Queensland (6do encyclopedia)



Queensland is a state located in northeastern Australia. It is the third-largest state in the country and the second-most populous. The capital city of Queensland is Brisbane, which is also the largest city in the state.

Geography

Queensland covers an area of 1,852,642 square kilometers and has a diverse landscape ranging from tropical rainforests to deserts. The state borders the Northern Territory to the west, New South Wales to the south, and the Pacific Ocean to the east. The Great Barrier Reef, the largest coral reef system in the world, is located off the coast of Queensland.

Climate

Queensland has a tropical and subtropical climate. The northern region of the state experiences a wet season from November to April, while the central and southern regions have a more temperate climate with hot summers and mild winters.

Economy

Queensland has a diverse economy with industries such as tourism, mining, agriculture, and manufacturing. The state’s GDP was approximately AUD 380 billion in 2019, making it the second-largest economy in Australia.

Tourism

Tourism is one of the largest industries in Queensland, with millions of visitors arriving every year. The state boasts a wide range of attractions, including the Great Barrier Reef, Fraser Island, the Daintree Rainforest, and the Gold Coast.

Mining

Queensland is home to a rich mineral and resource industry, with coal and natural gas being the most significant contributors to the state’s economy. The mining industry employs thousands of people in Queensland and generates billions of dollars in revenue each year.

Agriculture

Queensland is also a major producer of agricultural products such as beef, sugar cane, and cotton. The state’s agricultural industry is particularly important in rural areas, where it provides employment and supports local economies.

Culture

Queensland has a rich cultural history, with Indigenous Australians having lived in the region for thousands of years. The state is home to a number of Indigenous communities, and their traditions and cultures continue to be celebrated through art, music, and dance.

The multicultural population of Queensland has also contributed to the state’s vibrant culture. The city of Brisbane, in particular, has become a cultural hub with a thriving arts scene, music festivals, and a diverse culinary landscape.

Transportation

Queensland has a well-developed transportation infrastructure, with major highways and an extensive network of railways connecting different parts of the state. The state’s airports, including Brisbane Airport, also provide international and domestic air travel.

Education

Queensland has a strong education system, with several universities and renowned research institutions. The University of Queensland, Queensland University of Technology, and Griffith University are among the top institutions in the state.

Conclusion

Queensland is a vibrant and diverse state with a rich culture, beautiful landscapes, and a strong economy. Its natural wonders, including the Great Barrier Reef and the Daintree Rainforest, attract millions of visitors every year. The state’s mining, agriculture, and tourism industries contribute significantly to Australia’s economy and provide employment opportunities for thousands of people.


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Platypus returns to Australia’s national park in over 50 years

The Independent

23-05-14 12:55


Four female platypuses were reintroduced into Australia's Royal National Park by conservation groups after the animals had disappeared from the area 50 years ago. The animals, unique for their bill, webbed feet, and venomous spurs, are in danger of extinction due to habitat destruction, river degradation, feral predators, and natural disasters. Researchers tracked and tested the woodland creatures before the project, which took place in collaboration with the University of New South Wales, Taronga Conservation Society, WWF-Australia, and the New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/australia-platypus-royal-national-park-b2338564.html
Dementia and the options of dying

The Age

23-05-14 10:00


Several authors have called for changes to Victoria’s voluntary assisted dying legislation, to allow patients with irreversible conditions such as dementia to pre-arrange termination of life if they deteriorate to a certain stage. Jan Newmarch believes people should be allowed to make such decisions while they are still rational, which is difficult under current laws that require less than six months’ life expectancy. Mirna Cicioni suggests people should be able to list specific irreversible conditions after which they would want their lives to be ended, and that this should be written into a legally recognised document such as a will to prevent both discrimination and non-consensual termination of life. Kyle Matheson believes families should become responsible for deciding on treatment for dementia patients and Jill Edwards suggests people should be allowed to make a decision in advance that they want assistance to die should they be diagnosed with irreversible conditions.

Others have also called for people’s rights to be respected in relation to assisted dying. Ange Mackie writes of her distress at her mother’s suffering from vascular dementia and wishes to avoid such an end herself and Ross Churcher argues that people should be able to stipulate their own end-of-life wishes in a formal document to be signed and witnessed, like a will. In the case of the latter, doctors not connected to the patient would have to give their approval for access to assisted dying.

