Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Australian History: Snowy Mountain Scheme

I am currently reading a novel, "The Sound of One Hand Clapping" written by Richard Flanagan. Although only 10 chapters in, I have inadvertently sojourned into a dark chapter of our history that is not openly acknowledged. Like all good Australian School Children before me, I took on board the version of events disseminated to us via our well meaning History teachers at the time, not for a moment considering the cost these families had paid. Fleeing from their war torn homes in hope for a better life only to be caught between their lost aspirations of starting afresh in a "free" country and the loss/letting go of history/meaning of who they are, all in the name of progress......personal cost to the laborers, was insignificant when weighed up against the burgeoning electricity grid, that was to be the Snowy Mountain Hydro Electricity Scheme. approximately 66,000 immigrants from countries including: Romania, Norway, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Denmark, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Russia, Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Greece, Egypt, Ethiopia, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, USA, Britain, Ireland, France, Austria, Italy and Germany.

As the Federal Immigration Census "Federation To Century's End" shows, Australia's Immigration laws were very lax at times due to inability to agree on new set laws governing who could enter and why, initially it was ex-pats of Britain and new exotic wives of the soldiers and then business associates, but they also recognised the need for increased intake due to significant losses at war and to emigration so also included families and those from war torn countries such as Poland, that could not return home safely. A popular immigration slogan was 'the child, the best immigrant'. Children constituted a particularly attractive category of migrant because they were seen to assimilate more easily, were more adaptable and had a long working life ahead of them.

The men and women of the Snowy Mountains Scheme, are "Hidden Heroes" and deserve more than just our recognition for what they built, they deserve our respect, admiration and friendship.


Australian History: Snowy Mountain Scheme


The Snowy Mountains Scheme consists of:
  • sixteen major dams
  • seven power stations
  • a pumping station
  • 225 kilometers of tunnels, pipelines and aqueducts. 
Initial proposals in 1918 were instigated by the needs of farmers who wanted to make use of the waters of the Snowy River which flowed down the Great Dividing Ranges into the sea, by diverting the water inland for irrigation. In the same year, a plan for a dam was suggested to the NSW government for the construction of a power plant but made no provision for inland irrigation. However the plans were put on hold, revived once in 1937 and 1944 and it wasn’t until 1946 where the Federal, Victorian and NSW governments joined together to investigate the possibilities of a Snowy Scheme. In 1949 the Government accepted a proposal and the Snowy Mountain Hydro-Electric Power Act was passed in Federal Parliament in July 1949. The Snowy Mountains Authority came into being on August 1 of the same year led by Sir William Hudson, a prominent New Zealand engineer.

The chosen location is significant whereby altitudes exceed 2100m (Mt.Kosciusko, the highest point in Australia) and where a large proportion of the area is over 1800m [2]. This is important as precipitation in the form of snow and rain falls in catchment areas of the Scheme. Water from melting snow and rain is collected and stored in large dams which are then diverted through tunnels and pipelines down to power stations, hundreds of metres below. Mountainous regions are ideally suited to the generation of hydro-electricity, because there is plenty of rain and snow, low temperatures meaning less evaporation and high mountains to provide the steep fall that is needed for the water to spin the turbines

Snowy Hydro currently provides over 70% of all renewable energy that is available to the eastern mainland grid of Australia, as well as providing fast response power to light up the morning and evening rush hours of Sydney, Brisbane, Canberra, Melbourne and Adelaide.

The Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Scheme began in 1949, was 25 years in construction, and remains one of the world's great engineering and social achievements. The purpose of the scheme is to collect water from melting snow and rain in the Snowy Mountains. Where once most of this water used to flow into the Snowy River, it is now diverted through tunnels in the mountains and stored in dams. The water is then used by the power stations to create electricity. The water then flows mainly into the Murray and Murrumbidgee Rivers. These rivers are important for irrigation of farms and for household water for communities in New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia. A small proportion of the water also flows into the Snowy River.

