Academic literature on the topic 'McIlwraith'

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Journal articles on the topic "McIlwraith"

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Natusch, Daniel James Deans, and David Francis Stewart Natusch. "Distribution, abundance and demography of green pythons (Morelia viridis) in Cape York Peninsula, Australia." Australian Journal of Zoology 59, no. 3 (2011): 145. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo11031.

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The green python (Morelia viridis) is an iconic snake species highly sought after in the pet trade and is the target of illegal collection. Despite their popularity, some important ecological attributes of green pythons remain unknown, making their effective conservation management difficult. Detection-only surveys were conducted throughout the potential range of the green python in Australia, and intensive mark–recapture surveys were conducted in the areas where there have been previous records. In total, 298 green pythons were located in the Iron, McIlwraith and Kawadji–Ngaachi ranges of Cape York, distributed over an estimated area of 2289 km2, where they frequented rainforest habitats and adjacent vine thickets. They were not found in the Lockerbie Scrub or Jardine River Catchment, despite anecdotal records. Green python density was estimated to be 540 km–2 in the Iron Range and 200 km–2 in the McIlwraith Range, where the percentages of adults captured were 56% and 83%, respectively. The differences between abundance and population demographics in the Iron and McIlwraith ranges may be due to differences in prey abundance and the impacts of collection. The results of this study provide baseline data to conservation managers and policy makers for the future conservation management of this species in Australia.
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Bhatia, Neera. "Australian Medical Liability 2nd Edition by Bill Madden and Janine McIlwraith." Deakin Law Review 19, no. 1 (August 1, 2014): 195. http://dx.doi.org/10.21153/dlr2014vol19no1art214.

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Greet, T. R. C. "Diagnostic and Surgical Arthroscopy in the Horse edited by C. Wayne McIlwraith." Equine Veterinary Journal 18, no. 2 (March 1986): 132. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03568.x.

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Baker, Gordon J. "Equine Surgery: Advanced Techniques by C. Wayne McIlwraith and A. Simon Turner." Veterinary Surgery 17, no. 3 (May 1988): 154. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-950x.1988.tb00294.x.

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Cryle, Denis. "Scottish Intellectuals in Colonial Queensland: A Comparative Study of John Dunmore Lang and George Wight." Queensland Review 13, no. 1 (January 2006): 23–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600004256.

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Documenting and debating the contribution made by the Scots in nineteenth century Queensland has proved a fertile field of inquiry that continues to attract local historians. The vivid colonial portraits we now possess of pastoralists and politicians like Evan Mackenzie and Thomas McIlwraith confirm that the substantial power base of the colonial Scots transcended politics and commerce. Ambitious and hard working, Queensland Scots acquired rather than inherited pastoral holdings, often turning to politics or returning subsequently to Scotland. Nor should the contribution to exploration of the likes of Andrew Petrie, Henry Stuart Russell or the Archers be discounted in opening the way for rapid occupation. In this respect, the Queensland story of intrepid Scottishness appears to conform to a classic imperial narrative — that of the entrepreneur, possessed of a streak of ruthlessness, even recklessness, and committed to achieving a measure of commercial and political independence from distant bureaucracies and colonies. Mackenzie's commercial ambitions for early Brisbane, ably documented by John Mackenzie-Smith, anticipate the full-blown brand of Queensland nationalism championed by Premier Thomas McIlwraith at the end of the nineteenth century. The price of such independence could nevertheless be considerable: a series of colonial depressions — of which the 1840s, 1860s and 1890s adversely affected Queensland — invariably cast a shadow over this saga of individual achievement, in the process challenging the collective narrative of Scottish commercial supremacy. This article, while confirming the energy and individualism of local Scots, proposes to document and interweave two somewhat different case studies and in the process articulates a counter-narrative to the prevailing historical wisdom concerning Scottish colonial achievement.
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Legge, S., R. Heinsohn, and S. Garnett. "Availability of nest hollows and breeding population size of eclectus parrots, Eclectus roratus, on Cape York Peninsula, Australia." Wildlife Research 31, no. 2 (2004): 149. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr03020.

