Academic literature on the topic 'South Australia Fleurieu Peninsula'

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Journal articles on the topic "South Australia Fleurieu Peninsula"

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Casanova, Michelle T., and Kenneth G. Karol. "Monoecious Nitella species (Characeae, Charophyta) from south-eastern mainland Australia, including Nitella paludigena sp. nov." Australian Systematic Botany 21, no. 3 (2008): 201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb07026.

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Identification of Australian species of Nitella is problematic. Several species of monoecious Nitella have been described from south-eastern mainland Australia, but identification of these based on current treatments has been difficult. In response to the discovery of a new monoecious Nitella from the swamps of the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia, the monoecious species of Nitella from south-eastern mainland Australia were examined and compared. N. paludigena M.T.Casanova & K.G.Karol is distinguished from other monoecious species on the basis of its overall vegetative morphology and oospore morphology. N. paludigena is found in peaty tea-tree (Leptospermum sp) swamps on the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia, and in the south-west of Victoria. A description of the morphology and ecology of the five monoecious Nitella species from south-eastern mainland Australia is given, along with a key.
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Abbott, I. "Distribution of the native earthworm fauna of Australia - a continent-wide perspective." Soil Research 32, no. 1 (1994): 117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sr9940117.

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Based on nearly 2000 available records, the broadscale geographical distribution of the native earthworm fauna of Australia was mapped. Native earthworms were recorded from south-eastern, eastern and northern Australia within 400 km of the coast. Isolated faunas were present in Tasmania and south-west Western Australia, and apparently isolated faunas occurred in the Adelaide area/Fleurieu Peninsula of South Australia and the ranges of central Australia. All but 30 locality records occurred where annual rainfall averaged or exceeded 400 mm; 16 of these records were instances of moisture-gaining sites (moist caves, waterholes, banks of large rivers, edge of granite domes). A collecting strategy to both fill in gaps in the distribution map and discover additional anomalous occurrences (with respect to the 400 mm isohyet) is outlined.
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Littlejohn, Murray J. "Geographic variation in the advertisement call of Crinia signifera (Anura:Myobatrachidae) on Kangaroo Island and across southern south-eastern Australia." Australian Journal of Zoology 56, no. 4 (2008): 223. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo08018.

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The male advertisement call of anuran amphibians has a major role in mate choice, and regional variation in this attribute can act as an indicator of speciation and a marker for genetic differentiation. As part of a regional study of geographic variation in the male advertisement call of Crinia signifera across south-eastern Australia and adjacent larger continental islands, samples of advertisement calls from two populations on Kangaroo Island and two populations on the adjacent Fleurieu Peninsula were compared. Four call attributes were considered: pulse number, call duration, pulse rate and dominant frequency. Pulse number is considered the most reliable for comparative purposes because it is not influenced by effective temperature or audio recording and analysis. The two island populations (central and eastern, ~24 km apart) differ significantly in pulse number, with contact but no overlap of interquartile ranges. The eastern sample differs markedly from those on the nearby Fleurieu Peninsula – which are both similar to the more distant central island sample. Geographic variation in pulse number in these four samples and 11 others from two recent publications is then interpreted in the light of land bridges and lower temperatures of the late Pleistocene and early Holocene.
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Marginson, JC, and PY Ladiges. "Geographical variation in Eucalyptus baxteri s.l. and the recognition of a new species, E. arenacea." Australian Systematic Botany 1, no. 2 (1988): 151. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb9880151.

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Morphological variation in Eucalyptus baxteri (Benth.) Maiden & Blakely ex Black is described throughout its range. There are two geographical forms, the principal differences between which are seedling morphology and the time of transition from juvenile to intermediate growth phase. The forms are hereby recognised as two species. E. baxteri s.str. has adult leaves broad near the apex, warty flower buds, often large fruits, and an early transition to intermediate foliage. It occurs in South Australia on Kangaroo Island, Fleurieu Peninsula, Barossa Range and near Wandilo, and in Victoria on the Grampian Ranges, Great Dividing Range and coastal areas, E. arenacea sp. nov. has tapering adult leaves, generally more slender, non-warty flower buds with longer, narrower pedicels and peduncles. Fruits are generally smaller with the disc less raised. Seedlings typically show a later transition to the intermediate foliage. It occurs on Mt Stapylton in the Grampian Ranges and the desert sand country of north-western Victoria and south-eastern South Australia. It is parapatric with E. baxteri on Kangaroo Island and Fleurieu Peninsula, and is restricted to sand deposits. A previous cladistic analysis suggested that E. baxteri s.l. is paraphyletic, E. arenacea sp. nov. being the sister taxon to E. baxteri s.str. and E. akina (an endemic of the Grampian Ranges). A sequence of evolutionary events is hypothesised by using the cladogram, the distribution of the taxa on different soils, and the geological history of the region.
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Steinhardt, C. "The microstructural anatomy of a major thrust zone on Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 38, no. 2 (May 1991): 139–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08120099108727962.

