THEMATIC STUDY of the Cultural Landscape of Queensland

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

THEMATIC STUDY of the Cultural Landscape of Queensland REPORT 2: ThematicStud a Investigating Queensland's Cultural Landscapes: CONTESTED TERRAINS Series n d REPORT 2: THEMATIC STUDY of the CULTURAL y i oftheCulturalLandsca n t LANDSCAPE of QUEENSLAND e r A multi-theoretical analysis of Queensland history p using the themes of climate, land, development, perception, people and landscape, and interpreting the landscape as text. p r es ofQueensland e t Jeannie Sim THEMATIC STUDY of the CULTURAL LANDSCAPE ing the landscape as text. of QUEENSLAND Edited by Jeannie Sim FRONT COVER: Water tank on stumps, Heathland Station, Cape York, from Telegraph Road (Photographer: Delwynn Poulton 1992) Published by Cultural Landscape Research Unit, Investigating Queensland's Cultural School of Design and Built Environment, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, AUSTRALIA. Landscapes: CONTESTED TERRAINS Investigating Queensland's Cultural Landscapes: CONTESTED TERRAINS Series Report 2: THEMATIC STUDY OF THE Cultural Landscape OF Queensland Verily, there seems pressing need of a new apostle to go to and fro in the land, preaching everywhere what Ruskin calls the "duty of delight." A love of nature is just as much a matter of cultivation as a love of virtue or of knowledge, or any other desirable mental state, and its attainment must always form an essential part of every right education. That any life should ever be allowed to grow stale, flat, and unprofitable when there is much to learn and enjoy, is one of the mysteries. See to it, brothers and sisters – you dwellers in the quiet homes scattered over the hillsides, through the valleys, and on the broad plains of our country – see to it, that you are not throwing away your birthright. Source: Mackay, Angus (1875) The Semi-Tropical Agriculturist and Colonists’ Guide . Brisbane: Slater & Co. pg. 16 Edited by Jeannie Sim PUBLISHING INFORMATION REPORT 2: Thematic Study of the Cultural Landscape of Queensland Edited by Jeannie Sim ISBN 1 86435 519 0 Published by Cultural Landscape Research Unit, Queensland University of Technology, GPO Box 2434, Brisbane, Qld. 4001 The Project "Investigating Queensland's Cultural Landscapes: CONTESTED TERRAINS" was funded by ARC-SPIRT grant (1997-1999). The participants in this project included members of the Cultural Landscape Research Unit (QUT) with the industry partner being the Queensland Government's Environmental Protection Agency (Cultural Heritage Branch). Investigating Queensland's Cultural Landscapes: CONTESTED TERRAINS Series Other publications from this project: REPORT 1: Setting the Theoretical Scene Edited by Helen Armstrong ISBN 1 86435 518 2 REPORT 3: Contests and Management Issues Edited by Helen Armstrong, Danny O'Hare and Jeannie Sim ISBN 1 86435 520 4 REPORT 4: Reports of the Case Studies Edited by Jeannie Sim and Helen Armstrong ISBN 1 86435 521 2 © Authors and Cultural Landscape Research Unit (QUT) 2001. ii TABLE of CONTENTS INTRODUCTORY Jeannie Sim vi Part 1: LANDSCAPE HISTORIES 1 CLIMATE: living in the tropics People and their Environment – Getting to Jeannie Sim 2 Know the Queensland Climate – White People can live in the Tropics – Shade and Sunshine in Tropical Queensland – Climate and Cultivation – Verandahs – Shady Urban Open Space – Conclusion. 2 LAND: as the focus of Queensland's History Aboriginal Queensland – Early European Brian Hudson 19 Settlement – The 1860s, 1870s and 1880s – The 1890s to 1915 – 1915-1980. 3 DEVELOPMENT: the prime agent of change Development as Progress – Establishing Danny O'Hare 24 Queensland as a Cultural Landscape of Progress – A Cultural Landscape of Development and Conflict – Conclusion. 4 MARGINAL GROUPS: the unofficial histories – Overview of Marginal Groups in Queensland Helen Armstrong 36 – Migration to Queensland: Politics of Race and 44 Class – Brief History of South Sea Islanders in Walter Baker 52 Queensland – Cultural Landscapes of the Australian South Sea Lincoln T. Hayes 56 Islanders: an indicative list of place types iii TABLE of CONTENTS Part 2: LANDSCAPE AWARENESS 5 PERCEPTION: perceiving is more than seeing – Perception and Environmental Psychology Jeannie Sim 61 – Determining Landscape Character 66 – The Physical Landscapes of Queensland Brian Hudson 70 – Landscape Design Theory Jeannie Sim 74 – Traditional Visual Analysis 80 – Landscape Meaning 83 6 PEOPLE AND LANDSCAPE: the Australian context – Perceptions of Australia as a New World Helen Armstrong 96 – Distance and Isolation Jeannie Sim 99 – Antipodean and European Visions 101 – Cultural Landscape Interpretation through the Helen Armstrong and 102 Arts Kim Watson – Attitudes to Nature : Visions of Landscape Jeannie Sim 112 – Being a Queenslander (Being Different?). 