Between 1949, when the first blasting shot was fired, and by 1974, when the physical works of the Scheme were completed, over 100,000 men and women from more than 30 countries had worked on the Scheme. Australians formed the largest nationality group on the Scheme, making up one-third of the workforce, which reached a peak of 7300 in 1959. Many migrants were escaping the horror of war-torn Europe to begin a new life in Australia. Working together on the Scheme, they became part of the Snowy family – with former enemies and allies working side by side.

During construction, seven regional townships and over 100 temporary camps were established throughout the Snowy Mountains. These towns and camps serviced the men, women and families who came to build the Scheme. A sense of companionship and camaraderie grew out of hard work and isolation. Life in the camps was extremely hard, especially during the early years, when hundreds of men spent harsh winters in canvas tents with only basic amenities and provisions.

References:

[1] Designated Historic Civil Engineering Landmarks. Heritage Knowledgebase Database. American Society of Civil Engineers

[2] Year Book Australia, 1986

Census-Federation to Century's End, 1901-2001

Hidden Heroes of Australia

The History Place-World War II in Europe

Friday, August 6, 2010

Ned Kelly Armour, Reunited

                          
             Ned Kelly                 Joe Byrne                      Dan Kelly                Steve Hart


Ned Kelly Armour, Reunited for the Beechworth Ned Kelly weekend......for only the fourth time, all four suits of armour will be together. This is a very rare opportunity to see all the Kelly Gang armour together in one place, it will be a long time before this happens again anywhere in Australia.

Short History: How the Kelly gang was finally brought down...
(courtesy Vic State Library)

No one is ever likely to know just what considerations influenced the Kelly Gang in the months preceding the battle of Glenrowan. If the shroud that surrounded so much of their lives was dark, then the reticence that enveloped relatives and friends following the climax of their story was darker still.

What seems likely is that someone - probably Ned himself - dreamed up a checkmate to the banks’ new ring of security, and that once the idea was floated its very boldness gave purpose to everyone. The evidence is that mouldboards were stolen a few months after Jerilderie, and that the task of fashioning them into usable shape and quilting them kept the gang and their supporters busy throughout the entire 1879-80 summer. Ned and Joe meanwhile were casting around for a strategic objective and tactical plans. The betrayal of Maggie and withdrawal of the Glenrowan watch party may well have supplied the occasion sought. Sherritt would be executed, and his execution used to draw the special force from Benalla, so leaving its two banks unprotected. The town would then be isolated by cutting the rail links north and south.

To cut the line from Melbourne was simple. The rail bridge would be blown with gunpowder, and the road bridge too, if necessary. But where to cut the line to stop the special to Beechworth? The answer was obvious - right in the midst of their staunchest support, at Glenrowan which was without either Sunday rail traffic or telegraph.

Prelude to a Republic

It is tempting to picture the gang with their supporters - the telegraphs who had taken part in the raids on Euroa and Jerilderie, Tom Lloyd and others who had been involved in the complex job of securing the mould-boards and forging four suits of armour. Men come and go - cocky farmers, goldminers, sympathisers with barely two bob to rub together, members of the Greta mob, most of them young and Australian-born. Dan comes and goes, arranging transport of the armour. In the centre sits Joe Byrne, busily writing out instructions, checking times and ticking items off a list. Beside him stands Ned, warm and genial, shaking old friends by the hand and referring now and then to a sketch map, the light of confidence in his eye. Steve is dispatched on the greatest ride of his life to sound the tocsin in many a gully and flat.

The armour had been the subject of endless debate, especially as it made accurate aiming of a rifle impossible. Yes, it was proof to a Martini-Henry bullet at ten paces. But extra horses were needed to carry it, it had to be put on and off, which was time-consuming in the best of conditions. A new set of habits was required. In other words, the members of the gang would have to learn how to wear it; new disciplines were required to replace natural habit. There were too many unknown factors, said Joe, and the weight was terrible. It was approximately that of a bag of wheat, in other words about as much as a strong man could carry. To compensate for the inaccuracy of fire associated with the armour, Ned bought four rapid-fire Winchester repeaters and shortened the barrels. The gang now had several score men ready to take up arms. No doubt the armour captured their imaginations and it was their preference which swung the argument.

