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  • Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    DUKAS_182451233_FER
    Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Footprints 1
    Ref 16628
    13/03/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: University of Queensland

    A boulder that contains one of the highest concentrations of dinosaur footprints per square metre ever documented , has been revealed.

    A palaeontologist in Australia where it was found has identified 66 fossilised footprints left in the rock during the early Jurassic period, around 200 million years ago.

    Dr Anthony Romilio from the University of Queensland says the prints are from 47 individual dinosaurs which passed across a patch of wet, white clay, possibly walking along or crossing a waterway.

    Each footprint has three toes indicating they belong to a small dinosaur species called Anomoepus scambus.

    Dr Romilio explained: “These dinosaurs were small, with legs ranging from 15 – 50 cm in length and when they left these marks, they were travelling less than 6 km/hr.

    “Evidence from skeletal fossils overseas tells us dinosaurs with feet like these were plant eaters with long legs, a chunky body, short arms, and a small head with a beak.”

    The remarkable rock was uncovered 20 years ago at a mine near Biloela in central Queensland and given to the local high school, Biloela State.

    Its significance remained unknown until Dr Romilio’s previous work on nearby Mount Morgan footprints prompted the community to contact him.

    OPS: Dr Anthony Romilio taking a silicone mould of the rock specimen with the footprints at Biloela State High School.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    DUKAS_182451232_FER
    Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Footprints 1
    Ref 16628
    13/03/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Dr Anthony Romilio/University of Queensland

    A boulder that contains one of the highest concentrations of dinosaur footprints per square metre ever documented , has been revealed.

    A palaeontologist in Australia where it was found has identified 66 fossilised footprints left in the rock during the early Jurassic period, around 200 million years ago.

    Dr Anthony Romilio from the University of Queensland says the prints are from 47 individual dinosaurs which passed across a patch of wet, white clay, possibly walking along or crossing a waterway.

    Each footprint has three toes indicating they belong to a small dinosaur species called Anomoepus scambus.

    Dr Romilio explained: “These dinosaurs were small, with legs ranging from 15 – 50 cm in length and when they left these marks, they were travelling less than 6 km/hr.

    “Evidence from skeletal fossils overseas tells us dinosaurs with feet like these were plant eaters with long legs, a chunky body, short arms, and a small head with a beak.”

    The remarkable rock was uncovered 20 years ago at a mine near Biloela in central Queensland and given to the local high school, Biloela State.

    Its significance remained unknown until Dr Romilio’s previous work on nearby Mount Morgan footprints prompted the community to contact him.

    OPS: An illustration of the trackways as determined by Dr Anthony Romilio with human figures for scale

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    DUKAS_182451231_FER
    Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Footprints 1
    Ref 16628
    13/03/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Dr Anthony Romilio/University of Queensland

    A boulder that contains one of the highest concentrations of dinosaur footprints per square metre ever documented , has been revealed.

    A palaeontologist in Australia where it was found has identified 66 fossilised footprints left in the rock during the early Jurassic period, around 200 million years ago.

    Dr Anthony Romilio from the University of Queensland says the prints are from 47 individual dinosaurs which passed across a patch of wet, white clay, possibly walking along or crossing a waterway.

    Each footprint has three toes indicating they belong to a small dinosaur species called Anomoepus scambus.

    Dr Romilio explained: “These dinosaurs were small, with legs ranging from 15 – 50 cm in length and when they left these marks, they were travelling less than 6 km/hr.

    “Evidence from skeletal fossils overseas tells us dinosaurs with feet like these were plant eaters with long legs, a chunky body, short arms, and a small head with a beak.”

    The remarkable rock was uncovered 20 years ago at a mine near Biloela in central Queensland and given to the local high school, Biloela State.

    Its significance remained unknown until Dr Romilio’s previous work on nearby Mount Morgan footprints prompted the community to contact him.

    OPS: An illustration of the trackways as determined by Dr Anthony Romilio with human figures for scale

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    DUKAS_182451230_FER
    Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Footprints 1
    Ref 16628
    13/03/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Dr Anthony Romilio/University of Queensland

    A boulder that contains one of the highest concentrations of dinosaur footprints per square metre ever documented , has been revealed.