120 7 INTERPRETING LANDSCAPE AS TEXT Interpreting Landscape through Helen Armstrong 122 Phenomenological Hermeneutics List of Tables v List of Figures v iv LISTS of TABLES and FIGURES TABLES TABLE 1: Symbolic Linkages of People and Land 49 TABLE 2: Aesthetics (Tom Heath's Design Notes 1989) 64 TABLE 3: Physical Regions of Queensland: a comparison 67 TABLE 4: Biogeographic & Landscape Regions of Queensland 68 TABLE 5: Regional Classifications in Queensland 69 TABLE 6: Notes about Visual Elements and Design Principles 81 TABLE 7: Notes about Landscape Visual Assessment 82 TABLE 8: Eras in evolving Australia environmental visions and key elements 112 TABLE 9: Phases of the Phenomenological Method 124 TABLE 10: Criteria for Interpreting Texts 127 FIGURES FIGURE 1: Griffith Taylor's Features of Tropical Australia 2 FIGURE 2: Griffith Taylor's Predicted 'Crescent of Settlement' in Australia 4 FIGURE 3: Griffith Taylor's Natural Regions of Australia 7 FIGURE 4: Brunswick's Lens Model applied to Environmental Perception 63 v Thematic Study of Queensland of the Queensland Landscape". 2 This task INTRODUCTORY was soon recognised as too large and would not meet the immediate needs of the project. by Jeannie Sim (editor) Nonetheless, it remains a worthy future goal for those interested members of the research team. Finding some more appropriate model The purpose of the current thematic study is was required, and this process is reported in to provide a foundation for the interpretation the method section. To preface the thematic of cultural landscapes, with a focus on study, this introductory is divided into four Queensland, within Australia. Interpreting sections: determining the scope; developing cultural landscapes requires a theoretical a method; shaping a structure; and, writing field to achieve scholarly strength. In up the ideas. Australia, cultural landscape interpretations 1 have tended to be limited to heritage theory. Determining the Scope In order to broaden an understanding of the In Queensland, white settlement began in meanings embedded in Queensland's 1824 at Moreton Bay, but Aboriginal and cultural landscapes, a cultural theoretical Torres Strait Islander peoples lived here for field has been developed for this project thousands of years prior to that relatively which included a range of disciplinary recent date in history. Part of the landscape approaches including historiographical and histories included here, is the recognition of interpretative studies. many different groups and different influences, typically ignored in traditional The Thematic Study publication (Report 2) (socio-economic) histories. Thus, one major is one component of an ARC-SPIRT project objective in this thematic study was to be as called "Investigating Queensland's Cultural inclusive as possible in an effort to broaden Landscapes: CONTESTED TERRAINS", the scope or field of interest. Mixing lead by Professor Helen Armstrong at the different disciplines and their respective School of Design and Built Environment theoretical backgrounds proved a rewarding (formerly School of Design and Built strategy, with the work of physical and Environment) at the Queensland University cultural geographers being particularly of Technology (QUT) with industry partner helpful in this regard. While the scope of the Cultural Heritage Branch of the this thematic study is broad, it does not Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in pretend to be the complete or the most Queensland. Four Reports were prepared for comprehensive description. It is offered as a publication from this project – refer fresh approach to interpreting cultural publication information page. landscapes within the Queensland context. Preparing the historical background for the The collaborative effort of many members Contested Terrains project began with the of the research team (and invited colleagues) intention of writing a traditional and have produced a multi-dimensional