The plan was to derail the police special on a bend just north of the Glenrowan station, hand the survivors over to the Greta Mob with instructions to make for the hills, and then to ride the hop-step-and-jump to Benalla and blow the bridges. Ned, Joe, Dan and Steve, encased in armour, would serve as shock troops, fronting for their auxiliaries. Hare and his men would be captured and held hostage until such time as the Melbourne authorities saw fit to release Mrs Kelly. This, at any rate, is what Kelly indicated after the event.

Inside the Jones Inn

What had seemed right and necessary after months of being hounded by spies and black trackers, may now have seemed unnecessary to the outlaws. Back in the warmth of human society, even the police became human. Their plans had worked out well enough to date despite the special’s lateness, and their force was safe and intact. Rather than wreck the special with the resulting broken limbs, injured horses and other consequences, they decided on an alternative. Ned and Joe re-briefed the bush telegraphs and Greta Mob at McDonnell’s and Ned took a picked man to the gatehouse and instructed him in the use of the signal lamp. This would stop the special opposite the barracks, leaving the locomotive to proceed to the station where the horses could be unloaded. Safe in armour, the gang would meanwhile drive the police into the barracks where the Greta Mob would keep them cooped up. While the police mounts were driven into the hills, the gang would ride the police special back to Benalla.

Dan and Steve brought out armour forged from the ploughshares, begged or stolen, and showed it to the amazed prisoners. The iron was as thick as a dinner plate and quilted inside. Kelly repeated his declaration that he would be on the spot when the train ran over the culvert and would shoot all who were not killed. Upon request, Mortimer brought out his concertina and someone sang a Scottish reel. Mrs Jones offered her son sixpence to sing The Wild Colonial Boy, and the spirit of convict days not long since lived again amid the shadows cast by the fire.

Arrival of the Police Train

The outlaws hurried to the inner room and got busy on their strange toilet. They had no sooner turned their backs than Bracken, who had taken good note where the door key was hidden, walked over and slipped it in his boot. From the rear of the hotel, the frightened prisoners could hear smothered curses and the clang of armour, and from the front, the sound of the special steaming into the station. Then came the thud of feet from the back of the inn, at which Bracken unlocked the front door and made for the station. The excitement waxed intense at the clatter of horses being unloaded and the sound of police making their way towards the hotel in whose shadow, cast by the harvest moon, the outlaws stood waiting.

The police accounts of who opened fire in the battle of Glenrowan are contradictory. Hare claimed that his men fired fifty or sixty shots and the outlaws thirty or forty before he gave the order to stop firing. He was close to the inn when he saw the flash of a rifle and felt his left hand go limp, he said. Then three flashes followed from the veranda. Whoever had first fired at him stepped back and began to fire again. A voice cried, “Fire away you beggars, you can do us no harm,” and a trooper by his side said, “That is the voice of Ned Kelly.”

Kelly claimed that he arrived opposite the station and was dismounting to bail up the police when a bolt in his armour failed. By the time he had adjusted it, the police were firing into the inn. Hearing screams, he thought at first they came from Mrs Stanistreet and Hart had been cornered. He was half way between the gatehouse and the inn when he received a bullet in the foot and immediately after another in the left arm. It was only then, he declared, at the third volley, that he and his mates replied to police fire. As his armour required him to hold the rifle at arm’s length to get anything of a sight and his arm was smashed, he fired at random at the flashes through the wraiths of gunpowder smoke drifting across the field - two shots to the front and two shots to the left.

