Academic literature on the topic 'Crown lands New South Wales'

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Journal articles on the topic "Crown lands New South Wales"

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Shield, Margaret. "Crown Lands Commissioners – Moreton Bay and Darling Downs, 1842–56." Queensland Review 26, no. 01 (June 2019): 71–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2019.7.

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AbstractCommissioners of Crown Lands were the first government officials appointed to the newly declared pastoral districts surrounding Moreton Bay after it was opened to free settlement in 1842. These officers had a significant impact on the formation of regional communities, the administration of justice and the treatment of the Indigenous people but their primary responsibility was the implementation and enforcement of government policies relating to Crown Lands. Commissioners were required to oversee pastoral leases, ensure payment of fees for pastoral and other licences and undertake expeditions to provide the New South Wales government with information regarding the nature of the land and its resources. Extracts from the original correspondence between the Commissioners and the Colonial Secretary indicate that, despite enormous challenges, early Crown Lands Commissioners were largely successful in ensuring the orderly settlement of pastoral districts. Their success however, came at the expense of the Indigenous people, who were systematically driven from their lands without compensation and with scant consideration for their welfare.
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Thomson, P. "A Symposium on the Dingo. Edited by Chris Dickman and Daniel Lunney. A Review by Peter Thomson." Australian Mammalogy 23, no. 2 (2001): 189. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/am01189_br.

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A symposium on the dingo (Canis lupus dingo) was held in Sydney in May 1999 to discuss issues surrounding the conflicting views of the dingo: seen both as a potentially threatened species, and as a species that needs to be controlled because of its predation on livestock. The Symposium was particularly relevant to New South Wales (NSW) because of consideration being given to place the dingo on the schedule of NSW vulnerable species, under the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995. The potential for conflict was exacerbated by concurrent legislative changes in NSW (Rural Lands Protection Act 1998) requiring the Crown to control pest animals declared under the Act. Despite the obvious focus on the NSW situation, many of the issues discussed have wider relevance to the management and conservation of dingoes across Australia.
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Kercher, Bruce. "Informal Land Titles: Snowden v Baker (1844)." Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 41, no. 3 (November 1, 2010): 605. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v41i3.5214.

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Snowden v Baker (1844) concerned the judicial recognition of informal land titles. This article compares the treatment of this broad question in Newfoundland and New South Wales, with Snowden v Baker.In Newfoundland and New South Wales, informal titles gained legal recognition. This happened in Newfoundland through judicial creativity, including statutory interpretation. In New South Wales, the formal law was applied more strictly, but was softened when commissioners were appointed to assess whether Crown discretion should be exercised in favour of those dispossessed due to informality.Both methods were used in New Zealand, where the informal titles of British settlers derived from sales by Māori land owners. Titles purchased from Māori owners were declared null and void unless based on Crown grants. As in New South Wales, commissioners were appointed to advise whether such grants should be made. In Snowden v Baker, Martin CJ used statutory interpretation to take a further step, by holding that titles derived from Māori sales had a contingent validity until affirmed or denied by the Crown.
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Pople, A. R., S. C. Cairns, N. Menke, and N. Payne. "Estimating the abundance of eastern grey kangaroos (Macropus giganteus) in south-eastern New South Wales, Australia." Wildlife Research 33, no. 2 (2006): 93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr05021.