and thorough history to be called "The Making theoretical rich result. This thematic study 1 For example: Armstrong, H.B. (1989), "Urban and Rural Avenues in the Australian Landscape." Landscape 2 Based on the excellent precedents set by Hoskins, W.G. Research. Vol. 14, No. 2. pp 22-26 ; Armstrong, H.B. (1988), The Making of the English Landscape . (first (1991) "Environmental Heritage Survey." unpublished published 1955), London: Penguin (reworked as: report for Cultural Landscape Research Unit, UNSW ; Hoskins, W.G. and Christopher Taylor (1992), The Taylor, K. (1989), "Conservation and Interpretation Making of the English Landscape . London: Hodder and Study of the Rural Heritage Landscape of the Lanyon- Stoughton); Rackham, Oliver (1986), The History of the Lambrigg Area ACT." In Historic Environment VII(2). Countryside . (2 nd edition 1995) London: J. M. Dent; and 16-23 ; Taylor, K. (1993), "Reading and interpreting
Recommended publications
  • Long-Term Population Growth in Regional Queensland
    LONG-TERM POPULATION GROWTH IN REGIONAL QUEENSLAND March 2015 LONG-TERM POPULATION GROWTH IN REGIONAL QUEENSLAND 1.0 INTRODUCTION Over a period of time, major changes have been taking place in the distribution of population in regional Queensland outside of the south-east corner of the State. This paper sets out: o This changing pattern and the leading role of Cairns and the Cairns region in this changing pattern; o Why this consistent pattern of change has been happening over a period of time; and o On a continuation of these long-term trends, what regional population in Queensland would look like by 2050. This paper has been prepared by Cummings Economics for the Cairns Regional Council. W S Cummings B Econ 38 Grafton St (PO Box 2148) Cairns Q 4870 Phones 07 4031 2888 / 0418 871 011 Email [email protected] Website www.cummings.net.au CUMMINGS ECONOMICS ABN: 99 734 489 175 Ref: J2806 March 2015 Page /33 2 LONG-TERM POPULATION GROWTH IN REGIONAL QUEENSLAND 2.0 THE QUEENSLAND REGIONS Queensland outside of the south-east corner of the State covers a large area. Realities of distances lead to the area being served by a series of regional capitals with distinct commercial servicing regions. Map 1 shows these regional capitals and the commercial regions they serve. In the case of Cairns, Townsville, Mackay and Toowoomba, the regional capitals and their commercial servicing areas are fairly clear. Although Rockhampton is the regional capital of the Fitzroy and Central West region, unlike Cairns, Townsville and Mackay, the region’s port is not located at the city, but 100km away at Gladstone.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural Heritage Series
    VOLUME 4 PART 1 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM CULTURAL HERITAGE SERIES © Queensland Museum PO Box 3300, South Brisbane 4101, Australia Phone 06 7 3840 7555 Fax 06 7 3846 1226 Email [email protected] Website www.qmuseum.qld.gov.au National Library of Australia card number ISSN 1440-4788 NOTE Papers published in this volume and in all previous volumes of the Memoirs of the Queensland Museum may be reproduced for scientific research, individual study or other educational purposes. Properly acknowledged quotations may be made but queries regarding the republication of any papers should be addressed to the Director. Copies of the journal can be purchased from the Queensland Museum Shop. A Guide to Authors is displayed at the Queensland Museum web site www.qmuseum.qld.gov.au/resources/resourcewelcome.html A Queensland Government Project Typeset at the Queensland Museum DR ERIC MJÖBERG’S 1913 SCIENTIFIC EXPLORATION OF NORTH QUEENSLAND’S RAINFOREST REGION ÅSA FERRIER Ferrier, Å. 2006 11 01: Dr Eric Mjöberg’s 1913 scientific exploration of North Queensland’s rainforest region. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, Cultural Heritage Series 4(1): 1-27. Brisbane. ISSN 1440-4788. This paper is an account of Dr Eric Mjöberg’s travels in the northeast Queensland rainforest region, where he went, what observations he made, and what types of Aboriginal material culture items he collected and returned with to Sweden in 1914. Mjöberg, a Swedish entomologist commissioned by the Swedish government to document rainforest fauna and flora, spent seven months in the tropical rainforest region of far north Queensland in 1913, mainly exploring areas around the Atherton Tablelands.