“I’m afraid it’s a case with us this time.” “Don’t be so excited. The boys will hear us and it will dishearten them.” “Well, it’s your fault. I always said this bloody armour would bring us to grief.” “Don’t you believe it. Old Hare is cooked and we’ll soon finish the rest.”

Through the gloom appeared Dan and Steve. Ned sent them inside, Joe followed and the three clanked up the passage. As the bullets hummed off the armour, they pulled up the bar counter and partitions, barricaded the walls and cursed the police. To the prisoners Byrne appeared completely reckless - as though he did not care whether he lived or died. He marched up to the bar and had just poured himself a nobbler of whisky when a bullet found its way through a gap in his armour and cut the femoral artery. “Many more years in the bush for the Kelly gang,” he cried, and turning round twice, fell to the floor with a clang, the blood rushing from his groin.

The Bunyip

Constable Arthur was lighting his pipe when he heard something behind him. He turned and the sight so surprised him that the pipe dropped from his mouth. Advancing through the timber from the Lookout was a figure in grey cotton coat reaching past the knees. Most extraordinary of all was the head. Arthur goggled for several seconds before he concluded that some madman had conceived the notion of storming the hotel with a nailcan on his head. “Go back, you damn fool; you’ll get shot,” he shouted. The apparition, no more than thirty metres off, replied, “I could shoot you, sonny.” No sooner said than he lifted a revolver, placed it across his forearm and fired. The bullet went wide. Someone pointed to the figure and shouted, “Look at this!” With big head and shoulders looming through the mists of dawn it looked like a huge blackfellow wrapped in a blanket. “Challenge him, and if he doesn’t answer, shoot!” cried Senior Constable Kelly.

Arthur lifted his Martini and fired at the helmet, thinking to knock it off. The figure no more than staggered and continued to come, deliberately advancing one foot after the other with a macabre lurching motion and edging towards the rear of the inn. An opening in the helmet looked like a large mouth. Arthur fired a second shot. The figure staggered again but still came on. He fired again and heard the bullet spin off. Amazed cries came from the troopers. Someone shouted, “It’s a ghost!” Dowsett exclaimed, “It’s old Nick himself!” Senior Constable Kelly cried, “Look out, boys, it’s the bunyip. He’s bullet-proof!”

Ned had been lying on the rising ground in sight of the inn, bleeding in his cold mountain of iron and barely conscious, with who knows what thoughts, what bitterness racking him. Earlier, he had been near the tree where Arthur had found the revolving rifle and had refrained from shooting Steele in the back. At that point Tom Lloyd had found him and helped him to adjust his armour. Now, feeling somewhat revived, he was out to rally the other two. He rapped on his breastplate with his revolver butt, and Dan and Steve came to the rear and commenced firing. “Come out, boys, and we’ll whip the lot of them,” he cried, his voice echoing from behind the vizor.

The police poured bullets at him. Arthur fired, Phillips fired, Healy discharged both barrels of his shotgun. A chorus of shots broke out over the ground; those who could not see the outlaw fired into the inn from which the screams of woman and children broke out afresh. In spite of wounds in his foot, arm and right hand, Ned continued to advance, bearing the great weight of iron, staggering under the impact of the hits and firing deliberately but inaccurately at the inner ring of his attackers. He was laughing; at last he was discharging the terrible debt that had been accumulating since childhood.

Beginning of the End

Ned rose, fired carefully at Steele who was wiping from his eyes dirt flung up by a bullet from the inn, and headed towards Dowsett. He had approached within fifteen metres when the railway guard cried, “You’d better surrender old man, you’re surrounded.” “Never, while I have a shot left,” cried Kelly. As if to warn her master, the outlaw’s grey mare passed a few metres to the rear and Kelly turned to find Steele advancing at a run, swinging his gun as if to club him. He tried to aim his revolver. Steele fired at his knees, and he staggered back. Steele fired again at point blank range, scoring Kelly’s hand and hip with swanshot. The outlaw tottered. His voice boomed under the helmet, “I’m done, I’m done!”