    A palaeontologist in Australia where it was found has identified 66 fossilised footprints left in the rock during the early Jurassic period, around 200 million years ago.

    Dr Anthony Romilio from the University of Queensland says the prints are from 47 individual dinosaurs which passed across a patch of wet, white clay, possibly walking along or crossing a waterway.

    Each footprint has three toes indicating they belong to a small dinosaur species called Anomoepus scambus.

    Dr Romilio explained: “These dinosaurs were small, with legs ranging from 15 – 50 cm in length and when they left these marks, they were travelling less than 6 km/hr.

    “Evidence from skeletal fossils overseas tells us dinosaurs with feet like these were plant eaters with long legs, a chunky body, short arms, and a small head with a beak.”

    The remarkable rock was uncovered 20 years ago at a mine near Biloela in central Queensland and given to the local high school, Biloela State.

    Its significance remained unknown until Dr Romilio’s previous work on nearby Mount Morgan footprints prompted the community to contact him.

    OPS: Detailed hughlights of the rock specimen with the footprints

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    DUKAS_182451229_FER
    Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Footprints 1
    Ref 16628
    13/03/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Dr Anthony Romilio/University of Queensland

    A boulder that contains one of the highest concentrations of dinosaur footprints per square metre ever documented , has been revealed.

    A palaeontologist in Australia where it was found has identified 66 fossilised footprints left in the rock during the early Jurassic period, around 200 million years ago.

    Dr Anthony Romilio from the University of Queensland says the prints are from 47 individual dinosaurs which passed across a patch of wet, white clay, possibly walking along or crossing a waterway.

    Each footprint has three toes indicating they belong to a small dinosaur species called Anomoepus scambus.

    Dr Romilio explained: “These dinosaurs were small, with legs ranging from 15 – 50 cm in length and when they left these marks, they were travelling less than 6 km/hr.

    “Evidence from skeletal fossils overseas tells us dinosaurs with feet like these were plant eaters with long legs, a chunky body, short arms, and a small head with a beak.”

    The remarkable rock was uncovered 20 years ago at a mine near Biloela in central Queensland and given to the local high school, Biloela State.

    Its significance remained unknown until Dr Romilio’s previous work on nearby Mount Morgan footprints prompted the community to contact him.

    OPS: Detailed hughlights of the rock specimen with the footprints

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    DUKAS_182451228_FER
    Boulder reveals huge concentration of dinosaur footprints
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Footprints 1
    Ref 16628
    13/03/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: University of Queensland

    A boulder that contains one of the highest concentrations of dinosaur footprints per square metre ever documented , has been revealed.

    A palaeontologist in Australia where it was found has identified 66 fossilised footprints left in the rock during the early Jurassic period, around 200 million years ago.

    Dr Anthony Romilio from the University of Queensland says the prints are from 47 individual dinosaurs which passed across a patch of wet, white clay, possibly walking along or crossing a waterway.

    Each footprint has three toes indicating they belong to a small dinosaur species called Anomoepus scambus.

    Dr Romilio explained: “These dinosaurs were small, with legs ranging from 15 – 50 cm in length and when they left these marks, they were travelling less than 6 km/hr.

    “Evidence from skeletal fossils overseas tells us dinosaurs with feet like these were plant eaters with long legs, a chunky body, short arms, and a small head with a beak.”

    The remarkable rock was uncovered 20 years ago at a mine near Biloela in central Queensland and given to the local high school, Biloela State.

    Its significance remained unknown until Dr Romilio’s previous work on nearby Mount Morgan footprints prompted the community to contact him.

    OPS: Dr Anthony Romilio examines the rock specimen with the footprints at Biloela State High School.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    DUKAS_185311994_EYE
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'

    In eucalyptus woodland near Ipswich, where developers see new housing, ecologists see crucial habitat for endangered wildlife such as koalas, frill-necked lizards and increasingly rare birds.

    Prof Hugh Possingham in Woogaroo Forest - which is described as one of the last stands of forest left between Brisbane and Ipswich and is home to koalas and threatened bird communities and slated to be turned into housing estates.
    Possingham was Qld's chief scientist until recently and is one of the heavy hitters in Australian conservation science - he is calling on Tanya Plibersek to interview and protect this forest.

