Academic literature on the topic 'Warrnambool'

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Journal articles on the topic "Warrnambool"

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Matthews, A. E. W. "CHIEF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST WARRNAMBOOL & DISTRICT BASE HOSPITAL WARRNAMBOOL VICTORIA." Australian Occupational Therapy Journal 23, no. 2 (August 27, 2010): 79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1630.1976.tb01049.x.

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A Gregory, Mark, Kaye Scholfield, Khandakar Ahmed, Dorothy McLaren, James Williams, and Helen Marshall. "Warrnambool Exchange Fire — Resilience and Emergency Management." Journal of Telecommunications and the Digital Economy 2, no. 4 (May 26, 2020): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.18080/jtde.v2n4.274.

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Effective emergency management of a disaster at a single point of failure is vital if the effects of the disaster are to be mitigated. The immediate impacts of a disaster highlight stakeholder perspectives. There is no one-size-fits-all solution to every disaster. Nevertheless, analysing features, aftermath, impact and interim services made available after a disaster provide lessons that can be utilised to avert or mitigate the effects of similar events in the future. This paper provides lessons learnt from a fire that occurred in 2012 in the Warrnambool telephone exchange located in Victoria, Australia and proposes a strategy that provides increased network resilience and more effective emergency management once the copper-based core switching in exchanges is progressively replaced by fibre service area modules.
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Bowler, Jim M., David M. Price, John E. Sherwood, and Stephen P. Carey. "The Moyjil site, south-west Victoria, Australia: fire and environment in a 120,000-year coastal midden — nature or people?" Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 130, no. 2 (2018): 71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rs18007.

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At Moyjil (Point Ritchie), a cliffed site at the mouth of the Hopkins River at Warrnambool, south-eastern Australia, an erosional disconformity of Last Interglacial age on both a rock stack and the adjacent headland represents a surface of possible human occupation. Shells of edible marine molluscs occur on the disconformity, together with a distinctive population of transported stones derived from a calcrete of MIS 7 age and bearing variable dark grey to near-black colouration suggestive of fire. Experimental fire produced similar thermal alteration of calcrete. A strong correlation exists between intensity and depth of dark staining on one hand and increased magnetic susceptibility on the other. Thermal luminescence analyses of blackened stones provide ages in the MIS 5e range, 100–130 ka, consistent with independent stratigraphic evidence and contemporaneous with the age of the surface on which they lie. The distribution of fire-darkened stones is inconsistent with wildfire effects. Two hearth-like features closely associated with the disconformity provide further indications of potential human agency. The data are consistent with the suggestion of human presence at Warrnambool during the Last Interglacial.
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O'Toole, Kevin. "The ‘Unmass’ Media: The Local Appeal of the Warrnambool Standard." Media Information Australia 64, no. 1 (May 1992): 83–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x9206400112.

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Ward, Ian, and Kevin O'Toole. "A battle in the Bush: Some lessons from liberal‐national rivalry in Warrnambool." Australian Journal of Political Science 25, no. 1 (May 1990): 93–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00323269008402108.

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GOEDE, A. "Electron Spin Resonance–A Relative Dating Technique for Quaternary Sediments Near Warrnambool, Victoria." Australian Geographical Studies 27, no. 1 (April 1989): 14–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8470.1989.tb00589.x.

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Roe, Jill. "The Sydney History Group: From the Beginning." Sydney Journal 4, no. 1 (October 23, 2013): 204–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.5130/sj.v4i1.3652.

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Formally speaking, the Sydney History Group (SHG) began in 1977, and ran for almost 20 years to 1995, when the last of its seven books appeared.1 The books all presented original research on aspects of Sydney history and were edited by members of the Group, all whom are here today except for first president, the Warrnambool-born economic historian and urbanist Max Kelly.2 His MA on the history of Paddington, later published as A Paddock Full of Houses in 1978, set a new standard in suburban history and whose outline for a history of Sydney delivered to an informal interdisciplinary gathering of economic historians in the early seventies was ahead of its time. Max died too soon in 1996.
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Dun, R., and C. Morgans. "NATURAL GAS SUPPLY TO A SMALL MARKET: A DISTRIBUTOR'S PERSPECTIVE." APPEA Journal 29, no. 1 (1989): 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj88005.

