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1

Campbell, R. S. F. "Science in Tropical Queensland". Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 12, nr 4 (grudzień 1987): 307–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/isr.1987.12.4.307.

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McKay, Belinda. "‘Beethoven by Bus’: Nancy Weir and Queensland Music". Queensland Review 2, nr 2 (wrzesień 1995): 27–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600000829.

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In the last issue of Queensland Review, it was argued that the idea of Queensland literature has a history, and that the various competing formulations of that idea have implications for Queensland identity and politics. Queensland art, likewise, has some currency as an idea, particularly as an ‘art off centre’ to borrow the title of a recent conference. It is, therefore, somewhat surprising that the idea of ‘Queensland music’ has not emerged as a useful way of constructing a cultural or political identity. ‘Music in Queensland’, suggesting an exotic and not fully acclimatized cultural form, is instead the designation used in the few — mostly unpublished — works which treat Queensland's musical history.
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3

Wilson, Maurice C. "The Evolution of the ‘Queenslander’ Garden". Queensland Review 10, nr 2 (listopad 2003): 133–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600003408.

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The Queenslander garden is instantly recognisable both by those blessed with a Queensland birthright and by those who are newly arrived or perhaps making a brief visit to the state while on holiday. Since the proclamation of the State of Queensland in 1859 the Queensland domestic garden has undergone various and numerous changes. There have been changes in size, design and preferred plant species. There have been changes in the householder's perception, use and management of the garden. Importantly there has also been change in what constitutes the Queenslander house.
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4

Day, Kenneth A., i Gregory M. McKeon. "An Index of Summer Rainfall for Queensland’s Grazing Lands". Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology 57, nr 7 (lipiec 2018): 1623–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/jamc-d-17-0148.1.

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AbstractA historical rainfall index, relevant to the grazing industries of Queensland, Australia, is described. We refer to our index as the Queensland grazing lands rainfall index (QGLRI), which is a long-term (1890/91–present) time series of austral summer (November–March) rainfall, spatially averaged over a region we define as the Queensland grazing lands region. We argue that our QGLRI better represents historical summer rainfall variability faced by the majority of the grazing industry in Queensland than does area-averaged statewide rainfall. The geographical boundaries of our region were chosen to 1) better represent the spatial patterns of land use, settlement, and livestock densities and 2) coincide with spatial patterns of airmass dominance. The selected region covers 59% of Queensland’s mainland area but carries more than 80% of the state’s livestock. The region’s boundaries also closely match the mean summer location of the boundaries of the “tropical maritime Pacific” air mass. The selected 5-month season (November–March) was chosen based on summer rainfall dominance, seasonal climatic effects restricting pasture and animal growth, and pasture management implications such as burning and the risk of overgrazing. We find that this season also corresponds to the timing of tropical maritime airmass dominance. The remaining regions of Queensland, far-northern and far-western Queensland, also correspond to well-defined dominant air masses, with properties that are markedly different from those of the tropical maritime Pacific air mass. We demonstrate that the rainfall regime in far-northern Queensland makes a strong contribution to statewide totals, resulting in statewide summer rainfall having lower variability than our QGLRI.
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5

Warner, Anne. "Queensland". Children Australia 15, nr 2 (1990): 55–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1035077200002790.

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6

Williams, Paul D. "Queensland’s quandary". Queensland Review 29, nr 1 (26.12.2022): 36–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/qre.23431.

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Just as Queensland commemorated the centenary anniversary of the abolition of the state’s Legislative Council, the Labor government under Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, a ‘strong’ leader during the contemporaneous COVID-19 pandemic, found itself embroiled in the most serious integrity quagmire of its seven-year history. Given Queensland’s long history of ‘strong’ – even autocratic – political leadership and compromised government integrity, this article posits three arguments: that the abolition of the Legislative Council and a century of political excess in Queensland since 1922 are broadly related; that legislation in Queensland remains largely ‘executive-made’ and not ‘parliament-made’ law; and that the presence of a democratically elected Legislative Council after 1922 would have mitigated if not prevented much of Queensland’s political excess over the past one hundred years. The article also offers a model for a reintroduced Legislative Council that, given electoral distaste for ‘more politicians’, is unlikely to be approved at referendum.
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7

Wanna, John. "Queensland". Australian Journal of Politics & History 50, nr 2 (czerwiec 2004): 269–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8497.2004.247_4.x.

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8

Wiltshire, Kenneth. "QUEENSLAND". Australian Journal of Public Administration 44, nr 2 (czerwiec 1985): 154–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1985.tb02436.x.

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9

Forrest, John Lewis. "QUEENSLAND". Australian Journal of Public Administration 45, nr 2 (czerwiec 1986): 148–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1986.tb01524.x.

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10

Wiltshire, Kenneth. "QUEENSLAND". Australian Journal of Public Administration 46, nr 2 (czerwiec 1987): 233–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1987.tb01434.x.

