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Journal articles on the topic 'Photography, Australian Australia'

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1

Anderson, Fay. "Chasing the Pictures: Press and Magazine Photography." Media International Australia 150, no. 1 (2014): 47–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x1415000112.

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For over a century, press and magazine photography has influenced how Australians have viewed society, and played a critical role in Australia's evolving national identity. Despite its importance and longevity, the historiography of Australian news photography is surprising limited. This article examines the history of press and magazine photography and considers its genesis, the transformative technological innovations, debates about images of violence, the industrial attitudes towards photographers and their treatment, the use of photographs and the seismic recent changes. The article argues
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Maynard, Margaret. "Fashion and Air Travel: Australian Photography and Style." Costume 51, no. 1 (2017): 103–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cost.2017.0007.

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The expansion of commercial air travel in Australia after the Second World War caused significant changes to women's fashion and its marketing in this country. The developing technology of aeroplanes as commercial carriers meant European clothes and ideas reached Australia increasingly rapidly. A long-term sense of stylistic inferiority diminished and the sometimes unquestioning acceptance of imported style was challenged. As post-war retailers expanded their product range, they sought possibilities to market Australian designed and made garments both in Europe and the US. Using co-marketing w
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Quanchi, Max. "‘Record of my journeyings in the Coral Sea’: Randolph Bedford’s 1906 album of the Solomon Islands." Journal of New Zealand & Pacific Studies 8, no. 1 (2020): 39–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/nzps_00014_1.

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Albums and scrapbooks are rarely the focus of research. This article examines the motivation and context for a unique and rare album compiled by a ‘special correspondent’ – George Randolph Bedford, an aspiring Federal politician, journalist and writer – who visited the Solomon Islands in 1906 on a personal fact-finding mission. His scrapbook contains 212 photographs and a series of articles on the Solomon Islands that he had published in illustrated weekend newspapers in Australia in 1906 and early 1907. The Australian colonies had just federated, Britain had just passed control of Papua to Au
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Lydon, Jane. "Photography and Critical Heritage." Public Historian 41, no. 1 (2019): 18–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/tph.2019.41.1.18.

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Historical photographs of Australian Aboriginal people were amassed during the colonial period for a range of purposes, yet rarely to further an Indigenous agenda. Today, however, such images have been recontextualized, used to reconstruct family history, document culture, and express connections to place. They have become a significant heritage resource for relatives and descendants. Images stand in for relatives lost through processes of official assimilation—or as this sad history is now known in Australia, the Stolen Generations. This article explores the potential healing power of the pho
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Pickard, John. "Assessing vegetation change over a century using repeat photography." Australian Journal of Botany 50, no. 4 (2002): 409. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bt01053.

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Repeat photography is a technique of detecting changes in the landscape by comparing old and more recent photographs taken at the same place. Information gained is used to detect landscape change as one component of historical ecology. Understanding the causes of any change detected requires additional information. The technique was pioneered in vegetation ecology in Arizona and has since been applied in many other parts of the United States. After a description of the technique, the American experience is reviewed and the problems of detecting change and assigning cause are discussed. The rel
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Anderson, Fay. "‘Photographing Lindy’: Australian press photography and the Chamberlain case, 1980–2012." Media International Australia 162, no. 1 (2016): 7–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x16665495.

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This article analyses the news photography surrounding a high-profile case of alleged matricide in Australia: the disappearance of 9-month-old Azaria Chamberlain, and the subsequent murder trial and eventual acquittal of her mother, Lindy. While the scholarship on the media’s conduct during Chamberlain’s ordeal has been exhaustive, the press photographers’ role has not been considered. Drawing on oral history interviews with newspaper photographers, this article explores the ways that the photographers’ workplace culture, gender, relationships and practices informed their approach. It argues t
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Nowak, Magdalena Anna. "Self-Historicization Through Photography and Documentation. Stanisław Ostoja-Kotkowski’s Archive in the National Museum in Warsaw." Život umjetnosti, no. 111 (July 2023): 106–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.31664/zu.2022.111.09.

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The article is based on the research I carried out on the archive of Stanisław Ostoja-Kotkowski (1922–1994), the Cold War-era Polish-Australian artist living in South Australia, which is currently kept in the National Museum in Warsaw. Ostoja-Kotkowski was a pioneer in electronic art, kinetic sculpture, laser art, computer graphics and light art in the 1960s and 1970s. The article analyzes the archive in the context of “self-historicization” (Badovinac), used by this émigré artist to create his artistic identity in both Australia and Poland. The archive proves that self-documentation by the le
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Burns, Kara, and Suzanne Belton. "Clinicians and their cameras: policy, ethics and practice in an Australian tertiary hospital." Australian Health Review 37, no. 4 (2013): 437. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ah12039.

