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The 1859 Election on the Ovens’
Deakin University Access to Thesis. Antony O’Brien is the author of the thesis entitled: ‘The 1859 Election on the Ovens’. This thesis may be made available for consultation, loan and limited copying for the purpose of study and/or research in accordance with the Copyright Act 1968 [Australia]. This thesis was submitted for the degree of Master of Arts and is the result of the authors own research, except where otherwise acknowledged, and that the thesis in whole or part has not been submitted for an award including a higher degree to any other university or institution. This document has been processed by an optical character recognition program, thus there is a possibility of transcription errors. The 1859 Election on the Ovens. by Antony O’Brien, Bachelor of Arts (Honours) Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Deakin University 30 July 2004 Abstract The Victorian general election of 1859 occurred during a time of social transition and electoral reformation, which extended the vote to previously unrepresented adult males. Gold discoveries, including those on the Ovens, triggered the miners’ insistent demands for access to land and participation in the political process. The thesis identifies issues, which emerged during the election campaign on the Ovens goldfields, surrounding Beechworth. The struggle centred on the two Legislative Assembly seats for the Ovens and the one Legislative Council seat for the Murray District. Though the declared election issue was land reform, it concealed a range of underlying tensions, which divided the electorate along lines of nationality and religion. -
Cata Alogue E 68
Grosvenor Prints 19 Shelton Street Covent Garden London WC2H 9JN Tel: 020 7836 1979 Fax: 020 7379 6695 E-mail: [email protected] www.grosvenorprints.com Dealers in Antique Prints & Books Catalogue 68 February Listing Item 369: The Grand Master or Adventures of Qui Hi? in Hindostan All items listed are illustrated on our web site: www.grosvenorprints.com Registered in England No. 1305630 Registered Office: 2, Castle Business Villlage, Station Roaad, Hampton, Middlesex. TW12 2BX. Rainbrook Ltd. Directors: N.C. Talbot. T.D.M. Rayment. C.E. Elliis. E&OE VAT No. 217 6907 49 Stock: 43657 4. [Wax and Candle Invoice.] Bo.t of W. & J. Barton, Wax & Tallow Chandlers, No. 26 Bishopsgate with opposite Threadneedle Street. [1834.] Engraved invoice with manuscript; pt watermark (18)32. Sheet: 125 x 200mmm (5 x 8"). Folds and creasing. £75 An invoice for candles and sooap from chandlers W. & J. Barton based in Bishopsgate. Stock: 43660 5. [Horses] R. Thwaiites, Ripon. To the 1. Design Adopted by the Council for the following places on Pleasure with a Pair of Univerity of London. Horses and Waiting [...] William Wilkins, M.A. R.A. Arch.t 1826. Printed by C. Smith & Greaves sc Birmingham [c.1820] Hullmandel. Engraving, sheet 65 x 100mm (2½ x 4"). Trimmed. Lithograph. Sheet 260 x 320mm (10¼ x 12½"). mss ''D' £60 added top right, some soiling. £190 Billhead for a man based in Ripon, Yorkshire, with The designs by William Wilkins RA (1778-1839) for horses for hire. With unicorn vignette and list of the main building of what is now University College distances to nearby towns. -
Télécharger Notre Brochure Voyages Individuels
Voyages Individuels 100 destinations sur 4 continents Asie | Océanie | Afrique | Moyen-Orient | Amérique Latine 2019-2020 Un Monde de Sensations Sensations vous présente sa brochure entièrement dédiée aux 103 destinations que nous vous proposons de découvrir en voyage individuel, de l’Asie à l’Australie, du Pacifique à l’Amérique Latine de l’Afrique au Moyen-Orient ! Sommaire 2 Une équipe, 15 ans de passion! 4 Voyager en Individuel 3 Sensations, c’est aussi... 5 ASIE OCEANIE MOYEN-ORIENT Arménie 8 Australie 160-163 Egypte 138-143 Bhoutan 24 Nouvelle-Zélande 164 Iran 156 Birmanie 54 Polynésie française 166 Israël 146 Cambodge 60-63 Jordanie 148 Chine 26 AFRIQUE Liban 150 Corée du Sud 36 Afrique du Sud 92-97 Maroc 144 Géorgie 10 Botswana 84 Oman 152-155 Indonésie 44-49 Cap Vert 104-107 Inde 18-21 Ethiopie 66 AMERIQUE LATINE Japon 30-35 Kenya 68-71 Argentine 132 Laos 56 Madagascar 98-101 Bolivie 126 Malaisie et Hong Kong 38 Namibie 86 Brésil 128-131 Malaisie Bornéo 40 Ouganda 78-81 Chili 134 Mongolie 28 Rwanda 82 Colombie 116 Népal 22 Sénégal 102 Costa Rica 112-115 Ouzbékistan 12 Tanzanie 72-77 Equateur 118-121 Philippines 42 Zimbabwe 88-91 Mexique 110 Sri Lanka 14-17 Pérou 122-125 Thaïlande 50-53 Vietnam 58-61 2 www.travel-sensations.com Avec son approche créative, Sensations s’est imposé rapidement comme le spécialiste du voyage sur mesure. Notre équipe se tient à votre disposition pour élaborer et réaliser de bout en bout le voyage qui vous correspond. Parce que l’on voyage tous différemment, votre projet mérite d’être personnalisé comme il se doit. -
