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Taylors Hill-Werribee South Sunbury-Gisborne Hurstbridge-Lilydale Wandin East-Cockatoo Pakenham-Mornington South West
TAYLORS HILL-WERRIBEE SOUTH SUNBURY-GISBORNE HURSTBRIDGE-LILYDALE WANDIN EAST-COCKATOO PAKENHAM-MORNINGTON SOUTH WEST Metro/Country Postcode Suburb Metro 3200 Frankston North Metro 3201 Carrum Downs Metro 3202 Heatherton Metro 3204 Bentleigh, McKinnon, Ormond Metro 3205 South Melbourne Metro 3206 Albert Park, Middle Park Metro 3207 Port Melbourne Country 3211 LiQle River Country 3212 Avalon, Lara, Point Wilson Country 3214 Corio, Norlane, North Shore Country 3215 Bell Park, Bell Post Hill, Drumcondra, Hamlyn Heights, North Geelong, Rippleside Country 3216 Belmont, Freshwater Creek, Grovedale, Highton, Marhsall, Mt Dunede, Wandana Heights, Waurn Ponds Country 3217 Deakin University - Geelong Country 3218 Geelong West, Herne Hill, Manifold Heights Country 3219 Breakwater, East Geelong, Newcomb, St Albans Park, Thomson, Whington Country 3220 Geelong, Newtown, South Geelong Anakie, Barrabool, Batesford, Bellarine, Ceres, Fyansford, Geelong MC, Gnarwarry, Grey River, KenneQ River, Lovely Banks, Moolap, Moorabool, Murgheboluc, Seperaon Creek, Country 3221 Staughtonvale, Stone Haven, Sugarloaf, Wallington, Wongarra, Wye River Country 3222 Clilon Springs, Curlewis, Drysdale, Mannerim, Marcus Hill Country 3223 Indented Head, Port Arlington, St Leonards Country 3224 Leopold Country 3225 Point Lonsdale, Queenscliffe, Swan Bay, Swan Island Country 3226 Ocean Grove Country 3227 Barwon Heads, Breamlea, Connewarre Country 3228 Bellbrae, Bells Beach, jan Juc, Torquay Country 3230 Anglesea Country 3231 Airleys Inlet, Big Hill, Eastern View, Fairhaven, Moggs -
Governance of the Great Ocean Road Region Issues Paper
Governance of the Great Ocean Road Region Issues Paper Governance of the GREAT OCEAN ROAD REGION Issues Paper i Dormant Tower Hill Volcano Over Moyjil - Point Ritchie 14 public entities Aboriginal site possibly up to 2/3 80,000 journeys are years old day trips Nearly 170,000 hectares of Crown land Up to 11,000 visitors Over a day to the 12 Apostles 200 shipwrecks 5.4m visitors spent $1.3b 2cm/yr generating the rate at which the cliffs are being eroded Traditional 2 Owner groups From 1846, the 12 Apostles were once known as limestone Traditional lands of “The Sow and Piglets” 7 stacks (out of Eastern Maar (western and the original 9), middle stretches) and the known as the Wadawurrung (eastern end) 12 Apostles B100 The Great Ocean Road 8.1m is the world’s visitors projected largest war Infographic In in the next memorial 2011 decade Added to the National Heritage List Rip Curl Pro at Bells Beach is the world’s longest running 2 surfing competition National Parks 24,000 Number of people in Lorne during the Pier to Pub (up from normal population of 1,000) 9,200 jobs 2 in the year 1983 Ash Wednesday bushfires destroyed Marine National ending June 2017 Parks 42,000 and 729 hectares houses 3 2015 Wye River bushfire destroyed Marine National Sanctuaries and Rare polar dinosaur 2,260 115 fossil sites hectares houses The Great Ocean Road Taskforce proudly acknowledges the Eastern Maar and Wadawurrung people as the traditional custodians of the Great Ocean Road Region1. -
List of Parishes in the State of Victoria
List of Parishes in the State of Victoria Showing the County, the Land District, and the Municipality in which each is situated. (extracted from Township and Parish Guide, Department of Crown Lands and Survey, 1955) Parish County Land District Municipality (Shire Unless Otherwise Stated) Acheron Anglesey Alexandra Alexandra Addington Talbot Ballaarat Ballaarat Adjie Benambra Beechworth Upper Murray Adzar Villiers Hamilton Mount Rouse Aire Polwarth Geelong Otway Albacutya Karkarooc; Mallee Dimboola Weeah Alberton East Buln Buln Melbourne Alberton Alberton West Buln Buln Melbourne Alberton Alexandra Anglesey Alexandra Alexandra Allambee East Buln Buln Melbourne Korumburra, Narracan, Woorayl Amherst Talbot St. Arnaud Talbot, Tullaroop Amphitheatre Gladstone; Ararat Lexton