    [Show full text]
  • Araneae, Archaeidae) of Tropical North-Eastern Queensland Zookeys, 2012; 218(218):1-55
    PUBLISHED VERSION Michael G. Rix, and Mark S. Harvey Australian assassins, Part III: a review of the assassin spiders (Araneae, Archaeidae) of tropical north-eastern Queensland ZooKeys, 2012; 218(218):1-55 © Michael G. Rix, Mark S. Harvey. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Originally published at: http://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.218.3662 PERMISSIONS CC BY 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ http://hdl.handle.net/2440/86518 A peer-reviewed open-access journal ZooKeys 218:Australian 1–55 (2012) Assassins, Part III: A review of the Assassin Spiders (Araneae, Archaeidae)... 1 doi: 10.3897/zookeys.215.3662 MONOGRAPH www.zookeys.org Launched to accelerate biodiversity research Australian Assassins, Part III: A review of the Assassin Spiders (Araneae, Archaeidae) of tropical north-eastern Queensland Michael G. Rix1,†, Mark S. Harvey1,2,3,4,‡ 1 Department of Terrestrial Zoology, Western Australian Museum, Locked Bag 49, Welshpool DC, Perth, We- stern Australia 6986, Australia 2 Research Associate, Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA 3 Research Associate, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA 4 Adjunct Professor, School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, Perth, Western Australia 6009, Australia † urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:B7D4764D-B9C9-4496-A2DE-C4D16561C3B3 ‡ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:FF5EBAF3-86E8-4B99-BE2E-A61E44AAEC2C Corresponding author: Michael G.
    [Show full text]
  • MARCH 2021 SGAP Revisits Babinda Golf Course
    NEWSLETTER 208 MARCH 2021 SGAP revisits Babinda Golf Course Don Lawie Our first excursion for the new year was a return to the green field of Babinda Golf Club. The height of the wet season was upon us and we looked for a site that was botanically interesting and had shelter in case of rain. Babinda, Australia’s wettest town, is well set up for rainy days and we were welcomed by Golf Club members Peter and Patsy who are also SGAP members. On our visit in [Editors note: uncountable years ago] we had to to dodge the golfers as they played a round but today the god of rain had performed an apotropaic release flowing drains. The fairways are timber tree and suffering from an from their sysiphean task and we had delineated by rows of single trees, attack of myrtle rust. A notable the course to ourselves. About fifteen almost all of which are species native specimen, not native to the Babinda of us enjoyed a leisurely lunch and a to the area, supplied by native plant area, was possibly Austromullera valida, discussion of plants on the specimen enthusiasts including Nigel Tucker and from the high country of Mt Lewis, table. Stuart displayed a magnificent Rob Jago. They were planted about home of many rarities. metre long stem of Banksia robur with thirty years ago and are a lesson in two large inflorescences, a small piece how rainforest trees will grow when of fruit- bearing Finger Lime and a not associated with the close growth flowering Brachychiton vitifolius stem of their natural habitat.
    [Show full text]
  • Western Downs Regional Organisations of Council Freight
    Western Downs Regional Organisations of Council Freight Network Integration Issues and Opportunities Submission to Federal Government Enquiry Report May 2005 Contents 1. Introduction 1 1.1 Purpose 1 1.2 Western Downs Regional Organisation of Councils 1 1.3 The Transport Network 1 2. Role of the Transport Network 5 2.1 Overview 5 2.2 Freight Movement 5 2.3 Road Transport 7 2.4 Rail Transport 8 2.5 Intermodal Hubs 9 3. Relationship and Co-ordination between Road and Rail Networks and Ports 10 3.1 Overview 10 3.2 Port Capacities 10 3.3 Rail Capacities 11 3.4 Road Capacities 12 4. Potential Improvements 14 4.1 Land Transport Access to Ports 14 4.2 Capacity and Operation of Ports 17 4.3 Movement of Bulk Freight from Region 18 4.4 Intermodal Hubs 19 4.5 Existing Infrastructure Efficiencies 19 4.6 Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) Opportunities 20 