Widespread Crater-Related Pitted Materials on Mars: Further Evidence for the Role of Target Volatiles During the Impact Process ⇑ Livio L
Icarus 220 (2012) 348–368 Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect Icarus journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/icarus Widespread crater-related pitted materials on Mars: Further evidence for the role of target volatiles during the impact process ⇑ Livio L. Tornabene a, , Gordon R. Osinski a, Alfred S. McEwen b, Joseph M. Boyce c, Veronica J. Bray b, Christy M. Caudill b, John A. Grant d, Christopher W. Hamilton e, Sarah Mattson b, Peter J. Mouginis-Mark c a University of Western Ontario, Centre for Planetary Science and Exploration, Earth Sciences, London, ON, Canada N6A 5B7 b University of Arizona, Lunar and Planetary Lab, Tucson, AZ 85721-0092, USA c University of Hawai’i, Hawai’i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, Ma¯noa, HI 96822, USA d Smithsonian Institution, Center for Earth and Planetary Studies, Washington, DC 20013-7012, USA e NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA article info abstract Article history: Recently acquired high-resolution images of martian impact craters provide further evidence for the Received 28 August 2011 interaction between subsurface volatiles and the impact cratering process. A densely pitted crater-related Revised 29 April 2012 unit has been identified in images of 204 craters from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. This sample of Accepted 9 May 2012 craters are nearly equally distributed between the two hemispheres, spanning from 53°Sto62°N latitude. Available online 24 May 2012 They range in diameter from 1 to 150 km, and are found at elevations between À5.5 to +5.2 km relative to the martian datum. The pits are polygonal to quasi-circular depressions that often occur in dense clus- Keywords: ters and range in size from 10 m to as large as 3 km. -
City of Sydney 2018
Tourist Accommodation Register TA category Historic Property Establishment name & location Key type & No Original Building & other Pre-TA uses AR Dates & Ages Prior history TARC : Current : City of Sydney 2018 & type Records Street TA TA TAC VAM LAB Sands LC ANU Key HT PB SA BP Original Use AR TAC Pre-AR AR Establishment Name Main Street Name Other Street frontages Suburb PC V Built Pre-TA uses Building(s) demolishd Other TA idenitities No Cat Type Type 2016 1986 1933 Plans T&C type Rooms Rooms Units Beds sector Type Date Date Age Age 2019 ARB : Adaptive Reuse Backpacker hostels 790 on George St 790-798 George St Rawson St (1-9) & Rawson Lane Haymarket 2000 2 AR BP 69 x Beds 281 1914 Commercial Office Building (Station House ) 2007 93 12 Asylum Sydney 201-203 Brougham St Woolloomooloo 2011 8 AR BP 159 x Beds 92 1848 Residential 2 terrace houses 1988 140 31 1990 Backpacker to Boarding House Base Backpackers 477-481 Kent St Sydney 2000 1 AR BP 9 x Beds 492 1917 Industrial Warehouse & offices (Civic House) 2001 84 18 Wanderers on Kent Big Hostel 212-214 Elizabeth St Blackburn St Surry Hills 2010 3 AR BP 115 x Beds 137 1918 Commercial Offices (Anker House) 2002 84 17 Residence ( Craigholme ), Boarding House Blue Parrot Backpackers 87 Macleay St Potts Point 2011 8 AR BP 173 x Beds 50 1891 Residential 2001 110 18 (queried by some locals), Shops & Restaurant Film exchange ( MGM); dental school. Part of Bounce Sydney 20-28 Chalmers St Randle Lane Surry Hills 2010 3 AR BP 113 x Beds 163 1933 Miscellaneous 2010 77 9 dental hospital Casa Central -
Government Gazette of the STATE of NEW SOUTH WALES Number 112 Monday, 3 September 2007 Published Under Authority by Government Advertising