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11

Morgan, Kenneth. "Selling Queensland: Richard Daintree as Agent-General for Emigration, 1872–76". Queensland Review 27, nr 2 (grudzień 2020): 137–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2020.12.

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AbstractThis article analyses the work of Richard Daintree as Agent-General for Emigration from the United Kingdom to Queensland when he held that role between 1872 and 1876. Daintree designed exhibitions in London to attract emigrants, placed advertisements in newspapers, wrote a guide to Queensland’s resources, liaised with shipping companies for passenger berths, lectured in the provinces to potential emigrants, and cooperated with emigration sub-agents provided by Queensland’s government for Scotland and Ireland. Daintree contended with two main problems during his period as Agent-General. One involved a serious case of fraud discovered in his London office, but he was not responsible for its occurrence. The other was that a change of Queensland premier from Arthur Hunter Palmer, with whom he had worked cordially, to Arthur Macalister, with whom he had fraught relations, adversely affected his work. Overall, however, the article shows that Daintree was successful in increasing net migration to Queensland during his incumbency as Agent-General.
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12

Thulborn, Tony. "Creation science: Rot sets in in Queensland". Nature 315, nr 6015 (maj 1985): 89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/315089a0.

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McKay, Belinda. "Editorial". Queensland Review 20, nr 2 (30.10.2013): 133–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2013.15.

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14

Turner, Susan. "Vertebrate Palaeontology in Queensland". Earth Sciences History 5, nr 1 (1.01.1986): 50–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.5.1.u4316545371807vu.

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In the mid-nineteenth century European settlers discovered prehistoric vertebrates in the northern part of the Colony of New South Wales, which later became the State of Queensland in 1859. Most of these finds were dealt with by overseas professionals, of whom Richard Owen at the British Museum (Natural History) (BM(NH)) was pre-eminent. By the late nineteenth century Australian-based vertebrate palaeontologists, who were usually self-educated, were beginning to work on Australian material. At this time, under the direction of Charles Walter De Vis, the Queensland Museum in Brisbane became the focal point for this science in Queensland; a programme of collecting was initiated which continued as funds allowed. The early twentieth century saw a new phase of exploration undertaken with the specific objective of collecting, carried out by large overseas scientific institutions. Thanks mainly to individual donations, new finds kept appearing regularly in the first half of the twentieth century. As a result there were scientific contributions from a few notable people, Heber A. Longman for example. Yet vertebrate palaeontology in Queensland languished, following the fortunes of the Museum between wars and it did not flourish again until after the Second World War. Since then both trained and amateur palaeontologists have been on the increase, and greater financial assistance has been made available from private, and State and Commonwealth Government sources, allowing progress in this science to be made.
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15

Cotter, John. "Projects and the community—coexistence in practice". APPEA Journal 54, nr 2 (2014): 478. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj13051.

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Strong domestic and global demand for energy will continue to drive further gas exploration and development across Australia over coming years. From Queensland’s onshore gas industry experience the key foundation stones that have helped to build community trust have included: clear and unambiguous industry policy for resources and agriculture; science based approach to managing and monitoring groundwater; fair and balanced approach to land access; greater transparency on industry data and activities; investment in long term community infrastructure such as roads and telecommunications; and genuine opportunities for local businesses to grow and succeed. Queensland has this year also introduced a new regional planning framework that seeks to control what is appropriate development in areas of agricultural and environmental significance. The new approach gives landholders and communities a greater say upfront on how onshore gas and resource developments can occur. As other East Coast States grapple to establish their own onshore gas industry, there is still much more to be done in Queensland as the major CSG-LNG export projects move from construction to operation and ongoing gas well development programs are rolled out into new areas and communities. In addition, exploration by the emerging shale gas industry is bringing similar community engagement challenges to other parts of the Queensland. Formally established as an independent statutory body less than 12 months ago, the GasFields Commission Queensland seeks to manage and oversee the relationship between landholders, regional communities and the onshore gas industry in Queensland. It has and will continue to play an important role in helping identify and address community expectations about how the onshore gas industry develops and evolves.
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16

Cameron, David. "Queensland, the State of Development: the State and Economic Development in Early Twentieth Century Queensland". Queensland Review 4, nr 1 (kwiecień 1997): 39–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600001306.

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The general consensus of historians is that Queensland was economically dependent on primary production, and that, compared to the southern states, its manufacturing sector was relatively underdeveloped and unsophisticated. Generally speaking, however, the discipline of economic history has not paid sufficient attention to Queensland history, nor has economic analysis in the general body of Queensland historiography been as rigorous and encompassing as it could be. Some of the main themes on economic development considered in Queensland historiography are the patterns of expansion and dominance of the pastoral industry, the growth in agricultural activity associated with closer settlement schemes, and from after the First World War, the institutionalised responses intended to give primary producers control over marketing their own commodities. This reflects the obvious rural bias that infused the political economy of the period. However, close empirical analysis of the economic processes and sectoral composition of Queensland's industrial base demonstrates that the economic significance of the secondary industry sector has been somewhat understated historiographically. Furthermore, the impact of internal and external political, financial and ideological forces that effectively marginalised early Labor government plans to encourage the development of secondary industries have not been adequately researched. To illustrate the context of this, an examination of the dominant patterns of government sponsored developmental policy needs first to be undertaken.
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17

Cotton, James. "‘We are nearer the East than the other states’: Frederic Jones of Queensland, the first official from Australia in Shanghai". Queensland Review 27, nr 1 (czerwiec 2020): 39–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2020.3.