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Medical photography illustrates what people would prefer to keep private, is practiced when people are vulnerable, and has the power to freeze a moment in time. Given it is a sensitive area of health, lawful and ethical practice is paramount. This paper recognises and seeks to clarify the possibility of widespread clinician-taken medical photography in a tertiary hospital in Australia, examining the legal and ethical implications of this practice. A framework of law, state Department of Health policy and human rights theory were used to argue the thesis. Clinicians from 13 purposively chosen w
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Duggan, Jo-Anne, and Enza Gandolfo. "Other Spaces: migration, objects and archives." Modern Italy 16, no. 3 (2011): 315–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13532944.2010.507931.

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Other Spaces is a collaborative creative arts exhibition project that explores visual and material expressions of cultural identity with a particular focus on museum collections. This project aims to provide a rich examination – visual, emotional and intellectual – of the multiple cultural narratives that contribute to the social fabric of Australia through a unique marriage of contemporary photomedia and creative writing practice. This project explores the ways that migrants and refugees have found to express their cultural identity through the material objects they have brought with them to
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10

Zerwes, Erika. "A trajetória esquecida da fotógrafa Margaret Michaelis: entrevista com Helen Ennis * The forgotten history of photographer Margaret Michaelis: interview with Helen Ennis." História e Cultura 5, no. 3 (2016): 402. http://dx.doi.org/10.18223/hiscult.v5i3.1792.

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Esta entrevista com a australiana Helen Ennis, curadora e professora de história da arte na Australian National University, busca jogar luz sobre a vida e obra da fotógrafa Margaret Michaelis (1902-1985). Ennis foi a autora da única biografia existente até o momento sobre Michaelis, além de ter sido a responsável pela incorporação do arquivo da fotógrafa na National Gallery of Australia, e pela exposição “Margaret Michaelis: Love, loss and photography”, realizada naquela instituição em 2005. Ennis recuperou, depois de quase quarenta anos esquecida, a rica obra fotográfica e história de vida de
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11

Trinder, John C. "THE CURRENT STATUS OF MAPPING IN THE WORLD – SPOTLIGHT ON OCEANIA." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLI-B4 (June 13, 2016): 95–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xli-b4-95-2016.

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A summary is presented of the results of questionnaires sent to mapping agencies in Oceania, covering Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Island countries, to investigate the status of mapping in those countries. After World War II, the Australian Federal Government funded the initial small scale mapping of the whole country leading to increased percentages of map coverage of Australia. Mapping at larger scales is undertaken by the states and territories in Australia, including cadastral mapping. In New Zealand mapping is maintained by Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) at 1:50,000 scale a
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12

Trinder, John C. "THE CURRENT STATUS OF MAPPING IN THE WORLD – SPOTLIGHT ON OCEANIA." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLI-B4 (June 13, 2016): 95–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprsarchives-xli-b4-95-2016.

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A summary is presented of the results of questionnaires sent to mapping agencies in Oceania, covering Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Island countries, to investigate the status of mapping in those countries. After World War II, the Australian Federal Government funded the initial small scale mapping of the whole country leading to increased percentages of map coverage of Australia. Mapping at larger scales is undertaken by the states and territories in Australia, including cadastral mapping. In New Zealand mapping is maintained by Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) at 1:50,000 scale a
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13

Fuentes, Sigfredo, Anthony R. Palmer, Daniel Taylor, Melanie Zeppel, Rhys Whitley, and Derek Eamus. "An automated procedure for estimating the leaf area index (LAI) of woodland ecosystems using digital imagery, MATLAB programming and its application to an examination of the relationship between remotely sensed and field measurements of LAI." Functional Plant Biology 35, no. 10 (2008): 1070. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/fp08045.

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Leaf area index (LAI) is one of the most important variables required for modelling growth and water use of forests. Functional–structural plant models use these models to represent physiological processes in 3-D tree representations. Accuracy of these models depends on accurate estimation of LAI at tree and stand scales for validation purposes. A recent method to estimate LAI from digital images (LAID) uses digital image capture and gap fraction analysis (Macfarlane et al. 2007b) of upward-looking digital photographs to capture canopy LAID (cover photography). After implementing this techniqu
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14

Fensham, R. J., and R. J. Fairfax. "Assessing woody vegetation cover change in north-west Australian savanna using aerial photography." International Journal of Wildland Fire 12, no. 4 (2003): 359. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wf03022.