6835 Government Gazette OF THE STATE OF NEW SOUTH WALES Number 112 Monday, 3 September 2007 Published under authority by Government Advertising SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT EXOTIC DISEASES OF ANIMALS ACT 1991 ORDER - Section 15 Declaration of Restricted Areas – Hunter Valley and Tamworth I, IAN JAMES ROTH, Deputy Chief Veterinary Offi cer, with the powers the Minister has delegated to me under section 67 of the Exotic Diseases of Animals Act 1991 (“the Act”) and pursuant to section 15 of the Act: 1. revoke each of the orders declared under section 15 of the Act that are listed in Schedule 1 below (“the Orders”); 2. declare the area specifi ed in Schedule 2 to be a restricted area; and 3. declare that the classes of animals, animal products, fodder, fi ttings or vehicles to which this order applies are those described in Schedule 3. SCHEDULE 1 Title of Order Date of Order Declaration of Restricted Area – Moonbi 27 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – Woonooka Road Moonbi 29 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – Anambah 29 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – Muswellbrook 29 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – Aberdeen 29 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – East Maitland 29 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – Timbumburi 29 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – McCullys Gap 30 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – Bunnan 31 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area - Gloucester 31 August 2007 Declaration of Restricted Area – Eagleton 29 August 2007 SCHEDULE 2 The area shown in the map below and within the local government areas administered by the following councils: Cessnock City Council Dungog Shire Council Gloucester Shire Council Great Lakes Council Liverpool Plains Shire Council 6836 SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT 3 September 2007 Maitland City Council Muswellbrook Shire Council Newcastle City Council Port Stephens Council Singleton Shire Council Tamworth City Council Upper Hunter Shire Council NEW SOUTH WALES GOVERNMENT GAZETTE No. -
Campbell Housing Apartments)
Australian Capital Territory Heritage (Decision about Registration for Campbell Housing Apartments). Notice 2011 Notifiable Instrument NI 2011 - 742 made under the Heritage Act 2004 section 42 Notice of Decision about Registration 1. Revocation This instrument replaces NI 2011 – 489 2. Name of instrument This instrument is the Heritage (Decision about Registration for Campbell Housing Apartments) Notice 2011 - 3. Registration details of the place Registration details of the place are at Attachment A: Register entry for Campbell Housing Apartments . 4. Reason for decision The ACT Heritage Council has decided that the Campbell Housing Apartments meets one or more of the heritage significance criteria at s 10 of the Heritage Act 2004. The register entry is at Attachment A. 5. Date of Registration 1 December 2011 Gerhard Zatschler Secretary ACT Heritage Council 1 December 2011 Authorised by the ACT Parliamentary Counsel—also accessible at www.legislation.act.gov.au AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY HERITAGE REGISTER (Registration Details) Place No: For the purposes of s. 41 of the Heritage Act 2004, an entry to the heritage register has been prepared by the ACT Heritage Council for the following place: Campbell Housing Apartments, 6 & 8 Edmondson Street Campbell (Part) Block 15 Section 9 Campbell DATE OF REGISTRATION Notified: 1 December 2011 Notifiable Instrument: 2011/ Copies of the Register Entry are available for inspection at the ACT Heritage Unit. For further information please contact: The Secretary ACT Heritage Council GPO Box 158, Canberra, ACT 2601 Telephone: 13 22 81 Facsimile: (02) 6207 2229 IDENTIFICATION OF THE PLACE Authorised by the ACT Parliamentary Counsel—also accessible at www.legislation.act.gov.au Campbell Housing Apartments (Blamey Heights), 6 and 8 Edmondson Street, Campbell (Part) Block 15, Section 9, Campbell, Canberra Central STATEMENT OF HERITAGE SIGNIFICANCE This statement refers to the Heritage Significance of the place as required in s12(d) of the Heritage Act 2004. -
Developing the West Head of Sydney Cove