Kara Kara; Ripon Anakie Grant Geelong Corio Angahook Polwarth Geelong Corio Angora Dargo Omeo Omeo Annuello Karkarooc Mallee Swan Hill Annya Normanby Hamilton Portland Arapiles Lowan Horsham (P.M.) Arapiles Ararat Borung; Ararat Ararat (City); Ararat, Stawell Ripon Arcadia Moira Benalla Euroa, Goulburn, Shepparton Archdale Gladstone St. Arnaud Bet Bet Ardno Follett Hamilton Glenelg Ardonachie Normanby Hamilton Minhamite Areegra Borug Horsham (P.M.) Warracknabeal Argyle Grenville Ballaarat Grenville, Ripon Ascot Ripon; Ballaarat Ballaarat Talbot Ashens Borung Horsham Dunmunkle Audley Normanby Hamilton Dundas, Portland Avenel Anglesey; Seymour Goulburn, Seymour Delatite; Moira Avoca Gladstone; St. Arnaud Avoca Kara Kara Awonga Lowan Horsham Kowree Axedale Bendigo; Bendigo -
Biodiversity Assessment: Cape Otway Road, Australia
Final Report Biodiversity Assessment: Cape Otway Road, Australia Prepared for COESR Pty Ltd January 2018 Ecology and Heritage Partners Pty Ltd MELBOURNE: 292 Mt Alexander Road, Ascot Vale VIC 3032 GEELONG: 230 Latrobe Terrace, Geelong West Vic 3218 BRISBANE: Level 22, 127 Creek Street, Brisbane QLD 4000 ADELAIDE: 22 Greenhill Road, Wayville SA 5034 CANBERRA: PO Box 6067, O’Connor ACT 2602 SYDNEY: Level 5, 616 Harris Street, Ultimo, NSW, 2007 www.ehpartners.com.au | (03) 9377 0100 DOCUMENT CONTROL Assessment Biodiversity Assessment Address Cape Otway Road, Australia Project number 7689 Project Manager Shannon LeBel (Senior Botanist) Report Reviewer Andrew Hill (Director/Principal Ecologist) Other EHP staff Andrew Taylor (Consultant Zoologist) Mapping Monique Elsley (GIS Coordinator) File name 7689_EHP_BA_CORA_Finalv3_31012018 Client COESR Pty Ltd Bioregion Victorian Volcanic Plain and Otway Plain CMA Corangamite Council Surf Coast Shire Report versions Comments Comments updated by Date submitted Draft v1 - 22/09/2017 Incorporation of results from additional field Final investigations; Addressed comments provided by AT/SLB 27/11/2017 Tract and Surf Coast Shire Council. Updated Masterplan; Addressed preliminary Finalv2 SLB 28/01/2018 comments provided by DELWP Minor amendment to FFG Act text and Finalv2 SLB 31/01/2018 Minimisation Statement. Acknowledgements We thank the following people for their contribution to the project: Simon Loader (Tract Consultants) for project information; Daryl Pelchen (Daryl Pelchen Architects) for providing project and site information; The landowners who provided access to the study area; The Victorian Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning for access to ecological databases. Copyright © Ecology and Heritage Partners Pty Ltd This document is subject to copyright and may only be used for the purposes for which it was commissioned. -
Surf-Coast-Shire-Map-Aireys-Inlet.Pdf
Bambra BAMBRA DVE TK RD Creek SURF COAST WALK Lookout Hill PONDS Ironbark Painkalac Gorge HOME OF THE SPLIT POINT CREEK Coast through living landscapes Creek RD IRONBARK Distillery LIGHTHOUSE DUCK Painkalac Offering natural beauty and easy Dam GENTLE DISTILLERY access, the 44km Surf Coast Distillery Creek Picnic Area Painkalac Walk lets you relax and enjoy a ANNIE world-class walking destination at Great Otway RD BOUNDARY National Park BAMBRA RD your own pace. Explore inspiring landscapes on foot or bike beyond Anglesea Moggs BIMBADEEN the edge of Victoria’s beautiful Great Creek MOGGS Ocean Road. N TK RD 0 1 km B100 Relish the rich ochre of the Bells DR Scale COACH Beach cliffs, the deep blue of Bass Moggs Creek Picnic Area Aireys BOYD Strait and the leafy green of eucalypt OLD TK Creek Inlet forests. Discover ancient Aboriginal AV DR traditions, fascinating surf culture FOREST LIALEETA YARRIN Coalmine SHEOAK Hang Gliding CR Surf and abundant wildlife as the Walk YANDANA GA Launching RD Coast RD Walk Place Pole RD connects you with the coastal town COALMINE TK Spion Kopp RD House Creek comforts of Torquay, Anglesea and B100 Fairhaven Fairhaven OCEAN Split Point Aireys Inlet. Eastern Beach AIREYSINLET.ORG.AU GREAT Moggs Creek View Great Ocean Road Whether you’re a nature lover or a Memorial Arch fun lover, whether you take an hour, Lorne BASS STRAIT ONE OF THE COAST’S OLDEST SETTLEMENTS, AIREYS INLET HAS a day or a week, the Surf Coast GROWN AROUND THE FAMOUS SPLIT POINT LIGHTHOUSE INTO A Walk puts a stunning and unique BEAUTIFUL HOLIDAY VILLAGE WITH BREATHTAKING SCENERY AND AN coastal environment within easy reach. -
