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Proteaceae Dominated Kwongkan Shrubland: a nationally-protected ecological community
SENG National Newsletter - March 2014
Did Discovery Channel fake the image in its giant shark documentary? | George Monbiot
The suspicion that the Discovery Channel had abandoned its professed editorial standards was a powerful one. As I mentioned in my earlier blog, its documentary claiming that the giant shark Carchardon megalodon still exists contained images which gave a strong impression of being faked; reports of incidents which don't appear to have happened; and interviews with "marine biologists" no one has been able to trace.
But allegations of fakery are very hard to prove. As you know, absence of evidence doesn't mean evidence of absence. Just because no one has been able to find the news reports the Megalodon show claims to have found, or any record of the deaths of four people in an attack by a giant shark off South Africa last year, or any trace of the suspiciously handsome experts it used to confirm its thesis doesn't prove definitively that all of them are inventions, even though it's hard to see how they could not be.
Continue reading...Capacity-building grants awarded for the 2014–2015 round
Review of the Renewable Energy Target
Review of the Renewable Energy Target
Australian Heritage Council response to draft Great Barrier Reef strategic assessment
Tasmanian Freshwater Eel Fishery
Emissions Reduction Fund Update newsletter
Water Purchase Tender in the Queensland Lower Balonne now open
Public consultation: draft assessment bilateral agreement between the Commonwealth and South Australia
2011–12 annual report to Australian Packaging Covenant released
Release of the September quarter 2013 national inventory estimates
Release of the September quarter 2013 national inventory estimates
SENG Victoria Newsletter - February 2014
Huge chimpanzee population thriving in remote Congo forest
In one of the most dangerous regions of the planet, against all odds, a huge yet mysterious population of chimpanzees appears to be thriving – for now. Harboured by the remote and pristine forests in the north of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and on the border of the Central African Republic, the chimps were completely unknown until recently – apart from the local legends of giant apes that ate lions and howled at the moon.
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