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Models to calibrate tree and shrub cover assessed from aerial photography with field measurements were developed for a range of vegetation types in north-western Australia. The models verify previous studies indicating that woody cover can be successfully determined from aerial photography. The calibration models were applied to estimates of woody vegetation cover determined for 279 randomly located sample areas in the Ord–Victoria Rivers region using aerial photography from 1948 to 1950 and 1988 to 1997. Overstorey cover increased from a regional average of 11.5% to 13.5% and understorey cove
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15

Hilton, Deborah Joy. "Sports Monitoring with Moving Aerial Cameras Maybe Cost Efficient For Injury Prevention." SciMedicine Journal 2, no. 3 (2020): 132–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.28991/scimedj-2020-0203-3.

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Objectives: An Australian access economics report (2009) estimated the lifetime cost of care is 5.0 million for a person whom suffers paraplegia and 9.5 million for quadriplegia, and costs/year are approximately $90,000. Hilton )2018( on drones at sporting venues discusses their potential to revolutionize injury surveillance monitoring via expert exposure gained for recording, investigation, tracking and monitoring of sporting injuries. Hilton (2018) reviewed rugby union and league Australian spinal cord injury datasets, finding more incident cases in the union then league [1]. Methods/Analysi
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Fairfax, R. J., and R. J. Fensham. "Corrigendum to: Assessing woody vegetation cover change in north-west Australian savanna using aerial photography." International Journal of Wildland Fire 13, no. 1 (2004): 131. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wf03022_co.

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Models to calibrate tree and shrub cover assessed from aerial photography with field measurements were developed for a range of vegetation types in north-western Australia. The models verify previous studies indicating that woody cover can be successfully determined from aerial photography. The calibration models were applied to estimates of woody vegetation cover determined for 279 randomly located sample areas in the Ord–Victoria Rivers region using aerial photography from 1948 to 1950 and 1988 to 1997. Overstorey cover increased from a regional average of 11.5% to 13.5% and understorey cove
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17

Perry, Barbara. "The Pictorial Collection of the National Library of Australia." Art Libraries Journal 13, no. 1 (1988): 23–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200005526.

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The National Library of Australia at Canberra includes a Pictorial Collection comprising paintings, drawings, prints and photographs which illustrate the history of Australia. The Collection is being actively developed, the ultimate goal being a comprehensive visual record of all aspects of Australian life. The Collection is open to the public, and is served by a photographic unit; a selection of pictures are always on display, and items are lent to exhibitions elsewhere. A publications programme is to culminate in the production of an illustrated catalogue. Data on selected items in the Colle
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18

McLean, Lachlan J., Steve George, Daniel Ierodiaconou, Roger J. Kirkwood, and John P. Y. Arnould. "Impact of rising sea levels on Australian fur seals." PeerJ 6 (October 16, 2018): e5786. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5786.

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Global warming is leading to many unprecedented changes in the ocean-climate system. Sea levels are rising at an increasing rate and are amplifying the impact of storm surges along coastlines. As variability in the timing and strength of storm surges has been shown to affect pup mortality in the Australian fur seal (Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus), there is a need to identify the potential impacts of increased sea level and storm surges on the breeding areas of this important marine predator in Bass Strait, south-eastern Australia. Using high-resolution aerial photography and topographic dat
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19

Fensham, R. J., and R. J. Fairfax. "Aerial photography for assessing vegetation change: a review of applications and the relevance of findings for Australian vegetation history." Australian Journal of Botany 50, no. 4 (2002): 415. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bt01032.

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Studies attempting to calibrate vegetation attributes from aerial photography with field data are reviewed in detail. It is concluded that aerial photography has considerable advantages over satellite-based data because of its capacity to assess the vertical dimension of vegetation and the longer time period the record spans. Limitations of using the aerial photo record as digital data include standardising image contrast and rectification. Some of these problems can be circumvented by manual techniques, but problems of crown exaggeration that varies with photo scale and variation in contrast
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20

Kaviani, Fareed, Ben Lyall, and Sjaan Koppel. "Exploring social perceptions of everyday smartglass use in Australia." PLOS ONE 19, no. 11 (2024): e0313001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0313001.