Table Index Table 1 Road Operational Costs to the Port of Brisbane 7 Table 2 Road Operational Costs to the Port of Gladstone 8 Table 3 Rail Operational Costs from WDROC Intermodal Facility to Ports 9 Table 4 Indicative Rail Capacity (WDROC to Brisbane) 12 Table 5 Moura Line Additional Freight Capacity 12 41/14617/322471 Frieight Network Integration Issues and Opportunities Submission to Federal Government Enquiry Table 6 Road Capacity (WDROC to Brisbane) by Proportion of Heavy Vehicles (HV) in traffic Stream 13 Table 7 Maximum Achievable Mode Share Split Based on Current Infrastructure 13 Table 8 Road Travel Time to Ports of Brisbane and Gladstone 14 Table 9 Current Rail Travel Time to Ports
    [Show full text]
  • TTT-Trails-Collation-Low-Res.Pdf
    A Step Back in Time Pioneering History www.athertontablelands.com.au A Step Back in Time: Pioneering History Mossman Farmers, miners, explorers and Port Douglas soldiers all played significant roles in settling and shaping the Atherton Julatten Tablelands into the diverse region that Cpt Cook Hwy Mount Molloy it is today. Jump in the car and back in Palm Cove Mulligan Hwy time to discover the rich and colourful Kuranda history of the area. Cairns The Mareeba Heritage Museum and Visitor Kennedy HwyBarron Gorge CHILLAGOE SMELTERS National Park Information Centre is the ideal place to begin your Freshwater Creek State exploration of the region’s past. The Museum Mareeba Forest MAREEBA HERITAGE CENTRE showcases the Aboriginal history and early Kennedy Hwy Gordonvale settlement of the Atherton Tablelands, through to influx of soldiers during WW1 and the industries Chillagoe Bruce Hwy Dimbulah that shaped the area. Learn more about the places Bourke Developmental Rd YUNGABURRA VILLAGE Lappa ROCKY CREEK MEMORIAL PARK Tinaroo you’ll visit during your self drive adventure. Kairi Petford Tolga A drive to the township of Chillagoe will reward Yungaburra Lake Barrine Atherton those interested in the mining history of the Lake Eacham ATHERTON/HERBERTON RAILWAY State Forest Kennedy Hwy Atherton Tablelands. The Chillagoe smelters are HOU WANG TEMPLE Babinda heritage listed and offer a wonderful step back in Malanda Herberton - Petford Rd Herberton Wooroonooran National Park time for this once flourishing mining town. HERBERTON MINING MUSUEM Irvinbank Tarzali Lappa - Mt Garnet Rd The Chinese were considered pioneers of MALANDA DAIRY CENTRE agriculture in North Queensland and come 1909 HISTORIC VILLAGE HERBERTON Millaa Millaa Innisfailwere responsible for 80% of the crop production on Mungalli the Atherton Tablelands.
    [Show full text]
  • Bundy's Last Great Adventure"
    Diary: Bundy’s Last Great Adventure From 7 August to 10 September 2000, the Australian Narrow Gauge Railway Museum Society's Bundaberg Fowler and a film crew travelled to most of the Queensland cane mills. From the trip Larry Zetlin produced Bundy’s Last Great Adventure for Australian TV and a 55 min PAL video from Gulliver Media Australia. Two ANGRMS Society members, Bob Gough and Paul Rollason, took photographs and kept diaries during the trip. Bob’s notes cover the period 8-24 August from the point-of-view of an observer. Paul’s notes are more extensive and cover the whole trip from the perspective of a Bundy crew member. Monday 7 August: Nambour Bob (Observer): 8.00am Bundaberg Fowler Corporation 5, This year the rains came down at the rate of about 75mm per 0-6-2T, 2ft gauge, built under license from John Fowler in night and the weekend before BFC5 arrived the machines Bundaberg (commonly known as BFC5) was loaded onto a could not move around the fields to cut the cane. Monday low loader at Woodford and transported via the local jail to 7th evening, 90mm of rain was received in some of the cane Nambour. growing areas! BFC5 was invited to Nambour by Moreton Mill to haul sugar cane which coincided with their annual Sugar Festival Week. BFC5's area of responsibility is from the Howard Street Yard (easterly) to Moreton Mill (westerly), a distance of approximately 1km. The majority of the journey is up hill with a short flat section. Approximately 10 full trains are hauled per day, varying in length from either 45 or 50 bins.
