Sophisticated stone axes ‘not invented in Europe’ 9/4/2014

Photo Chris Langluddecke

Photo Chris Langluddecke

The first edge ground stone axes were not invented in Europe. 

They appeared in the central Kimberley at least 30,000 years ago.

“The suggestion that all innovation has to come from the Old World is not true because clearly ground-stone axes were created here,” archaeologist Prof Balme says.

She notes that they were also made in Japan at a slightly later date, by people who would have had no contact with either Australian Aborigines or people in Africa and Europe. Continue reading

Eradication efforts unite to preserve fairy-wren population 24/9/2014

Indigenous rangers have been working with WA’s department of food and agriculture to eradicate an exotic plant.

427 ClippingOrnamental rubber vine, which first escaped from a garden, is threatening the purple-crowned fairy wren’s habitat.

This story first appeared in Science Network WA on 24 September 2014 [read this story]. The Kimberley Echo republished it on 4 December 2014.

Kimberley frogs prove vulnerable to lungworms 19/9/2014

HOPES of using a parasite as a new biological control for cane toads have been dashed, as it has proven fatal to one of the Kimberley’s tree frog species.

Click on this image to read the story

Click on this image to read the story

University of Sydney herpetologist Rick Shine says lungworm infected and killed splendid tree frogs during laboratory trials.

“Not only did the parasite infect the frog and find its way to the lungs but it killed the frog very quickly,” Professor Shine says.

“[This happened] much more quickly than it affected the cane toads.”

This story first appeared in Science Network WA [read this story]. The Kimberley Echo republished it on 9 October 2014. I am planning another story about how the parasite passes from toad to frog which I will post when available.

Bat wing practice maximises flight efficiency 13/8/2014

AUSTRALIAN bats developed a high-speed flying technology some 50 million years before aircraft engineers.

Click on this image to read the story

Click on this image to read the story

A zoologist and an aerodynamics engineer have found several bat species employ the same principle used in a stealth bomber.

This is a story about flat-plate aerodynamics in bats, published in Science Network and republished in The Pilbara Echo.

Science Network [read this story]

He’s a Mason Master 22/8/2012

Gordon Marshall is an Aboriginal man and a freemason.

From The Koori Mail 22 August 2012 Photo - Geoff Vivian

From The Koori Mail 22 August 2012 Photo – Geoff Vivian

He has been Worshipful Master of The Derby Lodge seven times, and is now the Worshipful Master of Roebuck Lodge in Broome.

He appeared this week as a guest on The Mary G Show, where the “hostess with the mostest” congratulated him.

Anyhow, this was a good opportunity to share a Koori Mail story I wrote two years ago.

 

Science and community pinpoint algal bloom causes 8/6/14

Scientists say wastewater treatment by Broome Shire and the Department of Water is causing toxic algae blooms in Roebuck Bay.

Broome Advertiser 19 June 2014 P 13

Click on this image to enlarge it

A blue-green algae has been troubling Broome residents for 14 years.

Lyngbya causes bad skin irritations, and can kill small animals.

Scientists say it blooms in Roebuck Bay every wet season, thanks to the nutrients it gets in the runoff from the first rains, groundwater pollution, and the practice of dumping treated sewage water on local parks.

Science Network WA [read this story]

Broome Advertiser republished this story on 19 June 2014 – P13.

Aboriginal store ripoff ‘widespread’ 30/12/2008

Remote Aboriginal community stores are being ripped off throughout the Kimberley, prominent indigenous residents say.

The stores have become prime targets for unscrupulous store managers, with those doing it almost always escaping prosecution.

“They haven’t even been asked to pay the money back,” retired Aboriginal policeman Gordon Marshall said.

WA Today [read this story]

Protecting Kimberley wildlife from toads with science 2011 – 2014

Scientists have been working on various methods of protecting Kimberley wildlife against the cane toad, which has started arriving in numbers over the last two wet seasons.

Northern Territory experience has shown many species become severely depleted or even locally extinct after eating the toxic amphibians.

We cannot prevent the toads from spreading throughout the Kimberley, however I interviewed several scientists about their efforts to preserve populations of vulnerable species such as goannas and quolls.

KIM050614KIM1FUL012A couple of studies concentrated on taste aversion: feeding small doses of cane toad to wildlife in order to make it sick enough never to touch the nasty creatures again. Science Network [read this story]

Two scientists noted that toads in desert areas die if they are unable to get to water points during the dry season, and have been working on ways of isolating water sources from cane toads but allowing other species in. Science Network [read this story]

Others have found cane toads communicate chemically. Freshly laid eggs emit a chemical which jealous cane toad tadpoles to detect potential rivals which they destroy. Cane toads also emit an alarm pheronome which causes others to flee. If they are exposed to this chemical often, tadpoles end up becoming stunted little adults, or just die from stress. It may be possible to produce this hormone in sufficient quantity to kill tadpoles. Science Network [read this story]

KIM100414KIM1FUL010Another research group is working to establish a “frozen zoo” – a sperm bank of vulnerable Kimberley species that can be used to re-establish genetic diversity among depleted populations. Science Network [read this story]

 

SEALING the OUTBACK – could the Tanami really become a toll road? February 2014

020-026 FEATURE Tanami-1TEXT BY GEOFF VIVIAN

From Truckin’ Life February 2014

The most direct route from the Kimberley to central Australia is the Tanami Track.

About 800 kilometres of this important arterial road is gravel and dirt.

A Kimberley shire has a radical proposal to make it a toll way, charging road trains up to $2,000 to use it, so funds would be available to seal the road.

I explained how this would then open up a major trade route to south-eastern Australia.

Continue reading

Aboriginal night patrols 17/7/13 and 31/7/13

The Koori Mail

Text by GEOFF VIVIAN

Police, the WA government and Aboriginal community organisations agree that night patrols are an essential service.

Click on this image to read the story

Click on this image to read the story

Teams of trained Aboriginal workers drive through the streets of Perth and regional towns at night, stopping to speak to stranded countrymen who are often intoxicated or otherwise distressed.

They then offer them a lift home, or to emergency accommodation

In July 2013 the WA Aboriginal affairs minister ordered a review of the service, with a view to extending it.

Koori Mail 31 July 2013Meanwhile the Commonwealth Attorney General, who part-funded the service in Broome and Perth, decided to cut funding for the patrols by 37 and 20 per cent respectively.