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Smartglasses like Ray-Ban Stories by Meta are now commercially available, offering users features like photography, videography, music playback, phone calls, and content sharing. While existing research identifies barriers to adoption, no study has investigated the social acceptability of these commercially available devices. This is crucial because devices like Ray-Ban Stories are considered precursors to Augmented Reality-enabled smartglasses, and understanding current public perceptions is vital before further advancements. This study aimed to examine the social acceptability of everyday sm
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21

Banfai, Daniel S., and David M. J. S. Bowman. "Dynamics of a savanna-forest mosaic in the Australian monsoon tropics inferred from stand structures and historical aerial photography." Australian Journal of Botany 53, no. 3 (2005): 185. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bt04141.

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Stratified ground-truthing was undertaken within an area of approximately 30 km2 of tropical savanna across an abrupt sandstone escarpment in the monsoon tropics of Australia. Comparison of aerial photographs from 1941 and 1994 had previously revealed a landscape-wide expansion of closed forest and contraction of grassland patches. Good congruence between field measurements and the vegetation classifications from the 1994 aerial photography supported the authenticity of the vegetation changes. The relative abundance of rainforest and non-rainforest tree species also concurred with mapped veget
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Gibb, Michelle A., Helen E. Edwards, and Glenn E. Gardner. "Scoping study into wound management nurse practitioner models of practice." Australian Health Review 39, no. 2 (2015): 220. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ah14040.

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Objectives The primary objective of this research was to investigate wound management nurse practitioner (WMNP) models of service for the purposes of identifying parameters of practice and how patient outcomes are measured. Methods A scoping study was conducted with all authorised WMNPs in Australia from October to December 2012 using survey methodology. A questionnaire was developed to obtain data on the role and practice parameters of authorised WMNPs in Australia. The tool comprised seven sections and included a total of 59 questions. The questionnaire was distributed to all members of the
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23

Gerber, Rod, and Tammy Kwan. "Adolescent Students' Conceptions of Different Environments Through Photographs." Australian Journal of Environmental Education 17 (2001): 9–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s081406260000238x.

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AbstractPhotographs of familiar and unfamiliar environments are used extensively in studies about areas around the world. The study reported here describes a pilot investigation of how 27 Australian secondary school adolescent students understood and interpreted a familiar environment (represented by Australia) and unfamiliar environments (represented by Singapore and Hong Kong) through 18 coloured photographs. Few of these adolescent students had visited Singapore or Hong Kong, but most of them have travelled in their home country, Australia. They have viewed more of the Australian environmen
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Pickering, Janessa, Claudia Sampson, Marianne Mullane, et al. "A pilot study to develop assessment tools for Group A Streptococcus surveillance studies." PeerJ 11 (March 14, 2023): e14945. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14945.

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Introduction Group A Streptococcus (GAS) causes pharyngitis (sore throat) and impetigo (skin sores) GAS pharyngitis triggers rheumatic fever (RF) with epidemiological evidence supporting that GAS impetigo may also trigger RF in Australian Aboriginal children. Understanding the concurrent burden of these superficial GAS infections is critical to RF prevention. This pilot study aimed to trial tools for concurrent surveillance of sore throats and skins sore for contemporary studies of RF pathogenesis including development of a sore throat checklist for Aboriginal families and pharynx photography.
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Orchard, Jennifer, Jessica Suna, Anna Renner, et al. "Wound management across Australian and New Zealand pediatric cardiac services: a cross-sectional survey." Cardiology in the Young 34, no. 7 (2023): 1432–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047951123003025.

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AbstractBackground:CHD is associated with considerable burden of care. Up to one-third of babies born with CHD require surgery or intervention during the first year of life with an associated increased risk of surgical site infection. Pediatric wound care is informed largely by adult data, with no national or international guidelines available.Aim:To examine pediatric cardiac surgical wound care practices reported by healthcare professionals Australia and New Zealand-wide.Methods:A bi-national cross-sectional survey exploring pre-, intra- and post-operative wound practices was distributed usin
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Moore, Caitlin E., Jason Beringer, Bradley Evans, Lindsay B. Hutley, and Nigel J. Tapper. "Tree–grass phenology information improves light use efficiency modelling of gross primary productivity for an Australian tropical savanna." Biogeosciences 14, no. 1 (2017): 111–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-111-2017.