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PARKIN, TOM, JODI J. L. ROWLEY, JESSICA ELLIOTT-TATE, MICHAEL J. MAHONY, JOANNA SUMNER, JANE MELVILLE, and STEPHEN C. DONNELLAN. "Systematic assessment of the brown tree frog (Anura: Pelodryadidae: Litoria ewingii) reveals two endemic species in South Australia." Zootaxa 5406, no. 1 (February 2, 2024): 1–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5406.1.1.

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The brown tree frog (Litoria ewingii) is a relatively widespread, commonly encountered pelodryadid frog from south-eastern Australia, known for its characteristic whistling call. The distribution of Litoria ewingii spans over more than 350,000 km2, encompassing a range of moist temperate habitats, and is fragmented by well-known biogeographic barriers. A preliminary analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequences revealed evidence for deep phylogenetic structure between some of these fragmented populations. In this study, we sought to re-evaluate the systematics and taxonomy of Litoria ewingii sensu lato by analysing variation in nuclear and mitochondrial DNA, adult morphology and male advertisement calls throughout the species’ range. Our analyses reveal two additional, deeply divergent and allopatric lineages in South Australia. We herein re-describe Litoria ewingii from Tasmania, southern New South Wales, Victoria and south-eastern South Australia, resurrect the name Litoria calliscelis for a species occurring in the Mount Lofty Ranges and Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia, and describe a new species, Litoria sibilus sp. nov., endemic to Kangaroo Island.
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Bickford, Sophia, Peter Gell, and Gary J. Hancock. "Wetland and terrestrial vegetation change since European settlement on the Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia." Holocene 18, no. 3 (May 2008): 425–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959683607087932.

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Deegan, Brian M., George G. Ganf, and Justin D. Brookes. "Assessment of Riverine Ecological Condition in the Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia: Implications for Restoration." Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 134, no. 2 (January 2010): 228–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/3721426.2010.10887144.

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Taggart, PatrickL, Rebecca Traub, Sze Fui, and Phil Weinstein. "Attempt to uncover reservoirs of human spotted fever rickettsiosis on the Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia." Journal of Vector Borne Diseases 55, no. 3 (2018): 239. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-9062.249483.

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Baker, Geoff, John Buckerfield, Robyn Grey-Gardner, Richard Merry, and Bernard Doube. "The abundance and diversity of earthworms in pasture soils in the fleurieu peninsula, south australia." Soil Biology and Biochemistry 24, no. 12 (December 1992): 1389–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-0717(92)90123-f.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "South Australia Fleurieu Peninsula"

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West, Andrew S. "The shore platforms of the Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, abstract and table of contents only, 1992. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbw516.pdf.

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Bickford, Sophia Anastasia. "A historical perspective on recent landscape transformation: integrating palaeoecological, documentary and contemporary evidence for former vegetation patterns and dynamics in the Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia." Title page, contents and abstract only, 2001. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phb583.pdf.

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Includes bibliographical references (p. 301-319). Palaeoecological records, documented historical records and remnant vegetation were investigated in order to construct a multi-scaled history of vegetation pattern and change in the Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia over the last c. 8000 years. Aims to better understand post-European landscape transformation and address the inherently historical components of the problems of regional biodiversity loss, land sustainability and the cumulative contribution to global climatic change.
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Collings, Greg. "Spatiotemporal variation of macroalgal communities of southern Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, table of contents and summary only, 1996. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phc711.pdf.

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Boord, R. A. "Sedimentology of the Cambrian, Upper Kanmantoo Group, Southern Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1985. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09AR/09arb724.pdf.

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Stolz, Ned. "A magnetics study of the Brachina Formation on southern Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Adelaide, 1985. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbs876.pdf.