    David Kelly / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    David Kelly

     

  • The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    DUKAS_185311995_EYE
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'

    In eucalyptus woodland near Ipswich, where developers see new housing, ecologists see crucial habitat for endangered wildlife such as koalas, frill-necked lizards and increasingly rare birds.

    Prof Hugh Possingham in Woogaroo Forest - which is described as one of the last stands of forest left between Brisbane and Ipswich and is home to koalas and threatened bird communities and slated to be turned into housing estates.
    Possingham was Qld's chief scientist until recently and is one of the heavy hitters in Australian conservation science - he is calling on Tanya Plibersek to interview and protect this forest.

    David Kelly / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    David Kelly

     

  • The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    DUKAS_185311996_EYE
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'

    In eucalyptus woodland near Ipswich, where developers see new housing, ecologists see crucial habitat for endangered wildlife such as koalas, frill-necked lizards and increasingly rare birds.

    Female and male golden orb spiders in Woogaroo Forest. Prof Hugh Possingham is concerned for the survival of Woogaroo Forest - which is described as one of the last stands of forest left between Brisbane and Ipswich and is home to koalas and threatened bird communities and slated to be turned into housing estates.
    Possingham was Qld's chief scientist until recently and is one of the heavy hitters in Australian conservation science - he is calling on Tanya Plibersek to interview and protect this forest.

    David Kelly / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    David Kelly

     

  • The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    DUKAS_185311997_EYE
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'
    The fight for Woogaroo Forest: new housing could silence some of Queensland's 'virtuoso songbirds'

    In eucalyptus woodland near Ipswich, where developers see new housing, ecologists see crucial habitat for endangered wildlife such as koalas, frill-necked lizards and increasingly rare birds.

    Scats at the base of a eucalypt tree, evidence of a Koala has been in the area. Prof Hugh Possingham in Woogaroo Forest - which is described as one of the last stands of forest left between Brisbane and Ipswich and is home to koalas and threatened bird communities and slated to be turned into housing estates.
    Possingham was Qld's chief scientist until recently and is one of the heavy hitters in Australian conservation science - he is calling on Tanya Plibersek to interview and protect this forest.

    David Kelly / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    David Kelly

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965758_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    Mitch & Luella O'Loghlin. The O'Loghlin family recently moved to Bluewater from Brisbane - driven out by the price of property down south and lured north by the nature and outdoor lifestyle. Mitch was working in the Northern Territory and could not get home as his family fled the house during the recent flood. Fast flowing water cut off the house, swept away fences and was millimetres from entering the home. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965770_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    The coastal suburb of Bluewater north of Townsville has expanded over recent decades and new arrivals are drawn by access to beach, mountains, jungle and the the clear creek that gives the place its name. Signs warn of crocodiles but the locals swear it is free of the man-eating reptiles. But in downpours during the wet season, water rushes down the mountain and quickly turns the placid creek into a raging torrent of water, sweeping through properties and entering homes. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965769_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    Elisabet and Philip Hutchinson. After floodwater ripped through their Bluewater home in 1998 the Hutchinson's insurance company asked for their paperwork - 'It's out in the Coral Sea', Philip replied. They did not receive a payout. Instead they refinanced their home and put it on stilts more than two metres high. They were one of the few people in their part of the suburb to stay at home during the recent flood event. Their house became an island with water metres deep rushing below them - but the stilts did their job and the flood did not enter. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965762_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    Bobby and Tamika Tilbrooke going through their home in Bluewater on Tuesday 4th Feb. This is their first home they bought two years ago. They fled on Sunday 2nd Feb 2025 when the creek bordering their property burst its banks and began rapidly rising. They grabbed their kids Mia (12) and Jaxson (7) and dog Charlie and got out while they still could. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965759_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    Bobby and Tamika Tilbrooke going through their home in Bluewater on Tuesday 4th Feb. This is their first home they bought two years ago. They fled on Sunday 2nd Feb 2025 when the creek bordering their property burst its banks and began rapidly rising. They grabbed their kids Mia (12) and Jaxson (7) and dog Charlie and got out while they still could. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965761_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    Bobby and Tamika Tilbrooke going through their home in Bluewater on Tuesday 4th Feb. This is their first home they bought two years ago. They fled on Sunday 2nd Feb 2025 when the creek bordering their property burst its banks and began rapidly rising. They grabbed their kids Mia (12) and Jaxson (7) and dog Charlie and got out while they still could. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965763_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    Bobby and Tamika Tilbrooke going through their home in Bluewater on Tuesday 4th Feb. This is their first home they bought two years ago. They fled on Sunday 2nd Feb 2025 when the creek bordering their property burst its banks and began rapidly rising. They grabbed their kids Mia (12) and Jaxson (7) and dog Charlie and got out while they still could. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian

     

  • From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    DUKAS_180965760_EYE
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders
    From paradise to hell and back: why leaving isn't an option for some flood-hit north Queenslanders.

    Residents of Bluewater are picking up the pieces and rebuilding their homes - with or without insurance.

    Data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission suggests approximately one in five north Queenslanders, or more than 62,000 properties, are uninsured because people cannot afford to do so.

    Bobby and Tamika Tilbrooke going through their home in Bluewater on Tuesday 4th Feb. This is their first home they bought two years ago. They fled on Sunday 2nd Feb 2025 when the creek bordering their property burst its banks and began rapidly rising. They grabbed their kids Mia (12) and Jaxson (7) and dog Charlie and got out while they still could. Townsville. Queensland. Australia

    Joe Hinchliffe / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982982_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Jean who works as a contract drover. Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982987_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Kodee Judge riding Walter (white horse) Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982984_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175986017_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982980_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175986014_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175986016_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982983_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Kodee Judge riding Walter (white horse) Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982981_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Bill Little using his motorbike to drive the cattle west towards the new water site which is established every few hours

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982979_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Kodee Judge riding Walter (white horse) Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982986_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982978_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Jean who works as a contract drover. Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175986015_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    Kodee Judge riding Walter (white horse) Drover Bill Little and his team are droving 2000 head of cattle along a stock route which started 50 km outside of Roma, Queensland, Australia. They are contract drovers who move the cattle from one section of pasture to the next in order to allow the cattle to have pasture over a period of four months. 18th September 2024.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    DUKAS_175982985_EYE
    'I lost my phone in the first week': a new generation of drovers in outback Queensland
    Bill Little has been droving for 40 years across thousands of kilometres of stock routes. Now he's showing new hands the ropes.

    Droving is the art of moving large mobs of livestock along stock routes, which are lands gazetted by state governments and administrated by local councils.

    The horses on the trip constantly have flies hanging in their eyes. Bill little is droving 2000 head of cattle through Queensland.

    Carly Earl / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    DUKAS_170274594_EYE
    Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    Eighty families pay the bills of a family farm in south-east Queensland in exchange for fresh produce as part of a community-supported agriculture model.

    The farm's community-supported agriculture (CSA) scheme, a model whereby farms distributes produce among their members in exchange for consistent financial support.

    The on-farm meat room at Echo Valley Farm on 28 April 2024 in the Southern Downs, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    DUKAS_170274596_EYE
    Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    Eighty families pay the bills of a family farm in south-east Queensland in exchange for fresh produce as part of a community-supported agriculture model.

    The farm's community-supported agriculture (CSA) scheme, a model whereby farms distributes produce among their members in exchange for consistent financial support.

    Visitors on the Echo Valley Farm tour on 28 April 2024 in the Southern Downs, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    DUKAS_170274595_EYE
    Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    Eighty families pay the bills of a family farm in south-east Queensland in exchange for fresh produce as part of a community-supported agriculture model.

    The farm's community-supported agriculture (CSA) scheme, a model whereby farms distributes produce among their members in exchange for consistent financial support.

    Randal Breen speaking at the Echo Valley Farm tour on 28 April 2024 in the Southern Downs, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    DUKAS_170274593_EYE
    Meet the Australians swapping supermarket shopping for farm shares.
    Eighty families pay the bills of a family farm in south-east Queensland in exchange for fresh produce as part of a community-supported agriculture model.

    The farm's community-supported agriculture (CSA) scheme, a model whereby farms distributes produce among their members in exchange for consistent financial support.