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AbstractFrederic Jones became the Queensland Commercial Agent in the Far East in 1904. He worked assiduously to extend Queensland’s trade with Asia, often pursuing a vigorously competitive approach in his dealings with the other states. Based in Shanghai from 1906, he became the first official from Australia to serve in China. He persuaded the Commonwealth government to authorise him to provide visiting Chinese merchants and travellers with documentation that would allow them to enter without undergoing the dictation test. Foreseeing the potential for trade complementarity between Queensland and China, after his appointment concluded in December 1907 he remained in business in Shanghai.
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18

Bowden, Bradley. "How Smart Now? The Bligh Government and the Unravelling of the ‘Smart State’ Vision, 2007–11". Queensland Review 18, nr 2 (2011): 134–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1375/qr.18.2.134.

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The articulation of a ‘Smart State’ strategy by the Beattie and Bligh governments since 1998 represents, in large part, the continuation of a long Queensland tradition, in which governments have secured legitimacy by fostering economic growth and employment. For Queensland Labor, however, ‘Smart State’ programs also represented a key survival strategy as Labor's historic base among workers employed in agriculture, mining and manufacturing shrank into political insignificance. By 2009–10, these three sectors together employed only one worker in seven (Queensland Treasury 2010, p. 16). For this reason, in coming to office in September 2007, Anna Bligh sought both to continue and transcend the ‘Smart State’ strategy of her predecessor. In a series of policy documents launched with considerable fanfare in 2008–09 — ‘Towards Q2’, the ‘Smart Industry Policy and Decision Making Framework’ and the ‘Queensland Renewable Energy Plan’ — Bligh outlined her own vision for Queensland. Central to this vision was the embracing of a ‘green’ agenda — one that tapped into concerns shared by many of Queensland's growing cohort of middle-class professionals. In her first two years in office, Bligh pledged to continue the $9 billion Water Grid in the state's south-east corner, reduce greenhouse gas emissions by one-third, spend $300 million on ‘clean coal’ power generation and provide rebates for households installing solar hot water systems. All of this added considerably to the budget commitments made under Beattie. In highlighting its program for Queensland in 2008, the Bligh government proudly declared that it was ‘set to invest $17 billion’ in the ensuing year (Department of Premier and Cabinet 2008, p. 10).
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19

Walsh, Tamara, i Bridget Burton. "Queensland’s new right to education:What does it mean for children with disabilities?" Alternative Law Journal 45, nr 1 (26.10.2019): 18–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1037969x19883967.

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Queensland’s Human Rights Act 2019 includes a right to education. Schools will be required to consider the human rights of children when making decisions about enrolments and educational adjustments. This article investigates how the right to education might operate in Queensland state schools, and discusses the potential of this new provision to bring positive change for children with disabilities.
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20

Lake, David. "Science education: innovation in rural and remote Queensland schools". Educational Research for Policy and Practice 7, nr 2 (20.07.2007): 123–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10671-007-9038-6.

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21

Smith, Alan R., i S. B. Andrews. "Ferns of Queensland". American Fern Journal 81, nr 3 (lipiec 1991): 107. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1547582.

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22

Kerr, Ruth S. "Queensland political personalities". Journal of Australian Studies 25, nr 69 (styczeń 2001): 23–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14443050109387684.

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23

Lis, Jerzy A. "A revision of Australian species of the genus Macroscytus Fieber (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae)". Insect Systematics & Evolution 29, nr 4 (1998): 459–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187631298x00078.

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AbstractA revision of Australian species of the genus Macroscytus Fieber is presented, including descriptions of eight new species: M. annulipoides (Queensland), M. arnhemicus (Queensland, Northern Territory), M. australoides (South Australia), M. bisetosus (Queensland), M. glaberrimus (Queensland), M. minimus (Queensland), M. monteithi (Queensland), and M. pseudaustralis (Western Australia). M. dilatatus (Signoret, 1881) is synonymized with M. piceus (West-wood, 1837). A key for the determination of all Australian species of the genus is provided.
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Scott, Leon J., Corinna L. Lange, Glenn C. Graham i David K. Yeates. "Genetic Diversity and Origin of Siam Weed (Chromolaena odorata) in Australia". Weed Technology 12, nr 1 (marzec 1998): 27–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0890037x00042524.