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Szmidel, Rebekah. "The structural geology of Sellick Hill to Myponga Beach, Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1995. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbs998.pdf.

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Thesis (B. Sc.(Hons.))--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Geology and Geophysics, 1996.
National Grid reference (SI-54)6527 - II, (SI-54) 6627 - III 1:10 000 sheet. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 32-39).
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Crowhurst, Peter V. "The geology, petrology and geochemistry of the Proterozoic Inlier, south of Myponga, Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1988. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbc953.pdf.

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Barrett, Lyon. "The structural geology of the Rapid Bay-Second Valley area, Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1995. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbb274.pdf.

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Macdonald, Andrew. "The structural geology of the Yohoe Creek to Cape Jervis area, Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, contents and introduction only, 1995. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09S.B/09s.bm1348.pdf.

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Kapetas, John. "The structure of the Clarendon - Mt. Bold region : southern Adelaide fold belt, Fleurieu Peninsula, South Australia /." Title page, abstract and contents only, 1993. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbk17.pdf.

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Books on the topic "South Australia Fleurieu Peninsula"

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Whatmough, R., and Field Geology Club of South Australia. A field guide to the geology of Hallett Cove: And other localities with glacial geology on Fleurieu Peninsula. Adelaide: Field Geology Club of South Australia, 1999.

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Art Gallery of South Australia., ed. The painted coast: Views of the Fleurieu Peninsula south of Adelaide. Adelaide: Art Gallery of South Australia, 1998.

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G, Fotheringham D., and Buckley Ralf, eds. Coastal morphodynamics and Holocene evolution of the Eyre Peninsula coast, South Australia. Sydney, NSW: Coastal Studies Unit, Dept. of Geography, University of Sydney, 1986.

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J, Parker A., and Geological Society of Australia. Specialist Group in Tectonics and Structural Geology., eds. Archaean - early proterozoic granitoids, metasediments and mylonites of Southern Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. Sydney, Australia: Geological Society of Australia, 1988.

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Bryant, L. The resettlement process of displaced farm families: A study of 12 families from Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. Adelaide: Department of Agriculture, South Australia, 1989.

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Nicholson, Annie. Archaeology on the anxious coast: Archaeological investigations on the West Coast of the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia : a final draft report to Heritage Branch, Department of Environment and Planning, South Australia. Hall, A.C.T: National Heritage Studies, 1991.

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Blackwood, S. Aust ). Carto Graphics (Firm :. Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. Westprint, 1993.

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Insular toponymies: Place-naming on Norfolk Island, South Pacific and Dudley Peninsula, Kangaroo Island. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Pub. Company, 2013.

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Gold Mines of the World: Written after an Inspection of the Mines of the Transvaal, Rhodesia, India, Malay Peninsula, West Australia, Queensland, Victoria, New South Wales, Tasmania, New Zealand, British Columbia, the Klondyke, United S. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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Curle, James Herbert. Gold Mines of the World: Written after an Inspection of the Mines of the Transvaal, Rhodesia, India, Malay Peninsula, West Australia, Queensland, Victoria, New South Wales, Tasmania, New Zealand, British Columbia, the Klondyke, United S. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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Book chapters on the topic "South Australia Fleurieu Peninsula"

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Davis, Aaron, Tim Munday, and Nara Somaratne. "Characterisation of a Coastal Aquifer System in the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia, Using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Methods." In Groundwater in the Coastal Zones of Asia-Pacific, 89–120. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5648-9_6.

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McCaul, Kim. "Clamor Schürmann’s contribution to the ethnographic record for Eyre Peninsula, South Australia." In German Ethnography in Australia, 57–77. ANU Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/gea.09.2017.03.

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Hutchison, Charles S. "Other deposits." In South-East Asian Oil, Gas, Coal and Mineral Deposits, 221–24. Oxford University PressOxford, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198542957.003.0015.

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Abstract The broad SE Asian region contains examples of all the major types of bauxite deposits. Australia is the world’s major producer of bauxite (more than 33%), with major producing centres on the southern margin of SE Asia at Weipa on the Cape York Peninsula and in the Gove Peninsula of the Northern Territory (Hutchison, 1983a). The bauxite is in the form of lateritic residual caps upon Cretaceous and Tertiary sedimentary formations.
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Heathcote, R. Les. "Settlement Advance and Retreat: A Century of Experience on the Eyre Peninsula of South Australia." In Climate Variability, Climate Change and Social Vulnerability in the Semi-arid Tropics, 109–22. Cambridge University Press, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511608308.008.

