Friday, January 17, 2025

BLUEY SAVED FROM DEATH

Thanks to the  quick action of  a  motorist , the  above Blue Tongue lizard  was saved from certain death  when   pulled  off   a  busy Townsville   road   and  released  into  the  bush , no doubt  somewhat  dazzled  by  the  rescuers  bright  shirt . 

 (Lizard. Rescue. Shirt.)

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

DREAMTIME ENCOUNTER / ARTIST DEDICATED TO UNITY , PEACE

 
The Gubulla Munda  - Carpet Snake-  totem  and  protective Spirit of  the   Biri Gubba  people in the  Plantation Park, Ayr, North Queensland . It  is  a sacred site , occupied for thousands  of years before Euopean  occupation  , during  which  time  children were  born  on  the  creek  banks  and  elders  were buried there  , including  remains  of   some    returned  from   the  United  Kingdom  and  placed  to  rest in  their traditional land. 

The monument was  designed, constructed  and sculptured  by the late  Dr Farvardin Daliri  OAM  and  painted by  many  Aboriginal  artists. 

An Iranian born Baha’i who migrated to Australia in the 80s, Dr Daliri had a Bachelor of Fine Arts, a PhD in Education and a background in community development. He spent more than 30 years in the community services sector across Australia, initiating projects and programs towards a more cohesive and harmonious society.

Background information states he drew his knowledge from working in culturally complex situations in remote north Indian communities, his experience as a survivor of torture and a refugee, and over three decades working in remote communities from Tasmania to Far North Queensland with culturally diverse communities, service providers and government agencies.

Dr Farvardin used large scale public art to give a voice to marginalised communities and issues that were close to his heart. His sculptures included Indigenous Australians, Australian native animals and cultural symbolisms of peace.


Through his original abstract paintings, to giant crocodiles and a viral laughing kookaburra, which was featured on worldwide platforms such as The New York Times, CNN, and Buzzfeed, Dr Daliri was committed to bringing unity and cohesion to society through his artworks.

(Dreamtime. Snake. Peace.)  

ROADSIDE TAKEAWAY

 
Red-Tailed Black-Cockatoos  feasting on  nuts next  to busy  road . Vallis .  

(Cockatoos. Feeding. Road.)

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

CYCLONE TRACY TRAIL

 Darwin's Cyclone Tracy Trail memorial sculpure at East Point . It depicts five frangipani flowers scattered by the l974 disaster which killed 66 people and destroyed a large part of the city .

Photos  by  Craig.

The flowers represent their dominant place in the treescape at the time and the resilience of the community and the spirit of the people of Darwin to rebuild their city.

The sculpture is the work of local artist Techy Masero , who was born in Chile and trained there as a fine arts teacher, came to Australia in l958 .

Another structure is inspired by the thousands of corrugated iron sheets stripped from Darwin homes in the cyclone.

(Cyclone , Darwin, Trail.)

EARLY MIGRATION INFLUENCES

 The wide  interests   and   extensive  network  of  contacts  of  Darwin agronomist and  activist  Robert Wesley-Smith  are  apparent yet again  in  recent emails  received  from  him  by  this  blog . One  of  particular  interest included   the   following  release .  

A new study from the University of Adelaide and The Australian National University (ANU) has outlined the first genomic evidence of early migration from New Guinea into the Wallacea, an archipelago containing Timor-Leste and hundreds of inhabited eastern Indonesian islands.

The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciencesaddresses major gaps in the human genetic history of the Wallacean Archipelago and West Papuan regions of Indonesia – a region with abundant genetic and linguistic diversity that is comparable to the Eurasian continent – including the analysis of 254 newly sequenced genomes.

In combination with linguistic and archaeological evidence, the study shows that Wallacean societies were transformed by the spread of genes and languages from West Papua in the past 3500 years – the same period that Austronesian seafarers were actively mixing with Wallacean and Papuan groups.

“My colleagues at the Indonesian Genome Diversity Project have been studying Indonesia’s complex genetic structure for more than a decade, but this comprehensive study provides confirmation that Papuan ancestry is widespread across Wallacea, pointing to historical migrations from New Guinea,” says lead author Dr Gludhug Ariyo Purnomo, from the University of Adelaide’s School of Biological Sciences.

“By connecting the dots between genetics, linguistics, and archaeology, we now recognise West Papua as an important bio-cultural hub and the launching place of historical Papuan seafarers that now contribute up to 60% of modern Wallacean ancestry.”

Genomic research is also becoming increasingly important for developing new medicines tailored to specific genetic backgrounds.

“In the era of precision medicine, understanding the genetic structure of human groups is vital for developing treatments that are helpful rather than harmful, with Wallacea and New Guinea having been poorly represented in past genomic surveys,” Dr Purnomo says.

Associate Professor Ray Tobler, from ANU, says Wallacea had been isolated for more than 45,000 years since the arrival of the first human groups, and the more recently arriving Papuan and Austronesian migrants reconfigured Wallacean culture by introducing new languages that diversified and intermingled to create its rich linguistic landscape.

“Our findings suggest that the Papuan and Austronesian migrations were so extensive that they have largely overwritten the ancestry of the first migrants, making the recovery of these ancient migrations from genetic data challenging,” says Professor Tobler, who is also an Adjunct Fellow at the University of Adelaide’s Australian Centre for Ancient DNA.

According to the researchers, there are challenges in reconstructing past movements of people using modern genetic data due to historical migrations and movements.

“There's also been so much movement in Wallacea in the past couple of thousand years, due to the spice trade and slavery, that it obscures the relationship between geography and genetics,” Associate Professor Tobler says.

“What we know about Wallacea and New Guinea is just the tip of the iceberg, but the use of ancient DNA can help to overcome some of these challenges and help us to understand the origins and legacy of human journeys to the region stretching back tens of thousands of years.”

( Wallacea . Papua. Study.)

CAN DO SUGAR TOWN

 

Sardine  can   public art work  with the  title  Open  To  New Ideas , by local businessman  and artist  Ull Liesmann , installed  in   a   Home  Hill , Burdekin Shire ,  North  Queensland ,  park  during  the  2018 annual  Harvest  Festival

(Burdekin. Festival. Sardine.) 

Monday, January 13, 2025

PAUL HOGAN THROWS ANOTHER SHRIMP ON THE BARBIE AS TOURISTS ARRIVE



Bittern with prawn caught in king tide during  first visit  to Townsville of  cruise ship Queen Elizabeth , with  2000 passengers , one of  six  cruise vessels   expected over  a  fortnight . Shipping  Reporter  photos.  

( Cruise . Prawn.  Shipping.)