    [Show full text]
  • WET TROPICS CONSERVATION STRATEGY (2004) the Conservation, Rehabilitation and Transmission to Future Generations of the Wet Tropics World Heritage Area
    WET TROPICS CONSERVATION STRATEGY (2004) The conservation, rehabilitation and transmission to future generations of the Wet Tropics World Heritage Area. ‘We shall never achieve harmony with land, any more than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people. In these higher aspirations the important thing is not to achieve, but to strive’. Aldo Leopold ‘Never does nature say one thing and wisdom another’. Juvenal ISBN 0-9752202-0-9 The Conservation Strategy was written by Campbell Clarke © Wet Tropics Management Authority (August 2004) and Alicia Hill. Many thanks to the other staff of the PO Box 2050 Cairns QLD 4870 Wet Tropics Management Authority and the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service for their generous assistance Phone: (07) 4052 0555 and support. Fax: (07) 4031 1364 Graphic design and layout by Shonart. This publication should be cited as Wet Tropics Management Authority (2004), Wet Tropics Conservation Strategy: the conservation, rehabilitation and transmission to future generations of the Wet Tropics World Heritage Area, WTMA, Cairns. This Wet Tropics Conservation Strategy does not necessarily reflect the views of the Australian and Queensland Governments. Maps are for planning purposes only. The Authority does not guarantee the accuracy or currency of data presented. For legal purposes, please refer to original sources. Cover photo: Cannabullen Falls: Doon McColl • Back Cover photo: Licuala palms: WTMA • Background Image: Society Flats: Campbell Clarke WET TROPICS CONSERVATION STRATEGY PREFACE The Wet Tropics World Heritage Area has a special place in the priorities inform the Wet Tropics Natural Resource hearts of our regional community, being central to our sense of Management Plan which governs the expenditure of NHT funds place and identity.
    [Show full text]
  • State Coastal Management Plan
    Schedule 1: Regional overviews The Queensland coast has been subdivided into eleven coastal regions for the purpose of preparing regional coastal plans. The regions’ boundaries are based on coastal local government boundaries. The overview for each region generally describes the region, its coastal resources, existing management and administration arrangements, and the key coastal management issues.18 The eleven coastal regions are illustrated in map 1. Map 3 shows the terrestrial and marine bioregions referred to in this schedule. Marine Terrestrial 145 E 140 E yy Arafura 1 Cape York Peninsula Carpentaria 2 Gulf Plains yy 10 S 1 1 Wellesley 3 Einasleigh Uplands Karumba-Nassau 4 Wet Tropical Rainforest yy yyyyyyyyy West Cape York 5 Mount Isa Inlier 1 Torres Strait 6 Gulf Fall Upland yy yyyyyyyyy | 1 East Cape York 7 Mitchell Grass Downs Weipa Ribbons 8 yyyyyyyyy Brigalow Belt North 1 1 Wet Tropic Coast 9 Central Queensland Coast Coen yyyyyyyyyy1 yyCentral Reef 10 Desert Uplands Lucinda-Mackay Coast 11 South Brigalow 1 1 yyyyyyy1 Mackay-Capricorn 12 South-east Queensland 15 S 1 1 Cooktown Pompey-Swains 13 Simpson-Strzelecki Dunefields yyyyyyyyyyyyyyy 2 4 Shoalwater Coast 14 NSW North Coast 3 Tweed-Moreton 2 2 15 Darling-Riverine Plain yyyyyy yyyCairns yy zy 2 Outer Provinces 2 16 New England Tableland 2 Atherton 4 6 2 Normanton 17 3 4 Nandewar yyyBurketownyyy yyy 2 3 18 Channel Country 6 Einasleigh 4 2 3 Ingham 2 19 Mulga Lands yyyyyyyy 2 3 5 3 Townsville {|{ 2 Ayr 5 2 yyyyyCharters Towers 8 20 S 3 Bowen 20
    [Show full text]
  • 13 APRIL 2018 Cairns Public Hearing—Inquiry Into the Vegetation Management and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2018
    STATE DEVELOPMENT, NATURAL RESOURCES AND AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE Members present: Mr CG Whiting MP (Chair) Mr DJ Batt MP Mr JE Madden MP Mr BA Mickelberg MP Ms JC Pugh MP Mr PT Weir MP Members in attendance: Mr SA Knuth MP Ms CL Lui MP Staff present: Dr J Dewar (Committee Secretary) PUBLIC HEARING—INQUIRY INTO THE VEGETATION MANAGEMENT AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2018 TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS FRIDAY, 13 APRIL 2018 Cairns Public Hearing—Inquiry into the Vegetation Management and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2018 FRIDAY, 13 APRIL 2018 ____________ Committee met at 12.03 pm. CHAIR: Good afternoon. I declare open this public hearing for the inquiry into the Vegetation Management and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2018. Thank you for your attendance here today. I acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we are meeting today and pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging. My name is Chris Whiting, the chair and member for Bancroft. The other committee members with me today are Mr Pat Weir, deputy chair and member for Condamine; Mr David Batt, the member for Bundaberg; Mr Jim Madden, the member for Ipswich West; Mr Brent Mickelberg, the member for Buderim; and Ms Jess Pugh, the member for Mount Ommaney. Also present at the committee table at various stages will be Shane Knuth, the member for Hill, and Cynthia Lui, the member for Cook. They have been granted leave by the committee to participate in today’s proceedings under standing order 209. The committee’s proceedings are proceedings of the Queensland parliament and are subject to the standing rules and orders of the parliament.