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Asynchronous flowering was noted in a recently discovered infestation of siam weed in north Queensland. This may indicate some genetic diversity in the infestation, increasing concerns about the origin of the infestation. Internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) sequence data were obtained for siam weed individuals from north Queensland, Indonesia, Thailand, South Africa, Ivory Coast, Brazil, Colombia, and the U.S. The ITS1 region is 258 base pairs long, and the populations that flower at different times in north Queensland differ by four base substitutions. The genotype common in north Queensland is also reported throughout the native and introduced ranges. The other genotype is reported only in north Queensland and southern Brazil. These data, in conjunction with prior investigations into possible origins, indicate that Brazil is the most likely source of the infestation in Australia.
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25

Stone, G., B. Zhang, J. Carter, G. Fraser, G. Whish, C. Paton i G. McKeon. "An online system for calculating and delivering long-term carrying capacity information for Queensland grazing properties. Part 1: background and development". Rangeland Journal 43, nr 3 (2021): 143. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rj20084.

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This paper (Part 1) describes the development of a new online system that estimates long-term carrying capacity (LTCC) for grazing properties across Queensland, Australia. High year-to-year and multi-year rainfall variability is a dominating feature of the climate of Queensland’s grazing lands, and poses major challenges for extensive livestock production. The use of LTCC is one approach used by graziers to reduce the impact of rainfall variability on land condition and financial performance. Over the past 30 years, scientists, graziers and their advisors have developed a simple approach to calculating LTCC ((average annual pasture growth × safe pasture utilisation) ÷ annual animal intake). This approach has been successful at a property scale (regional south-west Queensland) and in a wider application through Grazing Land Management (GLM) regional workshops. We have built on these experiences to develop an online system (as described in detail in Part 2; Zhang et al. 2021; this issue) that incorporates the simple LTCC approach with advances in technology and grazing science to provide LTCC information for Queensland grazing properties. Features of the LTCC system are: (1) assimilation of spatial datasets (cadastral data, grazing land types, climate data, remotely-sensed woody vegetation cover); (2) a pasture growth simulation model; (3) land type parameter sets of biophysical attributes; and (4) estimates of safe pasture utilisation. The ‘FORAGE LTCC report’ is a major product of the system, describing individual property information that allows detailed analysis and explanation of the components of the LTCC calculation by land type and land condition. The online system rapidly analyses property spatial data and calculates paddock/property LTCC information. For the 10 months between November 2020 and August 2021, over 4000 grazing property reports have been requested in Queensland, and has proven to be a sound basis for ‘discussion support’ with grazier managers and their advisors.
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PERKINS, PHILIP D. "A revision of the Australian species of the water beetle genus Hydraena Kugelann (Coleoptera: Hydraenidae)". Zootaxa 1489, nr 1 (31.05.2007): 1–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1489.1.1.