The Croaker 2014 08 August
THE croaker Correspondence to: the Editors via email: [email protected] Volume 7 No. 4 August 2014 Editors Deb Campbell & Jane Gorman Telstra is coming to the Marsh: Meeting Wednesday August 20th at 5.00pm—7.00pm ADSL & 4G For Deans Marsh: Deans Marsh and district is embarking on a quest to work with Telstra to help us upgrade all our communica- tions systems so that they do actually communicate. We have already collected a list of 50 interested com- munity members to show we are serious. Now we need to assemble and ask questions and put our case. When I first moved to the Marsh from Lorne, I was told by Customer Service in rather triumphal tones ‘Deans Marsh doesn’t have ADSL and it never will’. But it appears this is not necessarily the case. Our neighbours in Lorne and Birregurra campaigned for ADSL and succeeded: now it is our turn. Deans Marsh is right in the middle of one of Victoria’s most fire-prone areas. We have increasing numbers of visitors travelling through whose phones and sat navs do not work here. We also have residents whose mo- biles do not work in their own homes, let alone anywhere outside. We also have expensive and inadequate internet. We are hoping to work with Telstra to make real changes; the first step is a demonstration of support from us all. Anyone who is around 5kms from the Deans Marsh exchange should be able to get ADSL, and a 4G tower would help everyone, including visitors and travellers. -
Cape Otway Road Australia
Planning and Environment Act 1987 Development Advisory Committee Stage 1 Report Cape Otway Road Australia 17 April 2019 Planning and Environment Act 1987 Development Advisory Committee Stage 1 Report Cape Otway Road Australia 17 April 2019 Kathy Mitchell, Chair William O’Neil, Deputy Chair Elissa Bell, Member Adrian Vlok, Member Cape Otway Road Australia Development Advisory Committee Stage 1 Report 17 April 2019 Contents Page 1 Introduction ..............................................................................................................1 1.1 The Project............................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Site location ............................................................................................................. 3 1.3 Appointment and Terms of Reference .................................................................... 4 1.4 Issues review, inception briefing and site inspection ............................................. 6 1.5 Purpose of this Report ............................................................................................. 7 2 Planning and land use ...............................................................................................9 2.1 Background information and issues ........................................................................ 9 2.2 Strategic and statutory planning context ................................................................ 9 2.3 Discussion ............................................................................................................. -
V I F M & P V I F M & P
VMPi VIICTORIAN NITIATIVE FMOR INERALS &P ETROLEUM HYDROCARBON P ROSPECTIVITY P ACKAGE F OR VIC/O-01(1), VIC/O-01(2) andVIC/O-01(3) , E ASTERN O NSHORE O TWAY B ASIN, VAICTORIA, USTRALIA: 2001 ACREAGE R ELEASE VIMP REPORT 70 A.E. CONSTANTINE N. LIBERMAN November 2001 KYNETON PEP160 BALLARAT AREA OF INTEREST HAMILTON MELBOURNE PEP151 PEP150 LARA PEP159 GEELONG VIC/O-01(1) VIC/O-01(3) PEP152 (b) COBDEN 200m COLAC PORTLAND PEP154(a) VIC/P46 1000m PEP153 VIC/O-01(2) VIC/P44 2000m 3000m VIC/P43 0 10 20 30 40 50 Km 4000m 2001 acreage release . VIMP Report 70 Hydrocarbon prospectivity package for VIC/O-01(1), VIC/O-01(2) and VIC/O-01(3), Eastern Onshore Otway Basin, Victoria, Australia 2001 Acreage Release A. Constantine and N. Liberman November 2001 Bibliographic reference: CONSTANTINE, A. and LIBERMAN, N., 2001. Hydrocarbon Prospectivity Package for VIC/O-01(1), VIC/O-01(2) and VIC/O-01(3), Eastern Onshore Otway Basin, Victoria, Australia. 