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First image of white-faced storm petrel completing 10,000km migration captured by Esperance rangers
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Esperance Shipwreck s 3D Model Revealed on 199th Anniversary
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Esperance: The sleepy Australian town home to the whitest sand beaches in the world
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From champagne to candy, with rose and bubblegum in between, is it any wonder we love a pink lake? With the right balance of salt, sun and some hardworking micro-organisms, here are the lakes with the hottest hues.
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LAKE MACDONNELL, SOUTH AUSTRALIA
If you want to tackle driving the Nullarbor Plain, prepare to hear stories of the 1256 kilometre-long, achingly boring drive across southern Australia. But just an hour west of Ceduna, where the plain officially starts, a left turn and a 10-minute drive leads you to a rainbow of lakes, including the watermelon-pink Lake MacDonnell. For those whose colour preferences stretch further than simply pink, it s match by a blue lake and a green lake of similarly eye-popping tones. Happily for photographers, a perfectly straight road cuts between them, creating fabulous, made-for-social-media snaps of vivid pink on one side of the road, and turquoise or green on the other. The road ends at renowned surf spot Cactus Beach, at t
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Newspapers have long been an excellent source of information when articulating historical events or portraying the stories of individuals. What follows is the narrative of a Greek named George Manuel or Emanuel, who by all claims, arrived at the colony of New South Wales in 1811.
The story commences with the death of the centenarian George Manuel on 22 June 1878 and follows the path of his life journey in the colony of New South Wales and beyond.
The following newspaper extract, which draws attention to George’s death, first appeared in The Sydney Morning Herald on Friday, 28 June, 1878 and reads:
“On Sunday, the 23rd June, there was buried at the cemetery, Castle Hill, by the Rev. Mr. Dawson, Wesleyan minister, George Manuel or George Emanuel, on whose coffin was inscribed the age of 101 years.”