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Hauser, Mark William, and Julia Jong Haines. "The Archaeology of Modern Worlds in the Indian Ocean." In The Archaeology of Modern Worlds in the Indian Ocean, 1–23. University Press of Florida, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813069845.003.0001.

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Archaeology of the recent past is relatively new to the Indian Ocean region; however, scholars have already noted the need for engaging novel paradigms through material, landscape, and maritime studies based on the historical and cultural contexts of the region. For example, long standing trade-networks between Africa, South Asia, the Arabian Peninsula, and Australia were a defining feature of the Indian Ocean for centuries before European imperial expansion. European colonists and administrators tapped into these existing systems and social structures in ways we have yet to fully understand. Within this context, the multidisciplinary case studies in this volume examine colonialism, labor, race, ethnicity, diaspora, human-environment relationships, and current heritage issues. In drawing together regionally defined chapters, this volume moves toward the establishment of comparative spatial patterns, artifact typologies, and environmental dynamics. The volume as a whole demonstrates the potential contributions research in the Indian Ocean World can make to historical archaeology broadly.
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Payton, Philip. "Memorialising the Diasporic Cornish." In Death in the Diaspora, 155–75. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474473781.003.0007.

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And Shall These Mute Stones Speak? asked Professor Charles Thomas in his seminal book of the same name (University of Wales Press, 1994), arguing that in the early medieval period, with its paucity of documentary records, the inscribed standing stones of Cornwall were the best evidence for the existence of early Cornish people. The inference was that, in the modern era, with its multiplicity of sources and data, it was hardly necessary to resort to such devices. However, the ‘mute stones’ of the nineteenth and early twentieth-century Cornish diaspora – the grave stones of Cornish emigrants in cemeteries as disparate as Pachuca in Mexico and Moonta in South Australia – are vivid insights into the Cornish diasporic experience. Their location in often remote areas are testament to the extent of Cornish diasporic dispersal, while the inscriptions on individual gravestones are themselves important sources of social and cultural history. Moreover, these cemeteries and gravestones have served collectively and individually as memorials to the diasporic Cornish, often organised into distinctive ‘Cornish’ sections in graveyards, and are today explicit sites of remembrance – as in the ‘Dressing the Graves’ ceremony performed at Moonta, Wallaroo and Kadina during the biennial ‘Kernewek Lowender’ Cornish festival on South Australia’s northern Yorke Peninsula.
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Zuckermann, Ghil'ad. "Talknology in the Service of the Barngarla Language Reclamation." In Revivalistics, 227–39. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199812776.003.0007.

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This chapter introduces the fascinating and multifaceted reclamation of the Barngarla Aboriginal language of Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. In 2012, the Barngarla community and I launched the reclamation of this sleeping beauty. The presence of three Barngarla populations, several hours drive apart, presents the revival linguist with a need for a sophisticated reclamation involving talknological innovations such as online chatting, newsgroups, as well as photo and resource sharing. The chapter provides a brief description of our activities so far and describes the Barngarla Dictionary App. The Barngarla reclamation demonstrates two examples of righting the wrong of the past: (1) A book written in 1844 in order to assist a German Lutheran missionary to introduce the Christian light to Aboriginal people (and thus to weaken their own spirituality), is used 170 years later (by a secular Jew) to assist the Barngarla Aboriginal people, who have been linguicided by Anglo-Australians, to reconnect with their very heritage. (2) Technology, used for invasion (ships), colonization (weapons), and stolen generations (governmental black cars kidnapping Aboriginal children from their mothers), is employed (in the form of an app) to assist the Barngarla to reconnect with their cultural autonomy, intellectual sovereignty, and spirituality.
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Yu, Henry. "An Invocation." In Thinking Orientals: Migration, Contact, and Exoticism in Modern America, 3–4. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195116601.003.0001.