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Abstract. The coexistence of trees and grasses in savanna ecosystems results in marked phenological dynamics that vary spatially and temporally with climate. Australian savannas comprise a complex variety of life forms and phenologies, from evergreen trees to annual/perennial grasses, producing a boom–bust seasonal pattern of productivity that follows the wet–dry seasonal rainfall cycle. As the climate changes into the 21st century, modification to rainfall and temperature regimes in savannas is highly likely. There is a need to link phenology cycles of different species with productivity to u
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27

Oliver, Damon. "A Field Guide to Australian Butterflies." Pacific Conservation Biology 2, no. 2 (1995): 201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/pc960201.

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Robert Fisher believes that an increased awareness about conserving the remaining unique biota of Australia has created a desire in many people to identify and understand the biology of organisms. A Field Guide to Australian Butterflies is a useful way to impart such biological information to those who wish to explore the natural world around them. The objective of this field guide is to provide a book of photographs which aid in the identification and appreciation of some two hundred Australian butterfly species, about half of the total described species in this country. The field guide provi
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28

Ferres, Kay. "Introduction: The active cultural city." Queensland Review 22, no. 2 (2015): 111–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2015.31.

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Alfred Elliot's photograph on the cover of this themed issue is one of a series of images that captured Brisbane's reception for the Duke of York in 1927. The Duke, later King George VI, was in Australia to open the new Parliament House in Canberra. On glass plate, Elliot documented the decorated route of the royal procession. The cover image shows the centrepiece — an archway spanning Queen Street, which proclaims a ‘Citizen's Welcome’. Two decades earlier, this young immigrant had also photographed the crowd assembled in South Brisbane to vote in the 1899 Federation Referendum. Despite the e
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Hackett, Lisa J. "Diversity and democratization of Dior in Australia: Social factors in fashion modification in the 1940s‐50s." Journal of European Popular Culture 11, no. 1 (2020): 21–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jepc_00010_1.

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Christian Dior’s 1947 ‘New Look’ collection has been widely examined for its influence on both haute couture and clothing styles in the 1950s. In the Australian context, Margaret Maynard examined how the New Look was marketed through the ideological positioning of women’s roles in the domestic sphere. This marketing campaign was spearheaded by two business syndicates who brought a series of French Fashion Parades to Australia in the late 1940s through the 1950s. Despite the hype around the parades, just how much the fashions were adopted by the wider public has not been measured. Australians d
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Barr, Cheryl B., and William D. Shepard. "A review of the Larainae of Australia with description of seven new species and the new genus Australara (Coleoptera, Byrrhoidea, Elmidae)." ZooKeys 1073 (November 29, 2021): 55–117. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1073.71843.

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The three genera and four species of Larainae (Elmidae) previously described from Australia are reviewed, and one new genus and seven new species are described: Australara glaisterigen. et sp. nov., Ovolara lawrenceisp. nov., Ovolara monteithisp. nov., Stetholus carinatussp. nov., Stetholus longipennissp. nov., Stetholus metatibialissp. nov., and Stetholus woronorasp. nov. A lectotype is designated for Hydora laticeps (Carter & Zeck), and the first new collection records of the species are reported since its description in 1932. The occurrence in Australia of Potamophilinus papuanus Sa
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KERR, D. STEVEN, SHAUN THOMPSON, and PETER H. KERR. "A new species of Mycomya Rondani, 1856 (Diptera: Mycetophilidae) common to southeast Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand." Zootaxa 5264, no. 3 (2023): 418–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.9.

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Mycomya quadrimaculata sp. nov. is described from specimens collected in southeast Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand. A key and type photographs of known Australian and New Zealand Mycomya species are provided. The relative abundance, observed distribution, and morphological affinities of the new species suggests that it is adventive and a recent introduction to New Zealand. Wing characters indicate that the new species is most closely aligned with a subgroup of the Australian Mycomya fauna.
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Palmer, Daniel. "Icons of colonial injustice: From photographs to public art." Art & the Public Sphere 8, no. 2 (2019): 201–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/aps_00021_1.

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In the archive of Australian photography, few images point to the gross injustices experienced by Indigenous Australians more forcefully than a 1906 photograph depicting a group of Aboriginal people in neck chains. More recently, few images point to Indigenous self-empowerment more powerfully than a 1993 press photograph of footballer Nicky Winmar lifting his jumper to point proudly to his dark skin. This article explores the extraordinary legacy of these two images and specifically their translation into prominent contemporary public artworks ‐ respectively, a street mural in inner Melbourne
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Barr, Cheryl B., and William D. Shepard. "A review of the Larainae of Australia with description of seven new species and the new genus Australara (Coleoptera, Byrrhoidea, Elmidae)." ZooKeys 1073 (November 29, 2021): 55–117. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1073.71843.