GUNS, MAPS, RATS AND SHIPS Developing the West Head of Sydney Cove Davina Jackson PhD Travellers Club, Geographical Society of NSW 9 September 2018 Eora coastal culture depicted by First Fleet artists. Top: Paintings by the Port Jackson Painter (perhaps Thomas Watling). Bottom: Paintings by Philip Gidley King c1790. Watercolour map of the First Fleet settlement around Sydney Cove, sketched by convict artist Francis Fowkes, 1788 (SLNSW). William Bradley’s map of Sydney Cove, 1788 (SLNSW). ‘Sydney Cove Port Jackson 1788’, watercolour by William Bradley (SLNSW). Sketch of Sydney Cove drawn by Lt. William Dawes (top) using water depth soundings by Capt. John Hunter, 1788. Left: Sketches of Sydney’s first observatory, from William Dawes’s notebooks at Cambridge University Library. Right: Retrospective sketch of the cottage, drawn by Rod Bashford for Robert J. McAfee’s book, Dawes’s Meteorological Journal, 1981. Sydney Cove looking south from Dawes Point, painted by Thomas Watling, published 1794-96 (SLNSW). Looking west across Sydney Cove, engraving by James Heath, 1798. Charles Alexandre Lesueur’s ‘Plan de la ville de Sydney’, and ‘Plan de Port Jackson’, 1802. ‘View of a part of Sydney’, two sketches by Charles Alexandre Lesueur, 1802. Sydney from the north shore (detail), painting by Joseph Lycett, 1817. ‘A view of the cove and part of Sydney, New South Wales, taken from Dawe’s Battery’, sketch by James Wallis, engraving by Walter Preston 1817-18 (SLM). ‘A view of the cove and part of Sydney’ (from Dawes Battery), attributed to Joseph Lycett, 1819-20. Watercolour sketch looking west from Farm Cove (Woolloomooloo) to Fort Macquarie (Opera House site) and Fort Phillip, early 1820s. -
2018 Program
PAGE 1 PAGE A Workshop in Rural and Urban Stream Management Principles and Practices 29 October - 2 November 2018 Venue: George Kerferd Hotel, Beechworth Presented by North East Catchment Management Authority Department of Environment, Land, Water & Planning Jacobs Centre for Freshwater Ecosystems – La Trobe University River Basin Management Society Alluvium Consulting Pty Ltd Charles Sturt University Water Technology Arthur Rylah Institute for Environmental Research Testimonial: Dr Jamie Pittock Transforming River Management - What Works? As a land of “drought and flooding rains” Australia has had more reason than most countries to PAGE 2 PAGE experiment with innovative river management. However, despite considerable investments, our river management institutions have struggled to break out of the “hydro-illogical cycle” of short term fixes following extreme events, which then unravel. I venture to suggest that the Murray- Darling Basin Plan will need reform to avoid this fate. In this presentation I will focus on what Australia can learn from other countries from my research on six rivers and nine jurisdictions. A key question is why did significant reform persist, or not, in these cases where societies implemented major changes? Further, how can we apply these lessons to emerging threats to river health, such as from societal responses to climate change? Jamie Pittock Dr Jamie Pittock Dr Jamie Pittock (BSc, Monash; PhD, ANU) is Associate Professor in the Fenner School of Associate Professor Environment and Society at The Australian National University. Fenner School of Environment and Society He is also Director of International Programs for the UNESCO Chair in Water at ANU. Jamie Australian National University worked for environmental organisations in Australia and internationally from 1989-2007, including as Director of WWF’s Global Freshwater Programme from 2001-2007. -
Sydneyœsouth Coast Region Irrigation Profile
SydneyœSouth Coast Region Irrigation Profile compiled by Meredith Hope and John O‘Connor, for the W ater Use Efficiency Advisory Unit, Dubbo The Water Use Efficiency Advisory Unit is a NSW Government joint initiative between NSW Agriculture and the Department of Sustainable Natural Resources. © The State of New South Wales NSW Agriculture (2001) This Irrigation Profile is one of a series for New South Wales catchments and regions. It was written and compiled by Meredith Hope, NSW Agriculture, for the Water Use Efficiency Advisory Unit, 37 Carrington Street, Dubbo, NSW, 2830, with assistance from John O'Connor (Resource Management Officer, Sydney-South Coast, NSW Agriculture). ISBN 0 7347 1335 5 (individual) ISBN 0 7347 1372 X (series) (This reprint issued May 2003. First issued on the Internet in October 2001. Issued a second time on cd and on the Internet in November 2003) Disclaimer: This document has been prepared by the author for NSW Agriculture, for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales, in good faith on the basis of available information. While the information contained in the document has been formulated with all due care, the users of the document must obtain their own advice and conduct