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The Australian species of the water beetle genus Hydraena Kugelann, 1794, are revised, based on the study of 7,654 specimens. The 29 previously named species are redescribed, and 56 new species are described. The species are placed in 24 species groups. High resolution digital images of all primary types are presented (online version in color), and geographic distributions are mapped. Male genitalia, representative female terminal abdominal segments and representative spermathecae are illustrated. Australian Hydraena are typically found in sandy/gravelly stream margins, often in association with streamside litter; some species are primarily pond dwelling, a few species are humicolous, and one species may be subterranean. The areas of endemicity and species richness coincide quite closely with the Bassian, Torresian, and Timorian biogeographic subregions. Eleven species are shared between the Bassian and Torresian subregions, and twelve are shared between the Torresian and Timorian subregions. Only one species, H. impercepta Zwick, is known to be found in both Australia and Papua New Guinea. One Australian species, H. ambiflagellata, is also known from New Zealand. New species of Hydraena are: H. affirmata (Queensland, Palmerston National Park, Learmouth Creek), H. ambiosina (Queensland, 7 km NE of Tolga), H. antaria (New South Wales, Bruxner Flora Reserve), H. appetita (New South Wales, 14 km W Delagate), H. arcta (Western Australia, Synnot Creek), H. ascensa (Queensland, Rocky Creek, Kennedy Hwy.), H. athertonica (Queensland, Davies Creek), H. australula (Western Australia, Synnot Creek), H. bidefensa (New South Wales, Bruxner Flora Reserve), H. biimpressa (Queensland, 19.5 km ESE Mareeba), H. capacis (New South Wales, Unumgar State Forest, near Grevillia), H. capetribensis (Queensland, Cape Tribulation area), H. converga (Northern Territory, Roderick Creek, Gregory National Park), H. cubista (Western Australia, Mining Camp, Mitchell Plateau), H. cultrata (New South Wales, Bruxner Flora Reserve), H. cunninghamensis (Queensland, Main Range National Park, Cunningham's Gap, Gap Creek), H. darwini (Northern Territory, Darwin), H. deliquesca (Queensland, 5 km E Wallaman Falls), H. disparamera (Queensland, Cape Hillsborough), H. dorrigoensis (New South Wales, Dorrigo National Park, Rosewood Creek, upstream from Coachwood Falls), H. ferethula (Northern Territory, Cooper Creek, 19 km E by S of Mt. Borradaile), H. finniganensis (Queensland, Gap Creek, 5 km ESE Mt. Finnigan), H. forticollis (Western Australia, 4 km W of King Cascade), H. fundaequalis (Victoria, Simpson Creek, 12 km SW Orbost), H. fundata (Queensland, Hann Tableland, 13 km WNW Mareeba), H. hypipamee (Queensland, Mt. Hypipamee National Park, 14 km SW Malanda), H. inancala (Queensland, Girraween National Park, Bald Rock Creek at "Under-ground Creek"), H. innuda (Western Australia, Mitchell Plateau, 16 mi. N Amax Camp), H. intraangulata (Queensland, Leo Creek Mine, McIlwrath Range, E of Coen), H. invicta (New South Wales, Sydney), H. kakadu (Northern Territory, Kakadu National Park, Gubara), H. larsoni (Queensland, Windsor Tablelands), H. latisoror (Queensland, Lamington National Park, stream at head of Moran's Falls), H. luminicollis (Queensland, Lamington National Park, stream at head of Moran's Falls), H. metzeni (Queensland, 15 km NE Mareeba), H. millerorum (Victoria, Traralgon Creek, 0.2 km N 'Hogg Bridge', 5.0 km NNW Balook), H. miniretia (Queensland, Mt. Hypipamee National Park, 14 km SW Malanda), H. mitchellensis (Western Australia, 4 km SbyW Mining Camp, Mitchell Plateau), H. monteithi (Queensland, Thornton Peak, 11 km NE Daintree), H. parciplumea (Northern Territory, McArthur River, 80 km SW of Borroloola), H. porchi (Victoria, Kangaroo Creek on Springhill Rd., 5.8 km E Glenlyon), H. pugillista (Queensland, 7 km N Mt. Spurgeon), H. queenslandica (Queensland, Laceys Creek, 10 km SE El Arish), H. reticuloides (Queensland, 3 km ENE of Mt. Tozer), H. reticulositis (Western Australia, Mining Camp, Mitchell Plateau), H. revelovela (Northern Territory, Kakadu National Park, GungurulLookout), H. spinissima (Queensland, Main Range National Park, Cunningham's Gap, Gap Creek), H. storeyi (Queensland, Cow Bay, N of Daintree River), H. tenuisella (Queensland, 3 km W of Batavia Downs), H. tenuisoror (Australian Capital Territory, Wombat Creek, 6 km NE of Piccadilly Circus), H. textila (Queensland, Laceys Creek, 10 km SE El Arish), H. tridisca (Queensland, Mt. Hemmant), H. triloba (Queensland, Mulgrave River, Goldsborough Road Crossing), H. wattsi (Northern Territory, Holmes Jungle, 11 km NE by E of Darwin), H. weiri (Western Australia, 14 km SbyE Kalumburu Mission), H. zwicki (Queensland, Clacherty Road, via Julatten).
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Hewson, Kaye. "Integrating care in Queensland". International Journal of Integrated Care 18, s1 (12.03.2018): 14. http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/ijic.s1014.

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Frawley, Jodi. "State investment in science and entrepreneurship for environmental change in Queensland, 1912–16: The story of Cactus Estates Ltd". Queensland Review 23, nr 1 (31.05.2016): 2–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2016.3.

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AbstractGovernments across the globe use public–private partnerships to foster entrepreneurship while limiting their risk. The Prickly Pear Destruction Act 1912 enabled the Queensland government to enter contracts with private entities for land heavily covered with prickly pear (Opuntia and Nopalea species). The story of Cactus Estates Ltd, the first negotiation under the Act, provides an opportunity to analyse this response to local ecologies changed by nineteenth-century plant transfers. Most scholarship on the invasion of prickly pear focuses on the science of entomology due to the spectacular success of the introduction of Cactoblastis cactorum in 1926. This article examines an earlier period in the history of applied science in Queensland. The Queensland government, along with scientific and business communities, pursued poisons for controlling the density of plant growth as the preferred mechanism for eliminating plants. Cactus Estates Ltd experimented with arsenic-based poisons for this purpose. An examination of Cactus Estates Ltd provides evidence of the state's willingness to produce a multifaceted approach to dealing with invasive species in Australia in the early twentieth century.
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Atkinson, Sallyanne, Diane Cilento i Barry Maranta. "Queensland: Growing Up". Queensland Review 1, nr 1 (czerwiec 1994): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600000453.

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‘Growing Up in Queensland and Queensland Growing Up’ was the theme of the first Public Address of an annual series organised by the Queensland Studies Centre to mark the anniversary of Separation Day (10 December 1859). Hosted by Griffith University on 8th December 1993, the inaugural Public Address also served to launch the Centre's first major conference, which was organised around the related theme of ‘Defining Queensland: Histories and Futures’.
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30

HU, M., R. B. GASSER, N. B. CHILTON i I. BEVERIDGE. "Genetic variation in the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 within three species of Progamotaenia (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae) from macropodid marsupials". Parasitology 130, nr 1 (13.12.2004): 117–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0031182004006377.