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A decision to introduce natural gas supply to a small market requires a thorough examination of the economic and technical factors that a gas distributor will encounter in such a project. This paper identifies the important factors to be considered in the feasibility stage and in the construction and implementation phases of the project. The experience of the Gas and Fuel Corporation of Victoria supplying natural gas to the city of Warrnambool is described through all these stages.A feasibility study for natural gas to a small market requires the preparation of a reliable forecast of end- user demand and an assessment of demand/price elasticities for major market sectors, such as household uses and large industrial uses. Where gas is to be supplied from new gas fields any assessment of proven gas reserves must be made. The assessed level of reserves can be measured against forecast demand to identify an expected project life over which the producer and distributor will need to earn a fair return.A producer and a distributor have a common interest in the level of recoverable reserves, the price between producer and distributor, the market demand and the price payable by end- users. A price agreed between a producer and a distributor will be at a level where both parties are satisfied with the expected returns. A higher price would increase returns to the producer, but would deter the distributor from the project.Natural gas supply to Warrnambool involved the planning and construction of a pipeline and an up­grading and expansion of the local reticulation system. In addition, conversion of nearly 13 000 household appliances was undertaken. This work was successfully completed at a cost of about $10 million. The planning and design of these facilities is a balance between short- term cost minimisation, and cost levels that will achieve long- term economies of scale.To achieve a fast development of the end- use consumption, a strong marketing effort was undertaken to ensure connection of large- use industrial customers was achieved without delay. This quick development of load was essential to provide good cash inflows to the distributor and the producer at an early stage of project development.
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Carey, Stephen P., John E. Sherwood, Megan Kay, Ian J. McNiven, and James M. Bowler. "The Moyjil site, south-west Victoria, Australia: stratigraphic and geomorphic context." Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 130, no. 2 (2018): 14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rs18004.

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Shelly deposits at Moyjil (Point Ritchie, Warrnambool), Victoria, together with ages determined from a variety of techniques, have long excited interest in the possibility of a preserved early human influence in far south-eastern Australia. This paper presents a detailed analysis of the stratigraphy of the host Bridgewater Formation (Pleistocene) at Moyjil and provides the context to the shelly deposits, evidence of fire and geochronological sampling. We have identified five superposed calcarenite–palaeosol units in the Bridgewater Formation, together with two prominent erosional surfaces that may have hosted intensive human activity. Part of the sequence is overlain by the Tower Hill Tuff, previously dated as 35 ka. Coastal marine erosion during the Last Interglacial highstand created a horizontal surface on which deposits of stones and shells subsequently accumulated. Parts of the erosional surface and some of the stones are blackened, perhaps by fire. The main shell deposit was formed by probable mass flow, and additional shelly remains are dispersed in the calcareous sand that buried the surface.
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J., Rollo, and Esteban Y. "Urbanheart Surgery – a Collaborative Interdisciplinary Design Studio." KnE Engineering 2, no. 2 (February 9, 2017): 308. http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/keg.v2i2.631.

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<p class="Body1">The following paper presents an interdisciplinary design studio program at the School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, referred to as the ‘UrbanHeart Surgery’. This is a design based research forum that attempts to facilitate a landscape of decision-making that stimulates an integrated approach to design within the urban context.</p><p>The Urbanheart program has developed into a very successful teaching, research and public/community relations program. It has not only secured an ongoing relationship with various planning authorities, but its core of industrial partnerships has expanded to include four regional councils (Bendigo, Ballarat, Geelong, Surfcoast and Warrnambool), three metropolitan municipalities (Melbourne City, Port Phillip, Wyndham and Maribyrnong) and close links with various Victorian State government departments.</p><p>The program actively integrates postgraduate students from Architecture, Urban Design, Landscape Architecture and Planning. The different scales of resolution at which the unit operates would welcome further integration with students from Mechanical Engineering, Art and Design, Information Technology and Environmental Science.</p>
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Warrnambool"

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Marshall, Nicholas. "A Cultural History of Australian Rules Football in Rural South West Victoria during the Interwar Years." Thesis, 2019. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/40596/.