2001 Acreage Release. Victorian Initiative for Minerals and Petroleum Report 70. Department of Natural Resources and Environment. © Crown (State of Victoria) Copyright 2001 Petroleum Development ISSN 1323 4536 ISBN 0 7306 9472 0 (Hard Copy) ISBN 0 7306 9473 9 (CD-ROM) This report may be purchased from: Business Centre Minerals & Petroleum Department of Natural Resources and Environment 8th Floor, 240 Victoria Parade East Melbourne, Victoria 3002, Australia For further technical information contact: Manager Petroleum Development Department of Natural Resources and Environment PO Box 500 East Melbourne, Victoria 3002, Australia Website: www.nre.vic.gov.au/minpet/index.htm Authorship and Acknowledgments: The package was compiled and collated by the Basin Studies Group of the Petroleum Development Unit. -
Thomas Butson PEARSE 15 - 108
Thomas PEARSE Family Tree Family Tree of Thomas Pearse 1775 – 18?? & Mary Butson 1775 – 1827 and their descendants Revised – 7th December 2019 – V50 Copyright © - Stewart Robert McConachy 2016 – NO unauthorised use or reproduction permitted 1 Thomas PEARSE Family Tree INTRODUCTION The Pearse Family Tree has been created as a series of vertical charts. The lines on the left side of each page represent the generations. The relevant ancestors are listed at the top of each page. The names of children all touch the line coming directly from the name of their Pearse parent. This index includes all known people of the Pearse family. Women are indexed under their maiden/family name only. Where maiden/family names are not known, married names are used. These entries are indicated thus * Where two or more people have the same name, the year of birth is given. If further identification is required, the line from which they come is indicated, such as (J) for John. Descendants of Maxine Mauldin b 1944 and Baden Sylvester Hooper b 1929 are shown in the Samuel and George McConachy lines. Descendants of Sarah Taylor Pearse 1846 - 1920 and Robert McConachy 1829 - 1918 appear in the Robert McConachy line. Descendants of Robert William Scammell b 1935 and Betty Victoria McConachy b 1935 appear twice in the Thomas Butson line. Joanne Gai Scammell & Craig Norman Sheather appear twice in the Thomas Butson line. We now have 3000 plus people recorded in the Pearse family tree. We would like to continue recording the Pearse Family Tree and it would be appreciated if you would make a note in your diary each year to email or post to us an update of your section of the family. -
DEEP-WATER GIPPSLAND a New Frontier
DEEP-WATER GIPPSLAND A New Frontier • Deep water structures revealed by contemporary seismic and high resolution aeromagnetics • Gippsland petroleum systems extend into new acreage • Potential play-fairways identified PESA News April/May 2000 VICTORIAN SUPPLEMENT MINISTER’S STATEMENT VICTORIAN SUPPLEMENT he discovery of Australia's first giant petroleum fields in Bass Strait in the 1960's had a profound effect on both the Victorian and national economies. Major petrochemical industries and many other manufacturing and Tprofessional businesses are located in the State, largely because of the proximity to the oil and gas reserves in offshore Gippsland. As major a population and infrastructure base, the State provides employees and support for these companies as well as markets for their products. The Australian corporate headquarters of Exxon-Mobil, BP-Amoco and Shell are all located in Melbourne, as well as smaller active oil companies. Victoria is well served by its growing gas infrastructure. With coal fired electricity, the state has benefited from an abundance of energy sources, providing the most competitive energy pricing to business and domestic consumers in the nation. The value of the resource extracted from the basins within Victoria and its Adjacent Area offshore exceeds $3 Billion per year. Although the State realises only a small portion of direct revenue from royalties, it is in the indirect benefit of having a local supply of oil and gas providing the ongoing relatively inexpensive energy that adds so much value to the State. The Brack's Government was elected in 1999 with a mandate to increase energy supply security in the wake of the Longford tragedy in 1998. -