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Sequence variation within 3 morphologically defined species of the anoplocephalid cestode genus Progamotaenia (P. ewersi, P. macropodis and P. zschokkei) was investigated using the cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 gene. The magnitude of genetic variation detected within each morphospecies suggests that, in each instance, several cryptic species are present. Within P. ewersi, 5 genetically distict groups of cestodes were detected, 1 shared by Macropus robustus and M. parryi in Queensland, 1 in M. agilis from Queensland, 1 in Petrogale assimilis from Queensland, 1 in Macropus fuliginosus from South Australia and 1 in Wallabia bicolor from Victoria. In P. macropodis, cestodes from M. robustus from Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory, M. parryi from Queensland and M. eugenii from South Australia were genetically distinct from those in Wallabia bicolor from Queensland and Victoria and from M. fuliginosus from South Australia. P. zschokkei consisted of a number of genetically distinct groups of cestodes, 1 in Lagorchestes conspicillatus and L. hirsutus from Queensland and the Northern Territory respectively, 1 in Petrogale herberti, P. assimilis and M. dorsalis from Queensland, 1 in Onychogalea fraenata from Queensland, 1 in M. agilis from Queensland and 1 in Thylogale stigmatica and T. thetis from Queensland. In general, genetic groups within each morphospecies were host specific and occurred predominantly in a particular macropodid host clade. Comparison of genetic relationships of cestodes with the phylogeny of their hosts revealed examples of colonization (P. zschokkei in M. agilis) and of host switching (P. zschokkei in M. dorsalis).
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31

Tait, Gordon, i Belinda Carpenter. "Firearm suicide in Queensland". Journal of Sociology 46, nr 1 (21.09.2009): 83–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1440783309337673.

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The purpose of this article is to examine firearm suicide in Queensland. In 2006, statistical data were gathered from all closed paper coronial files for the 12-month period of December 2003—December 2004. Of the 567 people who committed suicide in Queensland during this period, 48 (8.5%) used firearms. The following results emerge from this data: first, gun suicides are continuing to decrease in Queensland, most likely as a function of ongoing gun controls, a decrease accompanied by a lesser increase in other methods of suicide, thereby providing little support for substitution theory; second, men continue to be more likely to shoot themselves, particularly elderly men; third, firearms are more likely to be used in rural settings, and by those with no known history of mental illness or previous suicide attempts. Finally, in spite of otherwise very high suicide rates, Aborigines rarely employ firearms, using instead the culturally significant method of hanging.
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32

COUPER, PATRICK J., i ANDREW P. AMEY. "Lerista karlschmidti (Marx and Hosmer, 1959) (Sauria: Scincidae): re-examination of the type series, reassignment of a paratype and distribution notes". Zootaxa 2312, nr 1 (16.12.2009): 39–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2312.1.3.

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Lerista karlschmidti was described from three specimens collected in the Woodstock area of north-eastern Queensland in the early 1950s but has not been recorded from Queensland since. A widely disjunct population occurs in the Northern Territory. Consequently, there has been some doubt as to whether the type series is actually from Queensland or whether these specimens had originated from the Northern Territory. The type series was re-examined and only two of the three specimens were found to be conspecific; these were morphologically consistent with material from the Northern Territory. The third specimen can be assigned to a narrowly endemic north-east Queensland population of Lerista cf. storri. Information provided by the collector’s son supports a Queensland origin for the type material, as does the inclusion of a narrowly endemic north-east Queensland taxon in the type series. Given the narrow endemicity that characterises north Queensland Lerista spp., it is unlikely that the Queensland and Northern Territory L. karlschmidti populations are conspecific. Lerista karlschmidti was last collected in Queensland 57 years ago and the Woodstock area has been substantially modified during this time. The conservation status of L. karlschmidti in Queensland warrants further investigation, particularly in light of conservation concerns for the congeneric Lerista allanae.
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33

Gosseye, Janina, i Alice Hampson. "Queensland making a splash: Memorial pools and the body politics of reconstruction". Queensland Review 23, nr 2 (grudzień 2016): 178–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2016.28.

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AbstractIn April 2015, The Pool emerged as the winning proposal for Australia's exhibition at the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale.1 Creative directors Aileen Sage and Michelle Tabet explained that the pool was ‘a lens through which to explore Australian cultural identity’ and ‘aptly represents a distinctively Australian democratic and social space’.2 In Australia, the public pool was popularised in the post-war period, particularly in Queensland where it offered relief from the long, hot and humid summers. Although Brisbane already had several floating baths along the Brisbane River from the mid-nineteenth century, large-scale, in-ground pool construction in the state did not start in earnest until the mid-1950s, when the personal and social benefits of recreational time with family and friends became well established. In Queensland, as elsewhere in the country, the government encouraged the construction of swimming pools, and many became memorial pools, dedicated to those who had fought to defend an Australian ‘way of life’. Their design was to reflect the civic and social foundations of the initiative, and in Queensland architects took delight in all the opportunities it afforded. The result was a widely diverging collection of predominantly humble and economical structures that were rarely ordinary or dull. Analysing three key pools that were constructed in regional Queensland between 1955 and 1965 — in Rockhampton, Mackay and Miles — this article draws out some of the defining features of Queensland's modern memorial pools, and highlights how this typology became the quintessential ‘Australian democratic and social space’.3
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34

Dickman, Christopher R., i Libby Robin. "Putting Science in its Place: The Role of Sandringham Station in Fostering Arid Zone Science in Australia". Historical Records of Australian Science 25, nr 2 (2014): 186. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/hr14014.