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Abstract Let us start with a map. Unfold like a painted fan a mercator projection, a view from high above the earth encompassing the Pacific Ocean, with Asia on the left and the Americas on the right. The arc of the Pacific Rim sweeps from the blotch of Australia to Indonesia and Southeast Asia, up the coast of China past the Korean peninsula and Japan, around Alaska and down the West Coast of Canada and the United States, tailing off to the tip of South America. Imagine the map as a parchment through which to relive the past, a chart to trace the stories of people as they move about, leaving a trail of dotted lines that follow them from place to place. The story of these people is one of movement, and like a travel-worn atlas that shows the scrawled markings of roads taken and places seen, this map will show journeys and tell stories of how people came to see things previously unseen, how they tried to understand what they saw, and how they often kept going somewhere farther in order to understand what they had just seen. Place-names coalesce on this imaginary map, given meaning within and connected to the lives of our travelers. Guangdong Province in southern China, Japan, Hawaii, Seattle, San Francisco, Stockton, Los Angeles, Butte, Tule Lake, Iowa City, Nashville, and, on the extreme edge of our map, Chicago.
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Conference papers on the topic "South Australia Fleurieu Peninsula"

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Alexander, Elinor. "Natural hydrogen exploration in South Australia." In PESA Symposium Qld 2022. PESA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36404/putz2691.

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South Australia has taken the lead nationally in enabling exploration licences for natural hydrogen. On 11 February 2021 the Petroleum and Geothermal Energy Regulations 2013 were amended to declare hydrogen, hydrogen compounds and by-products from hydrogen production regulated substances under the Petroleum and Geothermal Energy Act 2000 (PGE Act). Companies are now able to apply to explore for natural hydrogen via a Petroleum Exploration Licence (PEL) and the transmission of hydrogen or compounds of hydrogen are now permissible under the transmission pipeline licencing provisions of the PGE Act. The maximum area of a PEL is 10,000 square kilometres so they provide a large acreage position for explorers. PEL applicants need to provide evidence of their technical and financial capacity as well as a 5-year work program which could include field sampling, geophysical surveys (e.g., aeromagnetics, gravity, seismic and MT) and exploration drilling to evaluate the prospectivity of the licence for natural hydrogen. Since February 2021, seven companies have lodged 35 applications for petroleum exploration licences (PELs), targeting natural hydrogen. The first of these licences (PEL 687) over Kangaroo Island and southern Yorke Peninsula was granted to Gold Hydrogen Pty Ltd on 22 July 2021. As well as issuing exploration licences, a key role of the South Australian Department for Energy and Mining is to provide easy access to comprehensive geoscientific data submitted by mineral and petroleum explorers and departmental geoscientists since the State was founded in 1836. Access to old 1920s and 1930s reports, together with modern geophysical and well data has underpinned the current interest in hydrogen exploration. Why the interest? 50-80% hydrogen content was measured in 1931 by the Mines Department in gas samples from wells on Kangaroo Island, Yorke Peninsula and the Otway Basin, potential evidence that the natural formation of hydrogen has occurred. Iron-rich cratons and uranium-rich basement (also a target for geothermal energy explorers) occur in the Archaean-Mesoproterozoic Gawler Craton, Curnamona and Musgrave provinces which are in places fractured and seismically active with deep-seated faults. Sedimentary cover ranges from Neoproterozoic-Recent in age, with thick clastic, carbonate and coal measure successions in hydrocarbon prospective basins and, in places, occurrences of mafic intrusives and extrusives, iron stones, salt and anhydrite which could also be potential sources of natural hydrogen.
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Auken, E., A. V. C. Christiansen, A. V. Viezzoli, A. F. Fitzpatrick, and T. M. Munday. "Laterally Constrained Inversion of TEMPEST Data from Eyre Peninsula Area, South Australia." In Near Surface 2009 - 15th EAGE European Meeting of Environmental and Engineering Geophysics. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.20147038.

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Fitzpatrick, Andrew, Tim Munday, Kevin Cahill, and Volmer Berens. "Redefining the Groundwater Resource of the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia Using AEM Data." In Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2010. Environment and Engineering Geophysical Society, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4133/1.3445445.

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Fitzpatrick, Andrew, Tim Munday, Kevin Cahill, and Volmer Berens. "Redefining The Groundwater Resource Of The Eyre Peninsula, South Australia Using AEM Data." In 23rd EEGS Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609-pdb.175.sageep033.

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Davis, Aaron, Mike Hatch, Kevin Cahill, and Tim Munday. "Characterising the Variability Associated with the Quaternary Limestone Aquifers of the Southern Eyre Peninsula in South Australia Using Borehole NMR." In Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2012. Environment and Engineering Geophysical Society, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4133/1.4721754.

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