla Railway Accident (Murrurundi District Historical Society) – Bottom
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by noosard » September 14, 2021, 11:17 am

Wallabies rugby star Quade Cooper can become an Australian, after citizenship rules changed

Someone finally is thinking rather than just hoops and red tape

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Aardvark » September 15, 2021, 5:51 am

noosard wrote:
September 14, 2021, 11:17 am
Wallabies rugby star Quade Cooper can become an Australian, after citizenship rules changed

Someone finally is thinking rather than just hoops and red tape
Russel Crow in the same Boat, knocked him back numerous times ...

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