    Randal Breen at Echo Valley Farm on 28 April 2024 in the Southern Downs, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    DUKAS_168904420_EYE
    'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    Renewable energy developers are following tracks laid by the gas industry in the Western Downs - but they're also making the same mistakes.

    Agriculture was once king in Glen Beasley's neighbourhood on Queensland's Darling Downs, a vast agricultural area about 200km west of Brisbane.

    Then a high voltage power line was built through his family farm outside Chinchilla in 1984. The whispers of gas came with the turn of the millennium, and by the early 2010s, the coal seam gas industry was booming. Gas company Arrow Energy now holds a tenement over his property and a few doors down, there’s a coal seam gas waste facility.

    Today, expanding gas fields cover the landscape. Huge transmission lines crisscross fields of grazing cattle and crimson sorghum ready for harvest. Substations, pipelines and coal trains rolling by.

    Gas wells on the Western Downs between Miles and Chinchilla, Queensland, Australia on 19 April 2024.

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    DUKAS_168904435_EYE
    'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    Renewable energy developers are following tracks laid by the gas industry in the Western Downs - but they're also making the same mistakes.

    Agriculture was once king in Glen Beasley's neighbourhood on Queensland's Darling Downs, a vast agricultural area about 200km west of Brisbane.

    Then a high voltage power line was built through his family farm outside Chinchilla in 1984. The whispers of gas came with the turn of the millennium, and by the early 2010s, the coal seam gas industry was booming. Gas company Arrow Energy now holds a tenement over his property and a few doors down, there’s a coal seam gas waste facility.

    Today, expanding gas fields cover the landscape. Huge transmission lines crisscross fields of grazing cattle and crimson sorghum ready for harvest. Substations, pipelines and coal trains rolling by.

    Powerlines on the Western Downs at sunset east of Chinchilla, Queensland, Australia on 19 April 2024.

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    DUKAS_168904436_EYE
    'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    Renewable energy developers are following tracks laid by the gas industry in the Western Downs - but they're also making the same mistakes.

    Agriculture was once king in Glen Beasley's neighbourhood on Queensland's Darling Downs, a vast agricultural area about 200km west of Brisbane.

    Then a high voltage power line was built through his family farm outside Chinchilla in 1984. The whispers of gas came with the turn of the millennium, and by the early 2010s, the coal seam gas industry was booming. Gas company Arrow Energy now holds a tenement over his property and a few doors down, there’s a coal seam gas waste facility.

    Today, expanding gas fields cover the landscape. Huge transmission lines crisscross fields of grazing cattle and crimson sorghum ready for harvest. Substations, pipelines and coal trains rolling by.

    Edenvale Solar Park solar farm south of Chinchilla in Hopeland, Queensland, Australia on 18 April 2024.

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    DUKAS_168904422_EYE
    'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    Renewable energy developers are following tracks laid by the gas industry in the Western Downs - but they're also making the same mistakes.

    Agriculture was once king in Glen Beasley's neighbourhood on Queensland's Darling Downs, a vast agricultural area about 200km west of Brisbane.

    Then a high voltage power line was built through his family farm outside Chinchilla in 1984. The whispers of gas came with the turn of the millennium, and by the early 2010s, the coal seam gas industry was booming. Gas company Arrow Energy now holds a tenement over his property and a few doors down, there’s a coal seam gas waste facility.

    Today, expanding gas fields cover the landscape. Huge transmission lines crisscross fields of grazing cattle and crimson sorghum ready for harvest. Substations, pipelines and coal trains rolling by.

    Glen Beasley on his property west of Chinchilla, Queensland, Australia on 18 April 2024. The power line crossing his property is behind him.

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    DUKAS_168904421_EYE
    'Leave politics to the politicians': why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable energy
    Renewable energy developers are following tracks laid by the gas industry in the Western Downs - but they're also making the same mistakes.

    Agriculture was once king in Glen Beasley's neighbourhood on Queensland's Darling Downs, a vast agricultural area about 200km west of Brisbane.

    Then a high voltage power line was built through his family farm outside Chinchilla in 1984. The whispers of gas came with the turn of the millennium, and by the early 2010s, the coal seam gas industry was booming. Gas company Arrow Energy now holds a tenement over his property and a few doors down, there’s a coal seam gas waste facility.