Dr Nicolson asked what the armour meant. Ned replied that he had intended to fight it out and paste as many of the traps as he could before they got him. He was sick of his life. He was hunted like a dog, could get no rest and didn’t give a damn what became of him.

In the days that followed, reports of the siege of Glenrowan appeared wherever the English language was spoken. A spate of messages leapt across the continent according to the principle, Unto everyone that hath shall be given”. The Chief Secretary Mr Ramsay, Superintendent Hare and Chief Commissioner Standish received congratulatory telegams from Lord Normanby in Melbourne and Lord Augustus Loftus, Governor of New South Wales. From London came a comment from a young medical student, Arthur Conan Doyle, who remarked on the outlaw’s imagination and recommended armour for use by infantry. Military chiefs concerned with stamping out insurrection in India remarked in enlightened moments that the Kellys would have made fine soldiers.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Leadership - The Virtuoso

The virtuoso


• Lyndall Crisp

• The Australian

• March 17, 2010 11:38AM



Tognetti says there is rivalry in the group, but in a collegiate way - "we're playing the same music and pretty much on the same level," he says.

LIKE many successful people, Richard Tognetti was not a born leader. "I was not a leader at school. I was never really one to be part of the group, let alone lead the group. I didn't want anything to do with leading school riots certainly. But I definitely wasn't a follower either."

Nevertheless, the lad from Wollongong morphed into a brilliant violinist, conductor and “by necessity” a leader, as artistic director of the internationally successful Australian Chamber Orchestra. He is also artistic director of the Maribor Festival in Slovenia, Niseko Winter Music Festival in Japan and Vasse Felix Festival in Australia.

“I don’t lead because I feel I have to lead. I know I have a message in music, a strong musical personality that I want to express. Yet the repertoire I want to play requires more than one person. So it’s out of necessity that I end up in a leadership role,” he says.

It was while studying at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music that Tognetti, and others, began to realise he was someone his colleagues admired and would follow. It was his interpretation of music, as much as his extraordinary versatility as a violinist performing on period, modern and electric instruments, that inspired those around him.

Today, as well as shepherding an orchestra of 17 highly skilled musicians through concert performances, tours and special appearances here and overseas, Tognetti, 45, reaches out across other art forms and artistic styles to collaborate with artists as diverse as singer Neil Finn, photographer Bill Henson and artist-cartoonist Michael Leunig. He was also co-composer of the score for Peter Weir’s Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, and tutored the film’s star, Russell Crowe, in violin.

And that’s in addition to planning the ACO’s seasons years ahead and all at a time when it’s become more difficult than ever before to raise funding and attract sponsorship. “We’re a pretty strong ship in that we’re adaptable and we’re small. We thought we were going to suffer more and we had contingency plans. We suffered, but not as much as most.”

He has no formal business training and relies on a strong administrative team. However, he insists on having a foot firmly planted in both the management and musical camps.

“I have a lot to do with the management side,” he says. “If I don’t, then there’s a big chasm between management and the orchestra. We have a highly responsible general manager. I make sure we’re doing the right concerts, going to the right places, playing the right repertoire. If I hear mutterings that things are going badly, then I’ll listen. But it’s not really my role to manage people.”

Positive energy, vision, innovation - they’re all elements of effective leadership. Yet, as Tognetti points out, there are plenty of successful leaders whose modus operandi is the opposite.

“There are quite a few negative leaders who are very good. There are people who create negative energy in a team that maybe creates a positive outcome - conductors such as Toscanini, who didn't do ‘nice’. Too much emphasis is placed on being ‘nice and lovely and jolly’ these days. It's strange but true that Michael Leunig has a cute image, but it’s actually his vicious independent voice that creates his unique resonance.”

“For myself, more often than not I’m being fairly positive about things. But if I’m only being positive, then people can be a bit lax. To lead people you need a steel spirit and resolve.