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To provide an estimate of kangaroo numbers for harvest management, a survey was designed for an area of 29 500 km2 encompassing the agricultural and grazing lands of the Braidwood, Cooma, Goulburn, Gundagai and Yass Rural Lands Protection Board (RLPB) districts in south-east New South Wales. An aerial survey using a helicopter was considered more efficient than ground survey because of the size of the area, relatively high relief and dense tree cover, and the need for regular monitoring. Tree cover and landscape relief was used to stratify the five RLPB districts into areas of probable high, medium and low kangaroo density. Kangaroo density estimated from helicopter surveys conducted in the Northern Tablelands of New South Wales was used to suggest densities and thereby allocate survey effort in each stratum. A survey comprising 735 km of transect line was conducted in winter 2003 with a target precision of 20%. The survey returned an estimate of 286 600 ± 32 300 eastern grey kangaroos for the whole of the proposed south-east New South Wales kangaroo-management zone. In 2004, a trial harvest of slightly less than 15% of this estimate was taken. Success of the trial will be determined by the impact of harvesting on the population’s dynamics, by landholder and industry participation, and by the capacity to monitor population size, harvest offtake and compliance with regulations.
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Pook, E. W., A. M. Gill, and P. H. R. Moore. "Insect Herbivory in a Eucalyptus maculata Forest on the South Coast of New South Wales." Australian Journal of Botany 46, no. 6 (1998): 735. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bt97016.

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In most years between 1977 and 1992, insect defoliation was negligible in a regrowth stand of E. maculata Hook. on the south coast of New South Wales. However, leaf consumption by winter–spring infestations of cup moth larvae accounted for c. 6%, 19% and 4% of the total leaf loss from the canopy in 1989–90, 1990–91 and 1991–92, respectively. During the most serious infestation of 1990, cup moth larvae produced 0.56 t ha–1 of frass, equivalent to the consumption of c. 0.8 t ha–1, or c. 0.5 m2 m–2 of eucalypt leaf (c. 12% of winter leaf area index). In early November 1990, shortly after the infestation, an assessment of insect defoliation in the crown of a dominant tree revealed that (i) 47% of the leaf population was damaged, (ii) a larger proportion of older than younger leaves was damaged, (iii) the proportion of damaged leaves increased down the tree-crown profile, and (iv) 13% of the potential leaf area was missing. In the absence of further insect attack, the process of canopy renewal (leaf production and leaf fall) reduced the proportion of damaged leaves to 23% by June 1991.
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Slack, Jill, and Michael O'Rourke. "The Kamilaroi Lands: North-Central New South Wales in the Early 19th Century." Labour History, no. 79 (2000): 226. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27516748.

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Carlsen, Jack. "Economic Evaluation of Recreation and Tourism in Natural Areas: A Case Study in New South Wales, Australia." Tourism Economics 3, no. 3 (September 1997): 227–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/135481669700300302.

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Provision of information for the purposes of evaluating and monitoring recreation and tourism land use is a conceptually difficult task for economists and land managers. A range of techniques has been developed since the pioneering work of Clawson and Knetsch in the 1960s to estimate the market value of recreation and tourism in natural areas. These techniques involve a number of conceptual and practical difficulties when used for environmental auditing and evaluation purposes. This article outlines the process of evaluating recreation and tourism on public lands in order to provide information for an environmental audit of the Upper North East region of New South Wales. The range of market and non-market values associated with tourism and recreation on public lands is based on existing studies of the region. The values of commercial production, recreation and tourism on public lands are compared within a structural model (input–output) of the regional economy.
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8

Turner, R. J., and Peter Smith. "Mistletoes increasing in eucalypt forest near Eden, New South Wales." Australian Journal of Botany 64, no. 2 (2016): 171. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bt15253.

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Mistletoe proliferation has contributed to eucalypt decline in rural lands in south-eastern Australia, but has seldom been recorded within forests. We report here on mistletoes increasing deep inside extensive eucalypt forest near Eden. Mistletoes (chiefly Amyema pendula (Sieber ex Spreng.) Tiegh., some Muellerina eucalyptoides (DC.) Barlow) were counted in 180 plots in various logging and burning treatments within a long-term experimental area. In 141.4 ha, there were 516 mistletoes in 1990–1991, and 1478 mistletoes in 2004–2006. The number of trees with mistletoes increased (doubling in logged coupes and almost tripling in unlogged coupes), and the number of mistletoes per tree increased (by ~30%). However, mistletoe prevalence remained low in 2004–2006 (2.7% of trees in logged coupes and 3.7% in unlogged coupes). Intensive logging limited the increase in mistletoe-bearing trees, probably because there were fewer trees available in logged coupes, but had no significant effect on the increase in mistletoes per tree. Low-intensity prescribed burns had no significant effect on mistletoe numbers, even with a high frequency of burning, probably because of their low scorch heights. We suggest that the observed increase in mistletoes in this forest, rather than indicating an ecological imbalance, is part of a natural cycle of boom and bust, with populations crashing in severe wildfires.
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9

