Nintendo Wii Connection Ambassador – Australia (500 Free Wii Points)
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South Australia, Australia. – Medford Taylor $99 Windmills of Penong, South Australia. |
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Australia. – Sam Abell $169 Cave interior, coastal Australia. |
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Western Australia. – Sam Abell $99 Cumulonimbus clouds, Western Australia. |
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Queensland, Australia. – George Grall $99 Tawny frogmouth, Queensland, Australia. |
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Near Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia. – Jason Edwards $99 A flock of free range chickens on an open grassland farm plain. |
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Australia Coast. – Sam Abell $169 Driftwood and tidal pools, Victoria, Australia. |
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Victoria, Australia. – Sam Abell $169 Restaurant overlooking a harbor in Victoria, Australia. |
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Australia. – Medford Taylor $169 Male red kangaroos sparring, Australia. |
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Western Australia, Australia. – Brian J. Skerry $99 A whale shark in the waters off Western Australia. |
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Ceduna, South Australia, Australia. – Medford Taylor $99 OTC-Ceduna Satellite Station at dawn, South Australia. |
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Australia. – Joe Stancampiano $99 Aquatic split-level view with fish and mangroves, Australia. |
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Tasmania, Australia. – Joe Stancampiano $99 Portrait of a pair of Tasmanian devils, Tasmania, Australia. |
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Environment Of Australia $14.14 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Effects of Global Warming on Australia, Drought in Australia, Wind Power in Australia, Cronulla Sand Dunes, Kurnell Peninsula, Solar Power in Australia, Towra Point Nature Reserve, Water Security in Australia, Solar Hot Water in Australia, Environment of Australia, Currumbin Ecovillage, Australian Student Environment Network, Biofuel in Australia, Bush Heritage Australia, Photovoltaic Engineering in Australia, Ceres Community Environment Park, Australian National Heritage List, Shark Net, Murray-Darling Basin Authority, Riverlife, Timbarra Gold Mine, Swan River Trust, Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, Department of Environment and Conservation, List of Australian Environmental Books, Hepburn Heights Bushland, Continental Stress Class, Wind Prospect, Supervising Scientist, Queensland Ranger Association, Wesley Vale Pulp Mill, a Directory of Important Wetlands in Australia, Australasian Ecological Survey Sources, Department for Environment and Heritage, Landcare Australia. Excerpt: The development and maintenance of ecological consulting standards depends heavily on the publication of reliable survey methods. For the most part, ecological consultants do surveys to either detect statutorily threatened species and / or describe the biodiversity of a site. There are a wide range of Australasian Ecological Survey methods. Consultants and others carrying out ecological surveys may need to:1. Comply with statutorily required methods, as determined by legislation at either the national or state level;2. In the absence of statutory requirements, use methods suited to required objectives;2a Use a range of established methods, as developed in the literature;2b Develop new / alternative methods;Contents AUSTRALIA Australian Capital Territory New South |
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Noongar $14.14 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: -up, Noongar, Whadjuk, Swan Valley Nyungah Community, Alas Poor Yagan, Robert Bropho, Midgegooroo, Pindjarup, Noongar Classification, Mokare, Ken Colbung, Wagyl, Beeliar People, Yellagonga. Excerpt: Map of all coordinates from Google Map of all coordinates from Bing Porongurup is an example of a Western Australian place with a name that includes the “-up” suffix. -up (pronounced / p/ ) is a suffix commonly found in place names in south western Western Australia . The suffix originated in a dialect of Noongar , an Indigenous Australian language , in which “-up” means “place of”. The suffix “-in” or “-ing” has a similar meaning in a related dialect of Noongar. Places tended to be named after their distinctive features, whereby the place names could be used to create a “mental map” allowing Indigenous Australians to determine where water, food and other raw materials could be found. These sites were often located near sources of fresh water, leading to the common misconception that “up” and “in” mean “near water”. The meanings and the pronunciations of many of these names has been lost over time. A number of these places were at one stage named with a suffix “-upp”. This was as a result of the Western Australian Lands and Surveys Department adopting a system of spelling Indigenous Australian names devised by the Royal Geographical Society . In simple terms, the system set the pronunciation of consonants as in English and vowels as in Italian. Using this system meant that “up” would be pronounced “oop” (IPA: /u p/ ), whereas the names were meant to be pronounced “up” (IPA: / p/ ). The solution was deemed to be that doubling the following consonant would shorten the preceding vowel, thus “upp”. This spelling convention was rescinded for towns in south west Western |
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