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Is a woomera like a heron’s neck?

Is a woomera like a heron’s neck?

by Paula Peeters | May 16, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

This post is co-authored by Gordon Sanson.ยน Early dawn light is creeping across a glassy-still wetland, as wreaths of mist curl upwards. A large white egret stands still, poised ready. Nearby a man is waiting for kangaroos to venture onto the lush grass near the...
The toadfish, the toe-cutter, and the great swimming head

The toadfish, the toe-cutter, and the great swimming head

by Paula Peeters | May 9, 2015 | Tales of science, Writing

  I once met a man who could hypnotize toadfish. He would stand ankle-deep, on the mudflats of Bramble Bay, with his heels together like Dorothy. And the little common toadfish would swim into the ‘V’ created, and become still. Not many people like...
Walk like a man: Was the giant kangaroo too big to hop?

Walk like a man: Was the giant kangaroo too big to hop?

by Paula Peeters | May 1, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

Many years ago, Franz Kafka imagined a creature that was elusive, and remained tantalizingly out of reach, so that its exact nature was never quite discerned: The animal resembles a kangaroo, but not as to the face, which is flat almost like a human face, and small...
Egrets? I’ve had a few…

Egrets? I’ve had a few…

by Paula Peeters | Apr 22, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

  Over the last couple of months four species of egret have been frequenting Dowse Lagoon. Sometimes I see them together in the same muddy corner near the bird-hide. They are the great egret Ardea alba, plumed or intermediate egret Ardea plumifera, little egret...
The strangler fig: everyone’s favorite killer

The strangler fig: everyone’s favorite killer

by Paula Peeters | Apr 17, 2015 | Tales of science, Writing

A rainforest tree is subject to many mortal perils: shade, cyclones, fires, chainsaws. One of the most grotesque and extended deaths is carried in a tiny seed, rained down from above by complicit birds and bats. Many such seeds drop harmlessly to the forest floor, or...
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