SA Regional Development Australia Regions

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SA Regional Development Australia Regions South Australia Regional Development Australia Regions Amata (! Mimili (! Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Mintabie (! Far North Coober Pedy Unincorporated SA Unincorporated SA Maralinga Tjarutja Roxby Downs Leigh Creek (! Woomera Unincorporated SA (! Whyalla and Eyre Peninsula Flinders Ceduna Ranges (!Ceduna Port Augusta Renmark Paringa Berri and Barmera Streaky Bay Streaky Bay (! Whyalla Wudinna (! Whyalla Kimba Yorke and Unincorporated SA Franklin Mid-North Elliston Elliston Harbour Burra (! Cleve (! Tumby (! Lower Eyre Bay Renmark Peninsula Port Victoria (! Barossa Mid Loxton Waikerie Port Lincoln Murray (! Adelaide (! Karoonda Adelaide Murray East Murray Port Lincoln Bridge Murraylands Southern Kingscote and Riverland Mallee (! The Coorong Adelaide Hills, Fleurieu and Kangaroo Island Tatiara Limestone Kingston No Local Government Area Kingston S.E. (! Coast boundaries displayed Naracoorte & (see Adelaide Map) Lucindale Robe Regional Development Australia Wattle Range Mount South Australia Regions (! Gambier Mount Gambier Grant Towns/Populated Places (! Town (! Rural City (! State Capital Local Government Area Boundaries Local Government Areas SA RDA Regions Adelaide Adelaide Hills, Fleurieu and Kangaroo Island Barossa Whyalla and Eyre Peninsula Far North Limestone Coast Murraylands and Riverland Yorke and Mid-North Prepared August 2009 by the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government using 2009 Local Government Area boundaries as supplied by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Second Revision: March 2010 0 200 4 Kilometers Australian, state and territory governments working together to develop Australia’s regions For further information visit www.rda.gov.au.
Recommended publications
  • To Download the Whyalla Trip Guide
    c/- Adelaide University Sport, University of Adelaide, SA 5005 Whyalla Trip Guide General Trip Overview Revision 0 (compiled by David Warren 30/05/2018) Whyalla Trip Guide Rev0 Page 1 Adelaide University Scuba Diving Club Table of contents Table of contents ......................................................................................................................... 2 1 Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 3 2 Location ............................................................................................................................... 4 2.1 Accommodation .................................................................................................................................... 6 3 Finances ............................................................................................................................... 7 4 Diving ................................................................................................................................... 8 4.1 Shore Sites ............................................................................................................................................. 8 4.1.1 Stony Point ............................................................................................................................................................................. 8 4.1.2 Black Point .............................................................................................................................................................................
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  • River Health in the Mid North the Map Provides an Overall Assessment of the Health of Individual Sites in the Region
    Mayfly nymph (Koorrnonga inconspicua) Aquatic macroinvertebrates in the Mid North The region is biologically diverse, with over 380 types of aquatic macroinvertebrates having been collected from 1994–1999. The most common members include amphipod crustaceans (e.g. Pseudomoera species and Austrochiltonia australis), blackfly larvae (Simulium ornatipes), oligochaetes (worms), chironomid midge larvae (Chironomus species), molluscs (hydrobiid snails) and nematodes (roundworms). A number of rare and uncommon macroinvertebrates are also found in the region. They include bristle worms (polychaete worms from the family Syllidae) found in the main channel of the Broughton River, as well as from the lower Rocky River and Mary Springs. These worms are normally found in marine and estuarine environments and their widespread presence in the Broughton catchment was unexpected. Other interesting records include horsehair worms (Gordiidae) from Skillogallee Creek, and planorbid snails (Gyraulus species) from the Light River at Mingays Waterhole. There are also three rare blackfly larvae that occur in the region: Austrosimulium furiosum from the Broughton River, Simulium melatum from Mary Springs and Paracnephia species from Belalie Creek. Among the rarer midges in the area are Podonomopsis from Eyre Creek, Apsectrotanypus from the Light River at Kapunda and Harrissius from the Wakefield River. Mayflies such as Offadens sp. 5 and Centroptilum elongatum, from the Broughton River and Mary Springs respectively, were unusual records, as were the presence of several caddisflies (e.g. Apsilochorema gisbum, Taschorema evansi, Orphninotrichia maculata and Lingora aurata) from Skillogallee and Eyre creeks, Mary Springs and the lower Broughton River. Mayfly nymphs (e.g. Koorrnonga inconspicua) have flattened bodies that allow them to cling to rocks in flowing streams.
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  • Whyalla and Eyre Peninsula
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  • Eyre and Western Region Plan a Volume of the South Australian Planning Strategy
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  • Annual Report 2011/2012 PART 1
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  • Heavy Metal Contamination in the Northern Spencer Gulf
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  • Access Network Changes February 2018
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  • Whyalla & Pt Augusta Program
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  • Mid North Region Plan a Volume of the South Australian Planning Strategy
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  • Written Submission
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  • GRDC Southern Region Scoping Study
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