“I know what I want and how to achieve it in this sphere I work in. That comes from experience. I’ve always been clear about what I want musically. If people don’t know where they stand, then it’s a sign of bad leadership. To them it seems you’re dissembling or hiding the truth, which is not a good thing. You have to be honest. Sometimes if you think the truth is going to hurt, you are overly considerate and that can be a negative.”

Tognetti, 45, holds honorary doctorates from three Australian universities, was made a National Living Treasure in 1999 and his recordings of Bach’s solo violin repertoire for ABC Classics won three consecutive ARIA awards for best classical album (2006-8). This year he was awarded an AO (Officer of the Order of Australia). He spends more than three months each year away from home and his idea of a holiday is to go somewhere else and work.

When it comes to the orchestra he insists on perfection. “If someone’s not performing, you have to take them aside. But we haven’t had many dismissals from the orchestra, something I’m very proud of. On the management side, there have been many more [dismissals] because people apply for jobs without the right experience, yet they show very well in the interview.”

Tognetti has never had a mentor - “you have to work things out on your own” - and doesn’t mentor others, although he’s happy to give advice when asked.

“I find it necessary to be emotionally honest. If I’m in a bad mood, I’m not going to pretend I’m not (as long as it’s for a good reason). I’m not a happy-clappy person, I’m not in a happy clappy profession. We’re expressing quite deep, often tumultuous emotions. I am part of that language.”

One thing he won’t abide is gossip. “If I’m talking about someone behind their back, I won’t continue the conversation unless I feel sure I can say all those things to the person,” he says. “You can’t just backstab people. You must be able to confront them. We have a very good system, a forum with strong rules where people can express their grievances. People can put [their complaint] on the agenda and if we can’t deal with it then and there, we get outside counselling.”

As a man who wakes every day with a dozen new ideas in his head, Tognetti makes it clear he doesn’t want to be overburdened with petty grievances.

“If things are not being run very well - and years ago things were run very badly; there was a lot of learning to do when we started - then you have to listen to petty grievances and take them seriously. If things are going well and you’re still getting petty grievances, you have to look at the person who’s complaining and give them a bit of a psychological slap.

“In a way dealing with a small orchestra is even more difficult because it’s more personal. It’s the proximity. As Stalin said, ‘One man’s death is a tragedy; a platoon’s is a statistic.’ The closer you get, the more personal it is.

“Some members will become friends, some acquaintances and with some you have a wonderful collegial relationship. There’s rivalry whenever you get people together, but here it’s very collegiate. We are all playing the same music and pretty much on the same level. You can’t meddle.”

He feels he’s a strong leader but says that “staying ahead of the pack” is one of the toughest challenges.

“If you’re an independent thinker, then you have to be prepared to be lonely. Sometimes you have to make quite difficult and unpopular decisions. You have to be ready for all that. It happens often. When things are going well, you know something is going to come along [that will test you]. You have to be on your toes and also make sure the people who are following know it’s not all about things being easy.

“Yes, I enjoy leading - certainly more than following - otherwise I wouldn’t do it. There are a myriad of rewards. When things are going poorly, I take responsibility and when things go well ... it’s necessary to have a kind of humility.”

Sometimes he feels the pressure (though surfing helps). “You do become acclimatised to the pressure of performing and leading and dealing with crises. The only way to deal with a crisis is to keep calm. If the pilot is freaking out, then you’re doomed. Sometimes it’s better to put your head down and be fair but cruel, to be considered and apply your experience to making your own decisions without being distracted by listening to too many people.”

Saturday, July 17, 2010

" GUARDIAN CENTRAL ": Scientists find bizarre creatures of the deep

Scientists find bizarre creatures of the deep

Updated Fri Jul 16, 2010 2:28pm AEST


Australian scientists have discovered bizarre deep sea life hundreds of metres down in the seas around the Great Barrier Reef.