These opinions follow the exclusion of dementia patients in Victoria’s voluntary assisted dying legislation, with suggestions that this group is being discriminated against. It remains a contentious issue with many opposing the concept of voluntary assisted dying, whatever the circumstances or conditions.


https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/dementia-and-the-options-of-dying-20230514-p5d89e.html

Dragons fast-track Griffin call as club rejects Cheika approach

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-14 08:45


St. George Illawarra Dragons' recent poor form is expected to result in a decision on coach Anthony Griffin's future as soon as this week as the club distances itself from former Wallabies coach Michael Cheika for a cross-code switch. While Griffin was previously expected to stay in charge for as long as needed before the appointment of a long-term replacement, the Dragons' board is now expected to decide if he has coached his last game after a loss to the Cowboys. A decision on whether Griffin will remain head coach for the State of Origin period is also expected to be made. The decision will determine which job Roosters assistant Jason Ryles will target for his first NRL head coach role. While former premiership-winning captain and Rabbitohs assistant Ben Hornby remains an option, there is no appetite among St. George Illawarra Dragons members for Cheika.

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/dragons-fast-track-griffin-call-as-club-rejects-cheika-approach-20230514-p5d88r.html
Lord mayor joins chorus of calls for Tennyson rail line to be reopened

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-14 08:39


Queensland’s lord mayor, Adrian Schrinner, has called for the Tennyson rail line to be reopened to passengers amid uncertainty over the construction of a new transport bridge costing as much as AUD1.3bn ($918m). The line was closed to passengers in 2011 and replaced with a freight line; Schrinner’s request to reopen it was supported by councillor Nicole Johnston, who said residents would “absolutely love” it. Public transport advocate Professor Matthew Burke, however, cited the line’s previous “extremely low patronage” as a reason for concern over demand.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/queensland/lord-mayor-joins-chorus-of-calls-for-tennyson-rail-line-to-be-reopened-20230512-p5d80g.html
Who goes there? Just a local sprinter who could be anything

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-14 08:00


Three-year-old sprinter Who Goes There is set to race at the home base of Tamworth following a successful debut win at Scone. Racing for the first time at home, Who Goes There will compete in a Benchmark 58 handicap over 1000m. In his first race, the three-year-old son of group 1 winner Exosphere impressed by winning his maiden race by more than three lengths. Generating excitement amongst racing enthusiasts, the debutant clocked just over 50 seconds flat for the short course. A promising horse, if he does well in his next race, Mark Mason, his trainer and breeder, may consider targeting a Highway sprint in Sydney.

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/racing/who-goes-there-just-a-local-sprinter-who-could-be-anything-20230514-p5d89i.html
Massage therapist jailed for Valentine’s Day rape

The Age

23-05-16 04:07


A man who sexually assaulted a woman during a Valentine’s Day massage has been sentenced to 2.5 years in prison with parole eligibility after serving half that time. Yevgeny Borodinov was convicted on charges of sexual assault and rape. The crown prosecutor said Borodinov had shown no remorse for his “brazen” offending and that the assault had left the victim with “significant and traumatic effects”. The victim installed security cameras on all her doors and the incident also affected her relationship with her children and husband. Borodinov's defence argued that he should receive a suspended sentence as it was his first offence and it was a less serious case.

https://www.theage.com.au/national/queensland/massage-therapist-jailed-for-valentines-day-rape-20230516-p5d8sp.html
UQ’s cross-campus bus ban at odds with its master plan

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-16 11:01


The University of Queensland has been criticised for hindering public transport in Brisbane, by refusing to let buses travel across its St Lucia campus. The university has not confirmed whether buses can pass through the campus or whether it will lift its ban on cross-campus buses to Indooroopilly or Toowong. Public transport experts support a proposal in the university’s master plan that would allow a connection taking buses across the Eleanor Schonell Bridge and on to the two suburbs. The university, which is connected to two of Brisbane’s busiest public transport routes, has no through-running buses.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/queensland/uq-s-cross-campus-bus-ban-at-odds-with-its-master-plan-20230516-p5d8ot.html
Going goth: It’s ‘Wednesday’ at Fashion Week