Lake Modewarre Water Quality 2004–05
LAKE MODEWARRE WATER QUALITY 2004–05 Publication 1018 December 2005 1. SUMMARY EPA has found the lake continues to support an abundance of water bugs and bird life. Given EPA Victoria has investigated the water quality of Lake sufficient rainfall, Lake Modewarre should recover Modewarre following reports of two large fish kills and be able to support freshwater fish in the future. (carp and eels) in the summer of 2004–05. Eels in healthy condition were caught by EPA did not find evidence of fish disease or pollution in recreational anglers in Lake Modewarre in late 2005. Lake Modewarre and has concluded that water quality EPA will continue to monitor the health of Lake in Lake Modewarre has been affected by an extended Modewarre along with a number of lakes it is period of below-average rainfall. monitoring in the Western District. The results will Low rainfall and changes in the catchment have resulted contribute to the establishment of ecological in low water levels, rising salinity and high summer guidelines for assessing the environmental quality water temperatures. The combined effects of these of Victoria’s lakes. drought-related impacts appear to have made the lake 2. LAKE MODEWARRE unfavourable to some aquatic life and are the most likely cause of the 2004–05 carp deaths in the lake. Lake Modewarre is situated 30 km south-west of Geelong. It is a relatively shallow crater lake: in 2005 The eel deaths may also have been related to drought, the lake was around two metres deep. However, it or to eel deaths seen in other waterways (see EPA has reportedly varied between being 11 metres deep Publication 1013, Eel Deaths in Victoria, 2004–05). -
A Review of Historic Western Victorian Lake Conditions in Relation to Fish Deaths
A REVIEW OF HISTORIC WESTERN VICTORIAN LAKE CONDITIONS IN RELATION TO FISH DEATHS Publication 1108 March 2007 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Eel deaths occurred in waterways across Victoria from 2004 to 2006. EPA Victoria worked with responsible agencies to investigate the cause of the deaths. An information gap was identified regarding changes throughout the catchments over time. Much of this knowledge had not been documented formally and was difficult to assess. It is important to note that this report is based on a number of published accounts of the historical timeline as well as utilising personal accounts of history. Therefore there may be small discrepancies in exact dates. Anecdotal evidence and unpublished reports of the history of lakes Modewarre, Bolac and Colac indicate that, over the past 150 years, all lakes in the Western District have shown a distinct pattern of drying out during periods of extended drought. As early as 1846 the lakes showed signs of drying, which would indicate that any fish within those lakes also died due to lack of good quality water. The three lakes examined have been stocked by landholders, recreational anglers or commercial eel fishermen to hold the current stock of fish and eels. The catchments in which each lake sits have undergone changes, including culverts being developed to reduce flooding, the size of water storage reservoirs being increased and changes in agricultural practices. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS EPA would like to formally acknowledge the contribution of all those who assisted with the research into the Western District lakes. Much information was held in the minds of those who visit the lakes regularly for recreation, farming and lifestyle, and it is this that has provided such broad insight into one of Victoria’s precious resources.