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For the past fifty years, Sandringham Station has provided a major focus for scientific work in southwestern Queensland, an arid region that includes the Simpson Desert and the Channel Country (together 'Desert Channels'). This paper explores the role of place, chance and private enterprise in supporting science in this region. Unlike other parts of inland Australia, where government initiatives were prominent, science in Queensland's arid country was privately supported, and research there had an ecological or eco-physiological rather than an economic focus. It began later than elsewhere (1960s), and its scientific questions were different from those framed in research stations set up to address agricultural and pastoral imperatives. The location of Sandringham on the ecological edge between the ephemeral wetlands of the anastomosing channels and the dune country of the Simpson Desert created an ecotonal area that was rich in animals adapted to living in Australian desert country, and a particular opportunity to observe their adaptations to the boom-and-bust ecological conditions. The role of local observers, particularly station managers and naturalists, has been critical in studying the often cryptic animals of the region, and the ongoing support of the station itself was essential to investigations that were mostly on private leasehold lands.
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35

NAIRN, M. E. "University of Queensland School of Veterinary Science—Looking both ways". Australian Veterinary Journal 65, nr 3 (marzec 1988): 80–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-0813.1988.tb07365.x.

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36

Boreham, Peter F. L. "Frontiers of Medical Science Brisbane, Queensland, 16–19 October 1991". International Journal for Parasitology 22, nr 3 (maj 1992): 411–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0020-7519(05)80025-6.

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37

Boon, Helen J. "Regional Queensland parents’ views of science education: some unexpected perceptions". Australian Educational Researcher 39, nr 1 (14.12.2011): 17–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13384-011-0045-5.

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38

McMeniman, Neil. "The Faculty of Veterinary Science at the University of Queensland". Journal of Veterinary Medical Education 32, nr 3 (wrzesień 2005): 359–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/jvme.32.3.359.

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39

Schue, Fran�ois, Graeme George i David Hill. "Foreword: polymer science in Queensland?celebrating forty years of research". Polymer International 52, nr 11 (2003): 1669–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pi.1418.

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40

Hutchinson, Terry. "Being Seventeen in Queensland". Alternative Law Journal 32, nr 2 (czerwiec 2007): 81–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1037969x0703200204.

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41

Simpson, A. "The work and type collections of the Australian Palaeontologist, Professor Dorothy Hill (1907-1997)". Geological Curator 7, nr 2 (listopad 1999): 51–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.55468/gc430.

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The outstanding Australian palaeontologist, Professor Dorothy Hill, is renowned for her pioneering work on fossil corals and Palaeozoic biostratigraphy. During her long association with the University of Queensland she achieved much in the fields of science and education. Her working life has left an invaluable legacy of scientific papers and numerous specimens in the collections of the Geology Museum at the University of Queensland. These include 186 type specimens of 107 taxa. A comprehensive listing is given. Short biographical notes on her working life highlighting her more significant scientific achievements, particularly in relation to collection development at the University of Queensland, are also given as contextual information.
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42

Wijokongko, Wijokongko. "STEM Learning in Queensland Australia". Ideguru: Jurnal Karya Ilmiah Guru 4, nr 1 (1.10.2019): 95–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.51169/ideguru.v4i1.87.

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STEM learning in Australia has been well implemented and inspires Indonesian teachers to have great experiences. In Australia, STEM is considered as an learning approach and development that integrates the interrelated of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. The aim of the paper is to give a brief description of the implementation of STEM in Australia, the condition of transportation, the characteristic of people, as the result of observation during a short course in Australia. The result of the observation shows that STEM has been well implemented. The school has implemented STEM for their frame work. The school collaborate with the universities and industries to support their students in doing research. STEM can use 5E (Engage, Explore, Elaborate, Explain, Evaluate). The transportation system and the social relationship provide the Indonesian teachers to get good ones. The way of thinking , the education system, and the development of technology in schools can be valuable and great possibilities to implement in Indonesia. Other advance countries has implemented STEM. Indonesia should implement STEM to support the success of the students among the 21th century and the revolution 4.0 era.
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43

Walsh, Pete. "What ifs and idle daydreaming: The creative processes of Andrew McGahan". Queensland Review 23, nr 1 (31.05.2016): 62–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2016.7.