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The distribution of the Australian mainland endemic subspecies of the eclectus parrot, Eclectus roratus macgillivrayi, is currently confined to the lowland rainforests of the Iron–McIlwraith Ranges of eastern Cape York Peninsula. Females breed in large hollows in emergent rainforest trees that are readily visible from above. Aerial surveys were used to sample 58% of the rainforest (454 km2) of the Iron Range region to estimate the density of these nest trees. Corrections for overcounting bias (not all observed emergent trees were active nest trees) and undercounting bias (not all active nest trees were visible from the air) were made by ground-truthing over 70 trees. The tree count data were treated in two different ways, producing estimates of 417 (s.e. = 25) and 462 (s.e. = 31) nest trees for the Iron Range region. Long-term observational data on the number of eclectus parrots associated with each nest tree were used to estimate the population size of eclectus parrots at Iron Range: 538–596 breeding females, and 1059–1173 males. These results have three implications. First, this relatively low population estimate suggests that the Australian subspecies of eclectus parrots should be considered vulnerable to habitat loss or perturbation, especially in light of their complex social system, male-biased adult sex ratio, low breeding success and high variance in reproductive success among females. Second, the low density of nest trees suggests that eclectus parrots are absent from the rainforests of Lockerbie Scrub and the Jardine dunefields because these areas are too small. Finally, if eclectus parrots persisted in the Iron–McIlwraith region during the rainforest contractions of Pleistocene glacial maxima (e.g. 14 000–17 000 years ago), the refugium in this region must have been fairly substantial in order to support a viable population – probably larger than previously assumed.
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Hoskin, Conrad J., Harry B. Hines, Rebecca J. Webb, Lee F. Skerratt, and Lee Berger. "Naïve rainforest frogs on Cape York, Australia, are at risk of the introduction of amphibian chytridiomycosis disease." Australian Journal of Zoology 66, no. 3 (2018): 174. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo18041.

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Amphibian chytridiomycosis disease has caused widespread declines and extinctions of frogs in cool, wet habitats in eastern Australia. Screening suggests that the disease does not yet occupy all areas modelled to be environmentally suitable, including rainforests on Cape York Peninsula. Cape Melville is an area of rainforest with several endemic frogs, including the stream-associated Melville Range treefrog (Litoria andiirrmalin), which is deemed at particular risk of disease impacts. We tested 40 L. andiirrmalin for chytrid infection by PCR and found them all to be negative. In conjunction with previous testing at another high-risk location, McIlwraith Range, this suggests that endemic rainforest frogs on Cape York have been spared the introduction of chytridiomycosis. We discuss how the disease could get to these areas, what can be done to reduce the risk, and suggest an emergency procedure should it be introduced.
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Hsiao, Yun, and Rolf G. Oberprieler. "Taxonomic Revision of the Genus Miltotranes Zimmerman, 1994 (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Molytinae), the Bowenia-Pollinating Cycad Weevils in Australia, with Description of a New Species and Implications for the Systematics of Bowenia." Insects 13, no. 5 (May 12, 2022): 456. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13050456.

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The Australian endemic weevils of the genus Miltotranes Zimmerman, 1994 (Curculionidae: Molytinae: Tranes group), comprising two species, M. prosternalis (Lea, 1929) and M. subopacus (Lea, 1929), are highly host-specific and the only known pollinators of Bowenia cycads, which comprise two CITES-protected species restricted to Tropical Queensland in Australia. In the present study, the taxonomy of Miltotranes is reviewed, a lectotype for the name Tranes prosternalis Lea, 1929 is designated and a new species associated with the Bowenia population in the McIlwraith Range is described as M. wilsoni sp. n. The descriptions and diagnoses of all species are supplemented with illustrations of their habitus and salient structures, and an identification key to all species and a distribution map are provided. Potential implications of the new species and of the taxonomy and biogeography of Miltotranes overall on the systematics and conservation of Bowenia are discussed.
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SHEA, GLENN, PATRICK COUPER, JESSICA WORTHINGTON WILMER, and ANDREW AMEY. "Revision of the genus Cyrtodactylus Gray, 1827 (Squamata: Gekkonidae) in Australia." Zootaxa 3146, no. 1 (December 23, 2011): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3146.1.1.