Gray, Jonathan M., Greg A. Chapman, and Brian W. Murphy. "Land management within capability: a new scheme to guide sustainable land management in New South Wales, Australia." Soil Research 53, no. 6 (2015): 683. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sr14196.

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A new evaluation scheme, land management within capability (LMwC), used to guide sustainable land management in New South Wales (NSW), is presented. The scheme semi-quantitatively categorises the potential impacts of specific land-management actions and compares these with the inherent physical capability of the land in relation to a range of land-degradation hazards. This leads to the derivation of LMwC indices, which signify the sustainability of land-management practices at the scale of individual sites up to broader regions. The LMwC scheme can be used to identify lands at greatest risk from various land-degradation hazards. It can help to guide natural resource agencies at local, regional and state levels to target priorities and promote sustainable land management across their lands. Few other schemes that assess the sustainability of a given land-management regime in a semi-quantitative yet pragmatic manner are found in the literature. The scheme has particular application for regional soil-monitoring programs and it was applied in such a program over NSW in 2008–09. The results suggested that the hazards most poorly managed across the state are wind erosion, soil acidification and soil organic carbon decline. The LMwC scheme, or at least its underlying concepts, could be readily applied to other jurisdictions.
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Freeman, Clive, Julie Freeman, and Michelle C. Langley. "Gymea and the Fishing Technologies of the New South Wales Coast, Australia." Cambridge Archaeological Journal 31, no. 2 (February 5, 2021): 305–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959774320000396.

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Stories are important to all modern peoples, and this behaviour was no doubt also the case during the deep past. Consequently, it is important that archaeologists understand that artefacts made and discarded thousands of years ago were woven with stories by the peoples who produced them. In some regions of the world, these stories remain accessible by collaborating with the Traditional Owners of the lands from which they were recovered, while in others such an approach is impossible. Nevertheless, researchers need to remember that items carried meaning usually invisible to those outside communities—a principle often taught and cited, but possibly not fully appreciated. Here we tell the Yuin (coastal New South Wales, Australia) story of Gymea and her connection to fishing technologies. This story is told in order to demonstrate the depth of information that is not accessible to archaeologists if Indigenous collaborators are not sought out or available.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Crown lands New South Wales"

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Gillespie, Melina Jane. "Establishment success of native understorey species on coal mine rehabilitation areas in the Hunter Valley, New South Wales /." St. Lucia, Qld, 2003. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe17522.pdf.

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Books on the topic "Crown lands New South Wales"

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Office, Great Britain Colonial. Emigration: Copies of reports made to the governors and councils of Canada, New Brunswick, and New South Wales. [London: HMSO, 2001.

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Great Britain. Colonial Office. Emigration: Return to an address of the Honourable the House of Commons, dated 23 March 1835, for, no. 1. Copies or extracts of any correspondence between the secretary of state and the governors of the British colonies, respecting emigration, not already presented to this House; no. 2. Return of the number of persons who have emigrated from Great Britain and Ireland, to the British colonies, and to the United States of America, during the years 1833 and 1834; distinguishing the ports from which they have sailed, and the countries to which emigration took place; no. 3. Relation of the number of agricultural labourers, who, with their families, have emigrated to New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land; specifying the number of persons in each family, and the amount of assistance granted; no. 4. Return of the number of young unmarried females who have been assisted by government to emigrate to New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land ... [London: s.n., 2003.