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The three genera and four species of Larainae (Elmidae) previously described from Australia are reviewed, and one new genus and seven new species are described: Australara glaisteri gen. et sp. nov., Ovolara lawrencei sp. nov., Ovolara monteithi sp. nov., Stetholus carinatus sp. nov., Stetholus longipennis sp. nov., Stetholus metatibialis sp. nov., and Stetholus woronora sp. nov. A lectotype is designated for Hydora laticeps (Carter & Zeck), and the first new collection records of the species are reported since its description in 1932. The occurrence in Australia of Potamophilinus papuanus
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34

Franklin, Wally, Trish Franklin, Sal Cerchio, et al. "Photo-identification comparison of humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) flukes from Antarctic Area IV with fluke catalogues from East Africa, Western Australia and Eastern Australia." J. Cetacean Res. Manage. 17, no. 1 (2023): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.47536/jcrm.v17i1.425.

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Early ‘Discovery mark’ data together with recent photo-identification, acoustic, genetic and satellite-radio tag data revealed linkages between humpback whales migrating from breeding grounds (C) off East Africa and the Area III feeding area, from Western Australian breeding grounds (D) and the Antarctic Area IV feeding area and the East Australian breeding grounds (E1) and Antarctic Area V feeding area. These data also revealed low levels of intermingling between (E1) and (D) humpback whales in the Antarctic Area IV feeding area consistent with these being separate populations. Greenpeace pho
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Osmond, Gary. "Photographs, Materiality and Sport History: Peter Norman and the 1968 Mexico City Black Power Salute." Journal of Sport History 37, no. 1 (2010): 119–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/jsporthistory.37.1.119.

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Abstract This article considers the ways in which Australian athlete Peter Norman is presented and represented through the famous photograph of the 1968 Mexico City Olympic games “Black Power” salute. Photographic images are not simple, neutral, or objective records of the past; various material acts influence and affect the ways images are interpreted and read. This article will explore the materiality of the 1968 photograph with particular reference to Peter Norman, who is at different times, and in varying ways, both obscured and emphasized. A materiality approach contributes to understandi
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Kuiter, Rudie H. "Hippocampus tristis, a Lazarus species of seahorse (Teleostei: Syngnathidae) from Australia." Journal of the Ocean Science Foundation 35 (June 24, 2020): 41–47. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3907005.

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<em>Hippocampus tristis</em> Castelnau, 1872 was described from a single specimen that came from the Melbourne Fish Market in Australia. Following Kuiter&rsquo;s (2001) revision of Australian seahorses, two additional specimens of <em>H. tristis</em> were found in the South Australian Museum, housed under the name &ldquo;<em>Hippocampus</em> <em>novae-hollandiae</em>&rdquo;.&nbsp; Despite&nbsp; extensive diving in the southern region for several decades whilst looking out for this taxon, none have been found and Kuiter (2009) presumed it was extinct. However, a photograph of a seahorse taken i
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Brown, Terry M. "Transcending the colonial gaze: Empathy, agency and community in the South Pacific photography of John Watt Beattie1." Journal of New Zealand & Pacific Studies 8, no. 2 (2020): 151–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/nzps_00035_1.

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For three months in 1906, John Watt Beattie, the noted Australian photographer – at the invitation of the Anglican Bishop of Melanesia, Cecil Wilson – travelling on the church vessel the Southern Cross, photographed people and sites associated with the Melanesian Mission on Norfolk Island and present-day Vanuatu and Solomon Islands. Beattie reproduced many of the 1500-plus photographs from that trip, which he sold in various formats from his photographic studio in Hobart, Tasmania. The photographs constitute a priceless collection of Pacific images that began to be used very quickly in a varie
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HUANG, TIAN, YU-LINGZI ZHOU, JIŘÍ JANÁK, and HONG-ZHANG ZHOU. "Four new species and a key to Australian species of the genus Diochus Erichson (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae, Staphylininae, Diochini)." Zootaxa 5512, no. 3 (2024): 343–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5512.3.2.