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Australian Rules football has been played for over 160 years. Originating in Melbourne, the state capital of Victoria, the code is the most popular winter sport in the state and much of the nation. The game’s popularity has led to burgeoning historical literature of its origins, development, and expansion. Yet, the majority of these investigations have focused on metro- centric narratives of the code, overlooking the game’s prominence in many of those areas outside of major Australian cities. This thesis moves away from narratives of the game’s elite metropolitan history to explore the role Australian Rules football played in communicating, reproducing, and promulgating cultural values in a particular rural Australian context. More specifically, I analyse local newspapers from the south west of Victoria during the interwar period to begin the process of ascertaining what the game meant to rural Australian communities and to the nation more generally. While this thesis examines the general status and popularity of this code of football in a rural context, it focusses on the role that the local press and community played in promoting the game as a space that fostered the development of exemplary men and citizens. Australia’s late colonial and early twentieth century history is replete with narratives that connect Australia’s national identity with rural male figures that were revered for the idyllic manliness they embodied. Less, however, is known about the ideals of manliness in the country during the interwar period. Henceforth, this thesis analyses the multivalent perceptions of how men moulded their masculinity according to celebrated, admired, and revered characteristics of the predominantly male-oriented interwar setting of rural football competitions. Football in this rural setting was presented as a wholesome entity that nurtured attributes of congeniality, fairness, and sportsmanship. However, the memories extracted from historical sources of the period such as newspapers and monuments also illuminate some troubling aspects of football’s culture that were socially condoned and accepted as ‘a part of the game’. In particular, elements of violence, the accepted decline of Indigenous Australians, concerns about the impact of professionalisation, and the relevance of sport during periods of global crisis complicate the simplistic celebration of country football as a wholesome manly sport.
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Books on the topic "Warrnambool"

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Forth, G. J. A history of the Warrnambool & District Base Hospital. Rushcutters Bay, N.S.W: Halstead Press, 2002.

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2

Booth, Chris. Balanced stone: Chris Booth sculptures at Lincoln and Warrnambool. [Lincoln] N.Z: Lincoln University Press with Whitireia Pub. and Daphne Brasell Associates, 1998.

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Blake, Barry J. The Warrnambool language: A consolidated account of the Aboriginal language of the Warrnambool area of the Western District of Victoria based on nineteenth-century sciences. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, 2003.

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Bruce, Morris. Telling Warrnambool's story. Geelong, Vic: Deakin University Press, 1993.

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International Symposium on Ostracoda. (11th 1991 Warrnambool, Victoria). Ostracoda in the earth and life sciences: Proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Ostracoda : Warrnambook, Victoria, Australia, 8-12, July 1991. Rotterdam: A.A. Balkema, 1993.

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Warrnambool on the shipwreck coast. Covell Publications, 1994.

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Spirit of Warrnambool: A Gripping Paranormal Crime Thriller. Evolved Publishing, 2016.

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(Editor), C. E. Sayers, and P. L. Yule (Editor), eds. By These We Flourish: A History of Warrnambool. Hyperion Books, 1987.

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Roditch, Roditch. Francis of Warrnambool: A Short Story Between the Worlds. Independently Published, 2018.

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1935-, Cole Ronald James, ed. Birth of the blues: Warrnambool Football Netball Club, 1861-2007. Allansford, Vic: Warrnambool Football Netball Club, 2008.

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Reports on the topic "Warrnambool"

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Commonwealth Bank of Australia - Branches - Warrnambool - Exterior - 1922 (plate 47). Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-000563.

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