Ancient sharks, giant oil fish, swarms of crustaceans and a primitive shell-dwelling squid species called the nautilus were among the astonishing life captured by remote controlled cameras 1,400 metres below the surface at Osprey Reef, 350 kilometres north-east of Cairns.
Lead researcher Professor Justin Marshall, from the Queensland Brain Institute at the University of Queensland, says his team also found several unidentified fish species, including "prehistoric six-gilled sharks".

"Some of the creatures that we've seen we were sort of expecting, some of them we weren't expecting and some of them we haven't identified yet," he said.

"There was a shark that I really wasn't expecting, which was a false cat shark, which has a really odd dorsal fin."

The mission, known as the Deep Australia project and funded by the Australian Research Council, used special low-light sensitive cameras that were custom designed to trawl the ocean floor.

Professor Marshall says Osprey Reef is part of the Coral Sea Conservation Zone, which has been identified as an area of high conservation value.

He says it is therefore important we study the ecosystems and species that live in this area.

"We simply do not know what life is down there and our cameras can now record the behaviour and life in Australia's largest biosphere, the deep sea," he said.

Ancient nautilus

The researchers also collected footage of the nautilus, an ancient relative of the squid and octopus, which lives in a shell.

They measured the 'living fossils' to find out more about their biology before returning them to sea.

"Learning more about these creatures' primitive eyes and brain could help neuroscientists to better understand human vision," research student Andy Dunstan said.

Professor Marshall says most of our knowledge on how nerve cells function and communicate was first pioneered through work on giant squid nerve cells.

"We are now returning to these original model systems, both for their own intrinsic interest and also to better understand brain disorders which lead to conditions such as epilepsy," he said.

Under threat

Professor Marshall says the research had been made more urgent by recent oil spills affecting the world heritage-listed Great Barrier Reef, and the growing threat to its biodiversity by the warming and acidification of the world's oceans.

"One of the things that we're trying to do by looking at the life in the deep sea is discover what's there in the first place, before we wipe it out," he said.

"We simply do not know what life is down there, and our cameras can now record the behaviour and life in Australia's largest biosphere, the deep sea."

Scientists have already warned the 345,000-square kilometre attraction is in serious jeopardy, as global warming and chemical run-off threaten to kill marine species and cause disease outbreaks.

In April, the Chinese coal ship Shen Neng 1 gouged a scar in the reef when it ran aground whilst attempting to take a short cut, leaking tonnes of oil into a famed nature sanctuary and breeding site.

Professor Marshall says the cameras will now be sent to the sludge-ridden Gulf of Mexico to monitor the effects of the oil spill on marine life there.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

" GUARDIAN CENTRAL ": Fred Hollows coin released - Australian Geographic...

" GUARDIAN CENTRAL ": Fred Hollows coin released - Australian Geographic...:

"Fred Hollows coin released - Australian Geographic By: AAP July-8-2010 A one dollar coin commemorating the work of the late Fred Hollows..."

By: AAP

July-8-2010

A one dollar coin commemorating the work of the late Fred Hollows is being released this week.

The commemorative Fred Hollows one dollar coin is being released this week. (Photo: Royal Australian Mint)FRED HOLLOWS, WHOSE LEGACY lives on in the people he helped regain sight, will now be remembered through a commemorative coin, to be released Friday night.

Gabi Hollows says her late husband would be humbled at having a coin pressed in his honour. "He would be slightly embarrassed about it but also quite chuffed that they've given him that honour," she says.

Fred's work to save the sight of countless people across the world, and especially Australian Aborigines, brought him acclaim and in 1990 he was named Australian of the Year.

"He wore his badge of honour very well when he was Australian of the year and now to be put on an Australian coin - it will be quite special," his widow said.

Before his death from cancer in 1993, Dr Hollows pioneered the mass-manufacture of the intraocular lens in the developing world to treat cataracts and blindness.

"[Fred said] `let's manufacture this lens at an affordable price - let's make an operation for $25' and we've done that," says Gabi, estimating that more than four million people in the world have benefited from its use.