    [Show full text]
  • National Harvest Guide
    NATIONAL HARVEST GUIDE TABLE OF CONTENTS Disclaimer The National Harvest Labour Information Service Introduction 1 believes that all information supplied in this Guide New South Wales 8 to be correct at the time of printing. A guarantee Northern Territory 32 to this effect cannot be given however and no liability in the event of information being incorrect Queensland 36 is accepted. South Australia 60 Tasmania 75 The Guide provides independent advice and no payment was accepted during its publication in Victoria 85 exchange for any listing or endorsement of any Western Australia 103 place or business. The listing of organisations Grain Harvest 116 does not imply recommendation. This Guide does not take the place of current and accurate advice. For the latest information on WELCOME TO THE harvest labour opportunities please FREECALL NATIONAL HARVEST 1800 062 332. GUIDE Published January 2017 13th Edition Monthly updated text of this guide is also Revised available free of charge on the internet March 2019 www.harvesttrail.gov.au Click on ‘Download the National Harvest Guide © National Harvest Labour Information Service PDF’ 2018 • Left click to read* • Right click to save* This work is copyright. You may display, print and * Note: the National Harvest Guide is in pdf and reproduce this material in unaltered form only Microsoft word formats - please use appropriate (retaining this notice) for your personal, non software to read and save. commercial use or within your organisation. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968 all other rights are reserved. and trimming flowers and bunches and general THE NATIONAL HARVEST crop maintenance work.
    [Show full text]
  • Wooroonooran National Park Management Statement 2013 (PDF
    Wooroonooran National Park Management Statement 2013 Park size: 114,900 ha Plans and agreements Bioregion: Wet Tropics Indigenous Land Use Agreement and the Mamu Rainforest Canopy Walkway Ancillary Agreement QPWS region: North 2007 Ngadjon-Jii Memorandum of Understanding for Jiyer Local government Cairns Regional Council Cave estate/area: Wet Tropics Management Plan 1998 Tablelands Regional Council Wet Tropics of Queensland World Heritage Area Cassowary Coast Regional Regional Agreement 2005 Council Wet Tropics Aboriginal Cultural and Natural Resource Management Plan (Aboriginal Plan Bama) 2005 State electorate: Barron River Stream-dwelling Rainforest Frogs of the Wet Tropics Kennedy Biogeographic Region of North East Queensland Leichardt Recovery Plan 2000-2004 Recovery Plan for Mabi Forest Recovery plan for the Northern Bettong (Bettongia tropica) 2000–2004 Legislative framework Recovery plan for the southern cassowary (Casuarius casuarius johnsonii) 2007 Nature Conservation Act 1992 National recovery plan for the spectacled flying fox Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Pteropus conspicillatus Act 1999 Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act 2003 Queensland Heritage Act 1992 Thematic strategies Wet Tropics World Heritage Protection and Management Act 1993 Level 2 fire strategy for Mallanbarra Yidinji and Land Protection (Pest and Stock Route Ngadjon sections of the park Management) Act 2002 Level 2 pest strategy for specific pests Native Title Act 1993 (Commonwealth) Miconia property management plan Native Title (Indigenous Land Use Agreement) Regulation 1999 (Commonwealth) Wooroonooran National Park Management Statement 2013 Vision Wooroonooran National Park supports an internationally recognised tourism and outdoor recreation industry. Mount Bartle Frere is the centrepiece of the park. Josephine Falls and the Goldborough Valley remain popular park attractions.
    [Show full text]