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The gekkonid lizard genus Cyrtodactylus in Australia is revised based on a combination of morphology and mitochondrial (ND2) sequence data. Previous hypotheses that the Australian populations are assignable to a New Guinea species, C. louisiadensis, or to a Cyrtodactylus louisiadensis species group defined on shared colour pattern and enlarged subcaudal scales, are rejected. Evidence is provided for the existence of five endemic species in Australia, allopatrically distributed. Cyrtodactylus tuberculatus (Lucas & Frost) is formally resurrected for Australian populations in the Cooktown area, from Mt Leswell north to Stanley Island. Four new species are described: C. mcdonaldi sp. nov. in the south, from the Chillagoe area north to Parrot Creek Falls, C. hoskini sp. nov. from the Iron Range area, C. adorus sp. nov. from the Pascoe River drainage, and C. pronarus sp. nov. from the McIlwraith Range. Concordant genetic and morphological evidence enable the hypothesis that C. adorus and C. pronarus represent a species pair distinct from the sublineage represented by C. tuberculatus, C. mcdonaldi and C. hoskini.
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Abel, Kerry. "The Beginning of Print Culture in Athabasca Country by Patricia Demers, Naomi McIlwraith, and Dorothy Thunder (review)." Canadian Ethnic Studies 43, no. 3-1 (2011): 243–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ces.2011.0046.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "McIlwraith"

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Griffiths, Philip Gavin, and phil@philgriffiths id au. "The making of White Australia: Ruling class agendas, 1876-1888." The Australian National University. Faculty of Arts, 2007. http://thesis.anu.edu.au./public/adt-ANU20080101.181655.

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This thesis argues that the colonial ruling class developed its first White Australia policy in 1888, creating most of the precedents for the federal legislation of 1901. White Australia was central to the making of the Australian working class, to the shaping of Australian nationalism, and the development of federal political institutions. It has long been understood as a product of labour movement mobilising, but this thesis rejects that approach, arguing that the labour movement lacked the power to impose such a fundamental national policy, and that the key decisions which led to White Australia were demonstrably not products of labour movement action. ¶ It finds three great ruling class agendas behind the decisions to exclude Chinese immigrants, and severely limit the use of indentured “coloured labour”. Chinese people were seen as a strategic threat to Anglo-Australian control of the continent, and this fear was sharpened in the mid-1880s when China was seen as a rising military power, and a necessary ally for Britain in its global rivalry with Russia. The second ruling class agenda was the building of a modern industrial economy, which might be threatened by industries resting on indentured labour in the north. The third agenda was the desire to construct an homogenous people, which was seen as necessary for containing social discontent and allowing “free institutions”, such as parliamentary democracy. ¶ These agendas, and the ruling class interests behind them, challenged other major ruling class interests and ideologies. The result was a series of dilemmas and conflicts within the ruling class, and the resolution of these moved the colonial governments towards the White Australia policy of 1901. The thesis therefore describes the conflict over the use of Pacific Islanders by pastoralists in Queensland, the campaign for indentured Indian labour by sugar planters and the radical strategy of submerging this into a campaign for North Queensland separation, and the strike and anti-Chinese campaign in opposition to the use of Chinese workers by the Australasian Steam Navigation Company in 1878. The first White Australia policy of 1888 was the outcome of three separate struggles by the majority of the Anglo-Australian ruling class—to narrowly restrict the use of indentured labour in Queensland, to assert the right of the colonies to decide their collective immigration policies independently of Britain, and to force South Australia to accept the end of Chinese immigration into its Northern Territory. The dominant elements in the ruling class had already agreed that any serious move towards federation was to be conditional on the building of a white, predominantly British, population across the whole continent, and in 1888 they imposed that policy on their own societies and the British government.
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Griffiths, Philip Gavin. "The making of White Australia: Ruling class agendas, 1876-1888." Phd thesis, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/47107.