their own investigations and assessments of any proposals they are considering, in the light of their own individual circumstances. The document is made available on the understanding that the State of New South Wales, the author and the publisher, their respective servants and agents accept no responsibility for any person, acting on, or relying on, or upon any opinion, advice, representation, statement of information whether expressed or implied in the document, and disclaim all liability for any loss, damage, cost or expense incurred or arising by reason of any person using or relying on the information contained in the document or by reason of any error, omission, defect or mis-statement (whether such error, omission or mis-statement is caused by or arises from negligence, lack of care or otherwise). -
31 January 2006 Mowamba Aqueduct Recommissioned the Mowamba
Date: 31 January 2006 Subject: Mowamba Aqueduct Recommissioned The Mowamba Aqueduct has been recommissioned concluding the temporary arrangement of water borrowing to the Snowy River via the Mowamba Weir. The recommissioning enables the 3 kms of the Snowy River closest to the dam to now receive the volume of environmental flows that was intended and described in the outcome of the environmental studies conducted during the Snowy Water Inquiry. The recommissioning of the aqueduct was undertaken in accordance with the provisions of the Snowy Water Licence. Those provisions are as agreed between the Commonwealth, New South Wales and Victorian Governments on corporatisation of the Snowy Mountains Scheme in June 2002. It now means that environmental flows to the Snowy River will be fully provided from Jindabyne Dam, as agreed to by the New South Wales, Victorian and Commonwealth Governments and as Snowy Hydro Limited has been directed. Those flows are now occurring. Snowy Hydro Limited Managing Director, Mr Terry Charlton, said: “The recommissioning of the aqueduct means that the Snowy River immediately downstream of Jindabyne Dam is receiving a higher volume of environmental flows. This is the outcome we all wanted.” “Further downstream at Dalgety and beyond, the environmental flow in the Snowy River is the same as the Snowy River was receiving before the recommissioning - and of course we will continue to additionally maintain a riparian flow down the Mowamba River below the Weir.” “Snowy Hydro has undertaken this work as part of our obligations under the Snowy Water Licence.” “Transferring an amount of water from the Mowamba River into Lake Jindabyne and then into the Snowy River is integral and critical to the water release arrangements that required the company to spend over $90 million upgrading and modifying the Jindabyne Dam, including works that enable us to release only oxygenated water from the top surface of the dam. -
AIA REGISTER Jan 2015
AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS REGISTER OF SIGNIFICANT ARCHITECTURE IN NSW BY SUBURB Firm Design or Project Architect Circa or Start Date Finish Date major DEM Building [demolished items noted] No Address Suburb LGA Register Decade Date alterations Number [architect not identified] [architect not identified] circa 1910 Caledonia Hotel 110 Aberdare Street Aberdare Cessnock 4702398 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] circa 1905 Denman Hotel 143 Cessnock Road Abermain Cessnock 4702399 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] 1906 St Johns Anglican Church 13 Stoke Street Adaminaby Snowy River 4700508 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] undated Adaminaby Bowling Club Snowy Mountains Highway Adaminaby Snowy River 4700509 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] circa 1920 Royal Hotel Camplbell Street corner Tumut Street Adelong Tumut 4701604 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] 1936 Adelong Hotel (Town Group) 67 Tumut Street Adelong Tumut 4701605 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] undated Adelonia Theatre (Town Group) 84 Tumut Street Adelong Tumut 4701606 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] undated Adelong Post Office (Town Group) 80 Tumut Street Adelong Tumut 4701607 [architect not identified] [architect not identified] undated Golden Reef Motel Tumut Street Adelong Tumut 4701725 PHILIP COX RICHARDSON & TAYLOR PHILIP COX and DON HARRINGTON 1972 Akuna Bay Marina Liberator General San Martin Drive, Ku-ring-gai Akuna Bay Warringah