"Fred was determined to make sure we had no double standards in terms of prevention of blindness. People were given the same type of surgery that would have been done in his private clinic."

The Fred Hollows coin, which is uncirculated and aimed at collectors, will be part of the Royal Australian Mint's Inspirational Australians series. It recognises those who have made an extraordinary contribution to society. Sculpted by Mint Engraver Vladimir Gottwald, the coin design is inspired from a photograph taken by George Fetting, which depicts Fred holding an intraocular lens.

"We are proud to include Fred in this popular collector series which honours truly inspirational Australians," says Ross MacDiarmid, Chief Executive Officer of the Royal Australian Mint.

Gabi says she was "really, really proud" and hopes the coin brings attention to the work of the Fred Hollows Foundation, which helps restore eyesight to thousands of people in developing countries.

Last year, the Foundation restored sight to over 190 000 people across 18 countries and trained over 5000 eye health workers, said Brian Doolan, Chief Executive Officer of The Fred Hollows Foundation.

" GUARDIAN CENTRAL ": Australian Antarctic explorer dies - Australian Ge...

" GUARDIAN CENTRAL ": Australian Antarctic explorer dies - Australian Ge...:

"Australian Antarctic explorer dies - Australian Geographic by Rebecca Courtney July-6-2010 ALF HOWARD, AUSTRALIAN EXPLORER, scientist,..."

by Rebecca Courtney

July-6-2010

ALF HOWARD, AUSTRALIAN EXPLORER, scientist, educator and last remaining member of Sir Douglas Mawson's 1929-31 expedition to Antarctica, died peacefully in his sleep on 4 July, at the age of 104.

Along with famed photographer Frank Hurley, Alf was aboard Discovery on the British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (BANZARE) led by Mawson.

Alf, the youngest member of the team at 23 years old, was recruited as a hydrologist and chemist.

Mawson described him as being responsible for "the taking of sea-water temperatures and the collection and chemical examination of sea-water samples".

Further, he commended Alf's role on board the Discovery, recounting the valuable scientific work undertaken as a delicate and difficult operation.

Pictures of Alf during this time show him lurching over the side of the ship, precariously perched upon a ledge above the open freezing sea and strapped in with a harness around his waist to collect water samples.

He was born in Camberwell, Victoria, and received his first of five degrees, a Bachelor of Science, at the University of Melbourne in 1927.

Later studies included a PhD in linguistics and an honorary doctorate in statistics from the University of Queensland, an institution with which he had an association of almost 50 years.

His love of science and education ensured he was a valuable addition to the Department of Human Movement Studies at UQ in his later years, where he worked as an honorary computer programmer and statistics adviser until 2003, at the age of 97.

Alf is described as much more than the man who accompanied Mawson on the well-documented expedition to Antarctica.

He is remembered by former colleague Professor Doune Macdonald, Head of the School of Human Movement Studies at UQ, as "a practical man, generous with his time and with prodigious skills in helping generations of students".

Doune recalls fondly Alf's daily morning ritual of making a pot of tea - tea bags would not suffice - and that he walked to work despite his age.

Alf was also a lover of classical music - Mozart was his favourite - and an avid reader of anything scientific. "Fiction", he would say, "is frivolous."

He was also generous financially, donating in 2005 a considerable sum of money for a computer laboratory for undergraduate students and spending his retirement years as an Honorary Research Fellow, volunteering his time. He once indicated that all he needed was a UQ red parking sticker and a library card.

The 1990s saw him return many times to Antarctica. One occasion was in 1991 with an Australian Geographic Society trip, which was led by Dick Smith, where they visited Mawson's Hut. In 2001 he was presented with the Australian Geographic Society Lifetime of Adventure award.

His funeral is being held on 9 July at 2.30 p.m. at Mt Thompson Crematorium in Holland Park, Brisbane. The University of Queensland will mark the day by flying flags at half mast.