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-16 19:00


Australian designer Gail Sorronda brought her goth-inspired fashion to the Australian Fashion Week runway in Sydney last week. For 18 years, Sorronda has cultivated a following in Milan and Tokyo, an effort now directed toward the Australian market. The designer's gothcore style, showcased in her Resort 2024 collection In Dreams, features black pinafores, strict shirting and romantic gowns. The collection was inspired by her sleep paralysis and is drawn from earlier collections, including An Angel At My Table, which she showed at her last fashion week eight years ago. Sorronda told The Guardian her collections represent how her mind works.

https://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/fashion/going-goth-it-s-wednesday-at-fashion-week-20230509-p5d6xg.html
Voice support slides again as debate rages over model

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-16 18:43


Support for Indigenous Australians' Voice has fallen from 58% to 53% in the last month, according to an exclusive survey conducted by Resolve Strategic. The decline brings doubts over the controversial issue to gain constitutional approval. If the trend continues, the No campaign is likely to gain a majority and win the referendum by August, the report warns. The poll reveals that when voters were asked a "yes or no" question akin to the exact wording planned by the government, 53% supported the idea but 47% opposed it. An additional 18% were undecided. The survey confirms the decreasing trend in support for the Indigenous Voice, raising doubts about what changes can be made to the proposal to secure a greater chance of approval.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/voice-support-slides-again-as-debate-rages-over-model-20230516-p5d8t1.html
Why we can’t name the high-profile man charged with rape

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-17 01:24


Media outlets and members of the public are prohibited from naming an unnamed rape suspect in Queensland, Australia, because of Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Act. The act states that anyone charged with rape, attempted rape, assault with intent to commit rape, and other sexual offences cannot be identified publicly until a magistrate has decided there is enough evidence available for a trial and has referred the matter to the district or supreme court. The defendant has been charged with rape over an alleged incident in October 2021. A coalition of media organisations had earlier appealed for the man’s identification to be revealed on grounds of public interest.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/queensland/why-we-can-t-name-the-high-profile-man-charged-with-rape-20230330-p5cwl8.html
The $1 million piano that plays itself (just as well, because its owner can’t)

The Age

23-05-16 22:30


A new showroom dedicated to the Steinway & Sons brand named Steinway Galleries has opened in Australia. The gallery, owned by billionaire trucking magnate Lindsay Fox, caters not only to those that play, but also those who simply are entranced by the prestige of having an instrument such as a Steinway piano in their home. The showroom features a performance area that is regularly used for recitals, as well as the relatively new Spirio, which uses old-school pianola technology to allow the piano to play itself.

https://www.theage.com.au/culture/music/the-1-million-piano-that-plays-itself-just-as-well-because-its-owner-can-t-20230511-p5d7r3.html
NZ Police open a homicide investigation into deadly hostel fire

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-17 07:00


Six people were killed in a suspected arson attack on the Wellington Loafers Lodge in New Zealand, with fears that the death toll may rise. The property had been home to a mixture of residents including shift workers, welfare recipients and people under corrections orders including nine people on a community sentence order. Police have no arrests at present, but have opened a homicide investigation. This is New Zealand’s deadliest building fire since 1995. With the tragedy being a suspected arson case Prime Minister Anthony Albanese offered Australian assistance in the recovery effort.

https://www.smh.com.au/world/oceania/nz-police-open-a-homicide-investigation-into-deadly-hostel-fire-20230517-p5d95u.html
Is Qld’s cabinet shake-up a fresh start or a deck-chair reshuffle on a sinking ship?

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-17 10:37


Queensland's Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk is conducting a cabinet reshuffle, rumoured to involve Health Minister Yvette D'Ath and Attorney-General Shannon Fentiman switching roles. Up-and-comer Meaghan Scanlon is expected to be promoted to housing minister, and Youth Justice Minister Leanne Linard is expected to be relocated. Both Fentiman and Deputy Premier Steven Miles are seen as potential future party leaders for the Labor Party, which they belong to, along with party leader Palaszczuk and Treasurer Cameron Dick. The reshuffle may be a chance for a "reset" for the third-term government, or a shuffling of the deck chairs on a sinking ship.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/queensland/is-qld-s-cabinet-shake-up-a-fresh-start-or-a-deck-chair-reshuffle-on-a-sinking-ship-20230517-p5d94g.html
Club-vs-country compromise hampers Lionesses' World Cup preparations

