Search Results for ‘Australia’, ‘Natural History & Wildlife’ - 5 matches found
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Australia: Hema Regional Road Maps
| Relevant titles: | 9 |
| Publisher: | Hema |
| Scale: | various |
Touring maps providing more detailed or more convenient coverage of various regions of Australia than found on road maps of individual states or in Hema's "City to City" series. The maps indicate essential...
| Publisher: | Geoscience Australia (Australia Survey) |
| Catalogue number: | 65328 |
| Scale: | 1:5,000,000 |
| Availability: | Temporarily out of stock: expected back within 3 - 4 weeks |
Map showing the vegetation of Australia using different colours and abbreviations. The amount of foliage cover is classified, and the map includes nice little cross sections, in colour, of forest, open...
| Author: | Peter Rowland |
| Publisher: | New Holland |
| Catalogue number: | 74514 |
| Availability: | In stock: usually dispatched within 48 hours |
This book looks at a range of commonly asked questions ranging from bird behaviour to how much a Pelican can fit in its bill. Each is dealt with in an approachable way aimed at birdwatchers of all ages...
| Author: | Barbara Triggs |
| Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
| Catalogue number: | 56288 |
| Availability: | Temporarily out of stock: expected back within 10 days |
Everything the wildlife enthusiast needs to spot the presence of a mammal. Each species has a distribution map showing where one is likely to see it. Other clues are also covered, e.g. droppings, tracks...
Field Guide to Tasmanian Birds
| Publisher: | New Holland |
| Catalogue number: | 112303 |
| Availability: | Special order: usually dispatched within 10 days |
An easy-to-use field guide to Tasmania¿s diverse range of bird species by experienced wildlife photographer Dave Watts. The guide is divided into colour coded sections that correspond to major bird...
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Australia - Uluru - Kata Tjuta National Park
There is nothing I can do about it now. I climbed Ayers Rock (Uluru in Aboriginal) and I wish I hadn't. The red monolith that stands today as one of the most recognisable symbols of Australia is a sacred site to the local Aboriginal people, the Anangu.
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