    Today, expanding gas fields cover the landscape. Huge transmission lines crisscross fields of grazing cattle and crimson sorghum ready for harvest. Substations, pipelines and coal trains rolling by.

    Glen Beasley and Barbara Beasley on their property west of Chinchilla, Queensland, Australia on 18 April 2024

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian

     

  • 'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    DUKAS_168769519_EYE
    'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    Battling drought, Jenny and Russell Jenner tore out their failing crops. Could fields of sunflowers for selfies save their Queensland farm?

    An aerial view of the Kalbar Sunflower farm in Kalbar, about 80 kilometres southwest of Brisbane, April 15, 2024. Jenny Jenner and her husband Russell, who died of cancer last year, planted sunflowers after suffering financial loss from an ongoing drought.

    Dan Peled / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian Australia

     

  • 'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    DUKAS_168769518_EYE
    'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    Battling drought, Jenny and Russell Jenner tore out their failing crops. Could fields of sunflowers for selfies save their Queensland farm?

    Jenny Jenner is photographed on her sunflower farm in Kalbar, about 80 kilometres southwest of Brisbane, April 15, 2024. Jenny and her husband Russell, who died of cancer last year, planted sunflowers after suffering financial loss from an ongoing drought.

    Dan Peled / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian Australia

     

  • 'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    DUKAS_168769521_EYE
    'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    Battling drought, Jenny and Russell Jenner tore out their failing crops. Could fields of sunflowers for selfies save their Queensland farm?

    Sunflowers bloom at the Kalbar Sunflower farm in Kalbar, about 80 kilometres southwest of Brisbane, April 15, 2024. Jenny Jenner and her husband Russell, who died of cancer last year, planted sunflowers after suffering financial loss from an ongoing drought.

    Dan Peled / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian Australia

     

  • 'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    DUKAS_168769520_EYE
    'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    Battling drought, Jenny and Russell Jenner tore out their failing crops. Could fields of sunflowers for selfies save their Queensland farm?

    Jenny Jenner is photographed on her sunflower farm in Kalbar, about 80 kilometres southwest of Brisbane, April 15, 2024. Jenny and her husband Russell, who died of cancer last year, planted sunflowers after suffering financial loss from an ongoing drought.

    Dan Peled / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian Australia

     

  • 'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    DUKAS_168769517_EYE
    'They just make you happy': Jenny Jenner. The Queensland farmers who took a chance on a million sunflowers.
    Battling drought, Jenny and Russell Jenner tore out their failing crops. Could fields of sunflowers for selfies save their Queensland farm?

    Jenny Jenner is photographed on her sunflower farm in Kalbar, about 80 kilometres southwest of Brisbane, April 15, 2024. Jenny and her husband Russell, who died of cancer last year, planted sunflowers after suffering financial loss from an ongoing drought.

    Dan Peled / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian Australia

     

  • Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    DUKAS_167967227_EYE
    Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    Leonard Monaghan has gathered 104 tonnes of rubbish in Warwick since 2008 - and admits he might be 'a bit obsessed'

    Leonard Monaghan on 25 March 2024 outside Warwick, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    DUKAS_167967226_EYE
    Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    Leonard Monaghan has gathered 104 tonnes of rubbish in Warwick since 2008 - and admits he might be 'a bit obsessed'

    Leonard Monaghan on 25 March 2024 outside Warwick, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    DUKAS_167967228_EYE
    Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    Leonard Monaghan has gathered 104 tonnes of rubbish in Warwick since 2008 - and admits he might be 'a bit obsessed'

    Leonard Monaghan on 25 March 2024 outside Warwick, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    DUKAS_167967225_EYE
    Lost phones, a sex swing and dozens of deodorants: Queensland's 'rubbish rambler' Leonard Monaghan on 15 years of roadside finds.
    Leonard Monaghan has gathered 104 tonnes of rubbish in Warwick since 2008 - and admits he might be 'a bit obsessed'

    Leonard Monaghan on 25 March 2024 outside Warwick, Queensland, Australia

    Aston Brown / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    The Guardian

     

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