Telegraph

23-05-17 19:06


FIFA, football clubs, and other industry stakeholders have agreed on a date on which players should start preparing for Australia and New Zealand's Women's World Cup. Clubs and countries had previously been at odds, with clubs citing concerns over player welfare and injury risks while national teams were concerned that player rest periods would lead to deconditioning before the World Cup was due to take place. FIFA imposed a mandatory release date for players on 10 July for 2023's Women's World Cup. Now, players may prepare for the tournament no earlier than 23 June and no later than 29 June.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2023/05/17/club-vs-country-compromise-lionesses-world-cup/
Healthcare workers demand 6.5 per cent pay hike as paramedics begin strike

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-17 19:00


The Health Services Union (HSU) has written to the new Labor government of New South Wales, Australia, simultaneously making six demands to settle a dispute and calling for a 6% pay increase for its 47,000 members. Along with increasing wages, HSU boss Gerard Hayes has called for broader modernisation of HSU member awards for greater recognition of increased professionalism among paramedics and allied health care workers; as well as the establishment of a special commission of inquiry into health spending and further health reforms to reduce wastage. Hospital workers will refuse to take discharged patients to their home or a care facility in a protest from tomorrow.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/healthcare-workers-demand-6-5-per-cent-pay-hike-as-paramedics-begin-strike-20230517-p5d93p.html
Keep the safari suits in the closet, but bring back one-on-one tackles

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-17 19:00


The hip-drop tackle, which risks injuring ball carriers, is testing the loyalties of players to their clubs or state ahead of the State of Origin series in the National Rugby League, argues Roy Masters in The Sydney Morning Herald. The NRL begins suspending players exhibiting the move, where defenders aim for an attacker's upper body and use their body weight to bring them down, prompting coaches to resort to quicker tackles closer to the ground that are also riskier to the player making the tackle due to the joints being twisted, and the worst of which is the hip-drop. Masters suggests encouraging the classic one-on-one driving tackle to replace the hip-drop, which he believes could decrease in use thanks to the new penalties.

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/keep-the-safari-suits-in-the-closet-but-bring-back-one-on-one-tackles-20230517-p5d92l.html
The sin bins have gone too far – and I’m worried they will wreck Origin

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-17 19:00


Joey Johns has called for an end to NRL players going to the sin bin for minor infractions, saying it has gone too far. He cited the example of last week's game between Melbourne and Brisbane, where the Broncos had two players sin binned and the Storm then went on to score two tries. Johns argues that the sin binning of players could have potentially severe implications for the outcome of games, including the State of Origin matches, and should be curtailed. He also believes that the NRL should abandon the use of the video referee.

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/the-sin-bins-have-gone-too-far-and-i-m-worried-they-will-wreck-origin-20230517-p5d8zl.html
‘I’m terrified we’ll lose’: Voice advocate pleads for compromise to save referendum

The Age

23-05-17 18:48


A poll shows that support for granting Indigenous people a voice in parliament has slid from 58% to 53%, and that opposition to the proposal is up from 31% to 39%. Although leading figures in the campaign have urged calm, Mick Gooda and Professor Tom Calma are expressing concern that the referendum will fail. Gooda said he was “beginning to be terrified we’re going to lose this.” He urged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to make the proposition less risky for undecided voters. Although Calma conceded that public support was lower than hoped, he suggested that this might change when Australians came to understand the proposal. Conservatives supporting Indigenous recognition have argued that the parliamentary committee did not offer a way to broker a compromise, and have urged the Prime Minister to consider a compromise position.

https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/i-m-terrified-we-ll-lose-voice-advocate-pleads-for-compromise-to-save-referendum-20230517-p5d93f.html
Giant Brisbane CBD riverside beer garden to open next week

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-18 05:21


Riverland has completed its $3.5m expansion, creating an addition of 850 sq m to its riverside location in Brisbane. However, the new area will not be open to the public until Monday. Riverland's new space has added two global street food concepts and two levels, with an increased capacity for 1,000 customers. Australian Venue Co chief operating officer Craig Ellison said the expanded venue is a "subtropical" Brisbane destination with a riverside entry, open-plan design, landscaping and views of the Brisbane River and Story Bridge. The original venue will be open for drinks only until Monday's public opening.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/queensland/giant-brisbane-cbd-riverside-beer-garden-to-open-next-week-20230518-p5d9fo.html