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3

O'Rourke, Michael. The Kamilaroi lands: North-central New South Wales in the early 19th century. Griffith, A.C.T: The Author, 1997.

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4

Evison, Harry. Ngai Tahu land rights and the Crown Pastoral Lease Lands in the South Island of New Zealand. 3rd ed. Christchurch: Ngai Tahu Maori Trust Board, 1987.

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5

Who owns the high country?: The controversial story of tenure review in New Zealand. Nelson, N.Z.: Craig Potton Publishing, 2008.

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Brower, Ann. Who owns the high country: The controversial story of tenure review in New Zealand. Nelson, N.Z: Craig Potton Pub., 2008.

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7

Great Britain. Colonial Office. Colonial grants: Copy of the conditions under which lands are granted in the British North American colonies, and in the colonies of New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land. [London: Colonial Dept., 2000.

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8

Wilton, C. Pleydell N. Twelve Plain Discourses Addressed To The Prisoners Of The Crown, In The Colony Of New South Wales, Containing A Manual Of Prayers For Their Use. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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Wilton, C. Pleydell N. Twelve Plain Discourses Addressed To The Prisoners Of The Crown, In The Colony Of New South Wales, Containing A Manual Of Prayers For Their Use. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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Some account of the Island of Prince Edward: With some practical advice to those intending to emigrate, and some observations on the Cape of Good Hope, New South Wales, Canada, and the Red River : to which are added, sailing directions for the coast and harbours, and correct maps of the Island of Prince Edward, Holland Harbour, and the lands surrounding Cascumpec Bay. London: J.M. Richardson, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Crown lands New South Wales"

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Lunney, Daniel. "Royal Commission of 1901 on the western lands of New South Wales — an ecologist’s summary." In Future of the Fauna of Western New South Wales, 221–40. P.O. Box 20, Mosman NSW 2088, Australia: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.7882/rzsnsw.1994.022.

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Loughton, Gavin. "Did the Early British Colonists Regard the Indigenous Peoples of New South Wales as Subjects of the Crown Entitled to the Protection of English Law?" In The Impact of Law's History, 201–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-90068-7_11.

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"5. Bush, Town, and Crown in New South Wales." In The King’s Peace, 176–217. Harvard University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4159/9780674269521-006.

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Baskerville, Bruce. "‘So brave Etruria grew’: dividing the Crown in early colonial New South Wales, 1808–10." In Crowns and Colonies, 262–82. Manchester University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781784993153.003.0014.

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Williams, David V. "Radical Title of the Crown and Aboriginal Title: North America 1763, New South Wales 1788, and New Zealand 1840." In Common Law, Civil Law, and Colonial Law, 260–85. Cambridge University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108955195.011.

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Kercher, Bruce, and Jodie Young. "6. Formal and Informal Law in Two New Lands: Land Law in Newfoundland and New South Wales under Francis Forbes." In Essays in the History of Canadian Law, edited by Christopher English. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442656994-010.

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Mytum, Harold. "Forgetting and Remembering: Scots and Ulster Scots Memorials in Eighteenth-century Ulster, Pennsylvania and Nineteenth-century New South Wales." In Death in the Diaspora, 14–51. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474473781.003.0002.

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Mortuary monuments were used by Scots and Ulster Scots as they selectively chose to forget or remember their origins once they settled in new lands around the world. Those who moved to Pennsylvania in the eighteenth century and New South Wales in the nineteenth century employed different strategies regarding how they would create their identities and promote or discard aspects of their origins. Burial monument texts look back over the deceased’s life, but they are also selected by the living to create publicly visible family history and affiliation. Through both text and symbol on the memorials, families create visible, meaningful, biographies. Using survey data from Pennsylvania and New South Wales collected to investigate diasporic remembering and forgetting, this analysis recognises a widespread prevalence of forgetting and an increasing interest in creating new identities in the colonial context. However, some saw their origins as part of their identity and this formed part of the visible family biography.
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