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The Australian species of the genus Diochus Erichson, 1839 (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae, Staphylininae, Diochini) are reviewed and four new species are described: Diochus basseti sp. nov. and D. weiri sp. nov. from Queensland, D. lawrencei sp. nov. from Northern and Western Australia, and D. slipinskii sp. nov. from Western Australia. Four previously described species from Australia are revised here based on the examination of type material: Diochus divisus Fauvel, 1877, D. octavii Fauvel, 1877, D. longus Lea, 1929, and D. pubiventris Lea, 1929. A key to all eight species is included, along with
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Franklin, Wally, Trish Franklin, Virginia Andrews-Goff, David Paton, and Michael Double. "Movement of two humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) satellite-radio tagged off Eden, NSW and matched by photo-identification with the Hervey Bay catalogue." J. Cetacean Res. Manage. 17, no. 1 (2023): 29–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.47536/jcrm.v17i1.429.

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Photo-identification studies of humpback whales off eastern Australia show low levels of movement between eastern Australia and New Caledonia whales. Some eastern Australian humpback whales migrate through the southern waters of New Zealand on route to Antarctic feeding areas. Photoidentification studies have shown that the waters near the Balleny Islands, in Antarctic Area V, are a feeding area for some eastern Australian humpback whales. However, such studies provide no details of the routes taken between New Zealand and Australia and to and from Antarctic feeding areas. Sixteen humpback wha
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Witcomb, Andrea, and Alistair Patterson. "Collections without End." Museum Worlds 6, no. 1 (2018): 94–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/armw.2018.060108.

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The discovery of five photographs in 2018 in the State Library of Western Australia led us to the existence of a forgotten private museum housing the collection of Captain Matthew McVicker Smyth in early-twentieth-century Perth. Captain Smyth was responsible for the selling of Nobel explosives used in the agriculture and mining industries. The museum contained mineral specimens in cases alongside extensive, aesthetically organized displays of Australian Aboriginal artifacts amid a wide variety of ornaments and decorative paintings. The museum reflects a moment in the history of colonialism tha
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Wang, Han. "Decolonization Effects in Contemporary Australian Cities: A Case Study of Ultimo Power Station, Sydney." Communications in Humanities Research 6, no. 1 (2023): 476–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.54254/2753-7064/6/20230383.

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As a colonial country, the advent of colonialism brought about rapid urbanization and industrialization in Australia. However, it also brings negative impacts. Decolonization is becoming a concern of the people. The research aims to delve into the topic of decolonization efforts in contemporary Australian cities in depth and redefine decolonization from a new perspective. Taking the Ultimo Power Station as an example, this report would draw upon various forms of evidence, such as maps, photographs, interviews, and collages, to analyze the colonial problems, as well as depict and design a visio
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Darian-Smith, Kate. "The ‘girls’: women press photographers and the representation of women in Australian newspapers." Media International Australia 161, no. 1 (2016): 48–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x16665002.

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In 1975, Fairfax News commemorated International Women’s Year by appointing Lorrie Graham as its first female cadet photographer. Women only joined the photographic staff of newspapers in significant numbers from the 1980s and were more likely to be employed on regional newspapers than the metropolitan dailies. This article draws on interviews with male and female press photographers collected for the National Library of Australia’s oral history programme. It provides an overview of the history of women press photographers in Australia, situating their working lives within an overtly masculine
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HUTCHINGS, PAT, MARÍA CAPA, and RACHAEL PEART. "Revision of the Australian Sabellariidae (Polychaeta) and description of eight new species." Zootaxa 3306, no. 1 (2012): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3306.1.1.

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The family Sabellariidae is represented in Australian waters by eleven species belonging to five genera, including eight of themnew to Science: Idanthyrsus nesos n. sp., I. willora n. sp., Lygdamis wambiri n. sp., Phalacrostemma maloga n. sp., Sabellariakooraltha n. sp., S. lungalla n. sp., S. pyramis n. sp., and Tetreres terribilis n. sp. Three genera, Phalocrostemma, Sabellaria andTetreres, are newly recorded from Australia. Descriptions of all species are given, acompanied by detailed illustrations, includingdrawings, photographs and scanning electron micrographs, tables summarising specifi
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Milne, Andrew. "Australian Selectors in the Nineteenth Century and Discrepancies in Imaginings and Realities: Critical Family History." Genealogy 7, no. 4 (2023): 78. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genealogy7040078.

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Queensland became an independent state in 1859, separating from New South Wales. Almost immediately, an ambitious plan on migration was embarked upon in order to attract emigrants to Queensland, above all other possible colony destinations in the British Empire. Henry Jordan was instrumental as the Emigration Commissioner (1861–1866) in devising the land order scheme and Richard Daintree, as Agent-General, wooed, through modern techniques on never-before-seen photography in colour, small capitalists to the isolated outreaches of Queensland, where settlement was encouraged. Life there for those
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SEEMAN, OWEN D., and JENNIFER J. BEARD. "Identification of exotic pest and Australian native and naturalised species of Tetranychus (Acari: Tetranychidae)." Zootaxa 2961, no. 1 (2011): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2961.1.1.