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AbstractAndrew McGahan is one of Queensland's most successful novelists. Over the past 23 years, he has published six adult novels and three novels in his Ship Kings series for young adults. McGahan's debut novel, Praise (1992), won the Vogel National Literary Award for an unpublished manuscript, Last Drinks (2000) won the Ned Kelly Award for Crime Writing, and The White Earth went on to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, The Age Book of the Year Award and the Courier-Mail Book of the Year Award, and was shortlisted for the Queensland Premier's Literary Awards. In 2009, Wonders of a Godless World earned McGahan the Best Science Fiction Novel in the Aurealis Awards for Excellence in Australian Speculative Fiction. McGahan's unashamedly open critiques of Australian, and specifically Queensland, society have imbued his works with a sense of place and space that is a unique trait of his writing. In this interview, McGahan allows us a brief visit into the mind of one of Australia's pre-eminent contemporary authors, shedding light on the ‘what ifs’ and ‘idle daydreaming’ that have pushed his ideas from periphery to page.
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44

REYNOLDS, HENRY, i NOEL LOOS. "Aboriginal Resistance in Queensland". Australian Journal of Politics & History 22, nr 2 (7.04.2008): 214–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8497.1976.tb00911.x.

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45

Prasser, Scott. "EFFICIENCY AUDITING IN QUEENSLAND". Australian Journal of Public Administration 44, nr 4 (grudzień 1985): 352–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1985.tb01026.x.

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46

Greber, RS, i DE Shaw. "Dasheen Mosaic Virus in Queensland." Australasian Plant Pathology 15, nr 2 (1986): 29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/app9860029.

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47

Roth, Henry Ling. "The meteorology of Mackay, Queensland". Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 7, nr 37 (6.07.2007): 8–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/qj.4970073704.

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48

McInnes-Smith, Sienna. "The Inconsistency of the 'Lawful Correction' of Children Defence with Queensland's New Human Rights Act". University of Queensland Law Journal 41, nr 3 (25.01.2023): 327–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.38127/uqlj.v41i3.6439.

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Despite persistent criticism from international human rights bodies and experts, Queensland continues to permit the ‘lawful correction’ of children as a defence to criminal offences committed against them. The recent introduction of a human rights framework in Queensland further highlights the disconnect between the State’s correction defence, contemporary understanding of the deleterious effects of physically punishing children, and children’s human rights principles. This article examines this disconnect and the consistency of the Queensland defence with the Human Rights Act 2019 (Qld). To this end, it outlines the current position in the medical and psychological literature that corporal punishment has severe consequences for children. It also explains the scope of the Queensland defence and compares it to other Australian jurisdictions. The article then turns to an analysis of the consistency between the defence and the Human Rights Act. It concludes that the defence repudiates human rights guarantees in Queensland, as well as the international framework for children’s rights, and identifies avenues for reform.
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49

Little, John, Daniel J. Schmidt, Benjamin D. Cook, Timothy J. Page i Jane M. Hughes. "Diversity and phylogeny of south-east Queensland Bathynellacea". Australian Journal of Zoology 64, nr 1 (2016): 36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo16005.

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The crustacean order Bathynellacea is amongst the most diverse and widespread groups of subterranean aquatic fauna (stygofauna) in Australia. Interest in the diversity and biogeography of Australian Bathynellacea has grown markedly in recent years. However, relatively little information relating to this group has emerged from Queensland. The aim of this study was to investigate bathynellacean diversity and phylogeny in south-east Queensland. Relationships between the south-east Queensland fauna and their continental relatives were evaluated through the analysis of combined mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data. Bathynellaceans were collected from alluvial groundwater systems in three catchments in south-east Queensland. This study revealed a diverse bathynellacean fauna with complex evolutionary relationships to related fauna elsewhere in Queensland, and on the wider Australian continent. The multifamily assemblage revealed here is likely to represent several new species, and at least one new genus within the Parabathynellidae. These taxa likely have relatively restricted geographic distributions. Interestingly, the south-east Queensland Bathynellacea appeared to be distantly related to their north-east Queensland counterparts. Although it was not possible to determine the generic identities of their closest relatives, the south-east Queensland Parabathynellidae appear to be most closely affiliated with southern and eastern Australian lineages. Together with previous survey data, the findings here suggest that there is likely to be considerable bathynellacean diversity in alluvial groundwater systems across the wider Queensland region. Further assessment of stygofauna distributions in south-east Queensland is necessary to understand the biological implications of significant groundwater use and development in the region.
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50

Pockley, Peter. "Science in the Public Eye". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia 9, nr 1 (1991): 78–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1323358000024954.

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A few days ago a prominent physicist, Professor Frank Stacey of the University of Queensland, made a public statement on his retirement that he was burying a theory. He had believed he had measured a new gravitational constant for close objects. Over 12 years he and colleagues in Australia and overseas had tried to confirm a theory of a fifth fundamental force of nature to explain the observations. His claim had gained a great deal of publicity as, if true, it would have extended Newton’s law of gravity and Einstein’s theory of general relativity.
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