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This thesis argues that the colonial ruling class developed its first White Australia policy in 1888, creating most of the precedents for the federal legislation of 1901. White Australia was central to the making of the Australian working class, to the shaping of Australian nationalism, and the development of federal political institutions. It has long been understood as a product of labour movement mobilising, but this thesis rejects that approach, arguing that the labour movement lacked the power to impose such a fundamental national policy, and that the key decisions which led to White Australia were demonstrably not products of labour movement action. ¶ It finds three great ruling class agendas behind the decisions to exclude Chinese immigrants, and severely limit the use of indentured “coloured labour”. ...
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Books on the topic "McIlwraith"

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McIlwraith, C. Wayne. McIlwraith & Turner's equine surgery: Advanced techniques. 2nd ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1998.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1928 to 1931, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 1995.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1936 to 1939, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 1997.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1950 to 1955, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 2000.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1924 to 1927, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 1994.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1943 to 1949, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 1999.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1932 to 1935, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 1996.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1920 to 1923, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 1992.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1956 to 1960, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 2001.

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Judd, William Wallace. Annotated minutes of the meetings, 1961 to 1969, of the McIlwraith Ornithological Club, London, Ontario, Canada. London, Ont: Phelps Pub. Co., 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "McIlwraith"

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"Introduction: Andrew McIlwraith and His World." In More of a Man, 1–50. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442662193-005.

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"Appendix 1: The McIlwraith and Goldie Family Trees." In More of a Man, 403. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442662193-014.

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Colten, Craig E., and Peter J. Hugill. "Historical Geography." In Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198233923.003.0021.

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Gazing down on the field of historical geography from a lofty vantage point, the most obvious conclusion one can draw is that it is alive and well. Despite gloomy forecasts in the 1980s (Wyckoff and Hausladen 1985), the number of significant titles published in recent years and the consistency of historical geographic scholarship testifies to the vitality of this subdiscipline. Johns Hopkins, along with Texas, California, Chicago, and other university presses have released handsome and important contributions. Recently, the second and third volumes of the highly regarded Historical Atlas of Canada (Harris and Mathews 1987–93) have appeared; and Thomas McIlwraith and Edward Muller (2001) have revised the standard 1980s text on North American historical geography. The Journal of Historical Geography has a healthy backlog of manuscripts; The Geographical Review regularly features work from specialty group members; and Historical Geography has grown in size and substance. Although the number of academic job listings for historical geography may never challenge the opportunities in GIS, a sizable and energetic corps of practitioners is hard at work, whatever their individual job titles. The decade that has elapsed since Earle et al.’s (1989) review of the field (see also Conzen, Rumney, and Wynn 1993) has been particularly productive for historical geographers in terms of theory and approach. Studies framed by colonialism, capitalist development, postmodernism, feminism, and environmental history are all inherently interdisciplinary and add to the complex intellectual current in which historical geography finds itself. This diversity poses a particular problem for the authors of a chapter with panoramic intent. Like a bird’seye view of a nineteenth-century city, the most prominent structures, or themes, stand out in the foreground. Common dwellings, or the vast body of supporting literature, blend into a less distinct background pattern. Outstanding singular efforts rise like spires above the cluttered landscape. This chapter hopes to call attention to the scholarship found both along the main thoroughfares and the back streets in the bird’s-eye view, while also pointing out unique contributions. Anne Mosher’s (1999) outline of several major trends in historical geography scholarship provides the framework for this chapter.
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"Appendix 2: Andrew McIlwraith’s Mechanics’ Institute Library Loans, Newton-on-Ayr, Scotland, 1846–1852." In More of a Man, 404–12. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442662193-015.

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McIlwraith, C. Wayne. "Use of Oral Joint Supplements in Equine Joint Disease∗∗The author wishes to acknowledge that most of this information in this chapter was previously published in McIlwraith C.W. (2013). Oral joint supplements in the management of osteoarthritis. In: Geor R.J., Harris P.A., Coenen M. (Eds.). Equine applied and clinical nutrition (pp. 549-557). Saunders-Elsevier." In Joint Disease in the Horse, 270–80. Elsevier, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-1-4557-5969-9.00019-x.

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"‘Is the Working Man Better Off in America than in Britain?’ Andrew McIlwraith’s Letter to the Ayrshire Times, August 29, 1860." In More of a Man, 51–58. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442662193-006.

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