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An illustrated dichotomous key to the 3 endemic Australian, 9 naturalised exotic, and 14 exotic pest species of Tetranychus Dufour, 1832, deemed to be of greatest risk of accidental introduction to Australia is presented. Each species is diagnosed, illustrated with line drawings and/or photographs, and supplied with remarks on its biology, potential to enter Australia and economic importance. We establish that Tetranychus desertorum Banks, 1900, previously thought to be present in Australia, is absent. The erroneous record of T. desertorum is due to confusion between this species and T. ludeni
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Anderson, Margot. "Dance Overview of the Australian Performing Arts Collection." Dance Research 38, no. 2 (2020): 149–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/drs.2020.0305.

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The Dance Collection at Arts Centre Melbourne traces the history of dance in Australia from the late nineteenth century to today. The collection encompasses the work of many of Australia's major dance companies and individual performers whilst spanning a range of genres, from contemporary dance and ballet, to theatrical, modern, folk and social dance styles. The Dance Collection is part of the broader Australian Performing Arts Collection, which covers the five key areas of circus, dance, opera, music and theatre. In my overview of Arts Centre Melbourne's (ACM) Dance Collection, I will outline
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Pelayo, Francisco. "Hermann Klaatsch and his photographic representations of Australian aborigines during his scientific trip through Australia (1904-1907)." Culture & History Digital Journal 12, no. 1 (2023): e008. http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/chdj.2023.008.

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The German anatomist and palaeontologist Hermann Klaatsch arrived in Australia to study the aborigines in March 1904. The aim of his trip was to continue his research on the phylogenetic history of humanity and test his colleague at the University of Heidelberg Otto Schoetensack’s hypothesis that Australia was the cradle of humankind. He travelled the country’s coastline without interruption, except for a trip of a few months to Java, until May 1906. During his trip, which also included Tasmania, Klaatsch studied the aborigines from an anthropological, craniological, and material culture persp
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WELLS, ALICE, and ARTURS NEBOISS. "Australian Diplectroninae reviewed (Insecta: Trichoptera), with description of 21 new species, most referred to a new genus." Zootaxa 4415, no. 1 (2018): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4415.1.1.

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The history of studies on Australian caddisflies in the hydropsychid subfamily Diplectroninae is outlined against a broader background of uncertainties in the delineation of the worldwide type genus, Diplectrona Westwood. For the Australian fauna, keys are given to genera of Diplectroninae that occur in Australia and to adult males of species in Diplectrona (including a newly synonymised genus, Diemeniluma Neboiss), Austropsyche Banks, and Arcyphysa gen. nov. Of the 32 diplectronine species recognised, six are referred to each of Diplectrona and Austropsyche, among them one and four newly desc
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Walsh, Adrian, and Chris Chafer. "Taxonomic revision, occurrence, and identification of Intermediate Egret Ardea intermedia in North Queensland, Australia." Australian Field Ornithology 39 (2022): 174–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.20938/afo39174194.

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Between May and July 2021, five individual white egrets observed in Cairns, Queensland, Australia, appeared to have the physical characteristics of the nominate Intermediate Egret Ardea intermedia in non-breeding plumage, based on the mensurate bill methodology established by Cake et al. (2016). We review the taxonomic status of the Intermediate Egret complex, including A. intermedia (breeding in Asia), A. plumifera (breeding in Australia) and A. brachyrhyncha (breeding in Africa), using the species ranking criteria of Tobias et al. (2010). We subsequently performed an expanded comparative ima
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Nguyen, Nathalie Huynh Chau. "Memory in the Aftermath of War: Australian Responses to the Vietnamese Refugee Crisis of 1975." Canadian Journal of Law and Society / Revue Canadienne Droit et Société 30, no. 02 (2015): 183–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cls.2015.21.

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Abstract This article interweaves the personal and archival by exploring the intersection of official Australian records on the fall of Saigon and government handling of Vietnamese refugees in 1975 with my family history. As transitional justice addresses the legacies of human rights violations including the displacement and resettlement of refugees in post-conflict contexts, Australian responses to the Vietnamese refugee crisis of 1975 provide a relevant case study. Drawing on a wide range of archival documentation at the National Archives of Australia and the National Library of Australia, i
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