The tank c1950

The tank c1950. Watercolour by Kenneth Macqueen. Collection of the Queensland Art Gallery

Location

Australia

Harvesting scene c1956

Harvesting scene c1956. Watercolour by Kenneth Macqueen. Collection of the Queensland Art Gallery

Contour ploughing c1945

Contour ploughing c1945. Watercolour by Kenneth Macqueen. Collection of the Queensland Art Gallery

(Cattle and Creek) 1931

(Cattle and Creek) 1931. Watercolour by Kenneth Macqueen. Collection of the Queensland Art Gallery

Ploughing the boundary, 1928

Ploughing the boundary, 1928. Watercolour by Kenneth Macqueen. Collection of the Queensland Art Gallery

Golden Circle products, Northgate, 1947

Northgate, QLD
Australia
27° 23' 33.2412" S, 153° 4' 19.3692" E
1 January 1947
3 December 2010
3 December 2010

Location

Northgate, QLD
Australia
27° 23' 33.2412" S, 153° 4' 19.3692" E

Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Welcome to the home of Golden Circle products, Northgate, 1947. Booklet. Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

As essayist and literary critic Nettie Palmer put it, in 1927, ‘Queensland is notoriously huge: most parts of it are still unknown, except to the people who live in them’.

Low Isles, 1929

Low Isles, QLD
Australia
16° 22' 56.892" S, 145° 33' 39.8736" E
1 January 1929
3 December 2010
3 December 2010

Location

Low Isles, QLD
Australia
16° 22' 56.892" S, 145° 33' 39.8736" E
London
Royal Geographical Society

Collection of the University of Queensland

Map of Low Isles, 1929. From a survey by M.A. Spender assisted by Mrs T.A. Stephenson and E.C. Marchant, interior of mangrove swamp from photographs by RAAF. Great Barrier Reef Expedition 1928-29, Reports, Volume III, Number 2. Collection of the University of Queensland

Discoveries at Low Isles

The Low Isles party had prior knowledge of many reef species from existing biological collections and taxonomies. The focus of the expedition thus turned to more curious questions about population sizes, reproduction and growth. The scientific research at Low Isles was stratified according to environmental zones and scientific method, it comprised a boat party, a shore party and a physiological or experimental party. According to Charles Yonge, ‘First of all we examined our own reef and its population, then we experimented upon, and observed the habits of, the animals and plants, and finally, equipped with the knowledge thus gained, we journeyed further afield up and down the Barrier, able to take the fullest advantage of short visits to other islands and reefs’.

One of the key findings about coral growth rates was made possible by Saville-Kent’s detailed and accurate recordings more than two decades earlier. Members of the British Expedition relocated the individual corals recorded by Saville-Kent and re-measured them to calculate annual growth. 

Mr Hempsall’s sketch of Mill Point

Mill Point, QLD
Australia
26° 3' 45.198" S, 151° 6' 29.4336" E
2 December 2010
2 December 2010

Location

Mill Point, QLD
Australia
26° 3' 45.198" S, 151° 6' 29.4336" E

Collection of A. Hibbard & E. Crosby 

Mr Hempsall’s undated sketch of Mill Point. Mr Hempsall’s father or grandfather worked at the mill and he went there as a child, with the family remaining in the local Noosa district. The map is drawn from memory, but closely resembles the panoramic photograph taken in the 1880s. Collection of A. Hibbard & E. Crosby 

The lake scenery of Noosa, 1887

‘The lake scenery of Noosa’ as recorded in a wood engraving by A.J. Boyd in 1887.

Location

Cootharaba, QLD
Australia
26° 19' 41.1492" S, 152° 54' 13.3884" E
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