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Postcodes for the Australian Capital Territory (Canberra), Australia
Post code listings for
Postcodes for the Australian Capital Territory (Canberra), Australia
When available population data is included.
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Postcode | Name
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Acton 2601
Ainslie 2602
Amaroo 2914
Aranda 2614
Australian National University 0200
Banks 2906
Barton 2600
Belconnen 2616
Belconnen 2617
Black Mountain 2601
Bonner 2914
Bonython 2905
Braddon 2612
Bruce 2617
Calwell 2905
Campbell 2612
Canberra 2600 (327,700)
Canberra 2601 (327,700)
Canberra Business Centre 2610
Causeway 2604
Chapman 2611
Charnwood 2615
Chifley 2606
Chisholm 2905
City Centre 2601
Civic Square 2608
Conder 2906
Cook 2614
Curtin 2605
Deakin 2600
Deakin West 2600
Dickson 2602
Downer 2602
Duffy 2611
Dunlop 2615
Duntroon 2600
Erindale Centre 2903
Evatt 2617
Fadden 2904
Farrer 2607
Fisher 2611
Florey 2615
Flynn 2615
Forde 2914
Forrest 2603
Fraser 2615
Fyshwick 2609
Garran 2605
Gilmore 2905
Ginninderra Village 2913
Giralang 2617
Gordon 2906
Gowrie 2904
Greenway 2900
Griffith 2603 (15,455)
Gungahlin 2912
Hackett 2602
Hall 2618
Harman 2600
Harrison 2914
Hawker 2614
Higgins 2615
HMAS Creswell 2540
Holder 2611
Holt 2615
Hughes 2605
Hume 2620
Isaacs 2607
Isabella Plains 2905
Jamison Centre 2614
Jervis Bay 2540
Kaleen 2617
Kambah 2902
Kingston 2604
Kippax 2615
Kippax Centre 2615
Latham 2615
Lawson 2617 (10,598)
Lyneham 2602
Lyons 2606
Macarthur 2904
Macgregor 2615
Macquarie 2614
Manuka 2603
Mawson 2607
McKellar 2617
Melba 2615
Mitchell 2911
Monash 2904
Mount Stromlo 2611
Narrabundah 2604
Ngunnawal 2913
Nicholls 2913
O'Connor 2602
O'Malley 2606
Oxley 2903
Page 2614
Palmerston 2913 (25,000)
Parkes 2600 (11,137)
Parliament House 2600
Pearce 2607
Phillip 2606
Pialligo 2609
Red Hill 2603
Reid 2612
Richardson 2905
Rivett 2611
Russell 2600
Scullin 2614
Spence 2615
Stirling 2611
Swinger Hill 2606
Symonston 2609
Tharwa 2620
Theodore 2905
Torrens 2607
Tuggeranong 2900
Tuggeranong Distribution Centre 2901
Turner 2612
University of Canberra 2617
Uriarra 2611
Wanniassa 2903
Waramanga 2611
Watson 2602
Weetangera 2614
Weston 2611
Weston Creek 2611
Woden 2606
Yarralumla 2600
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MONGABAY.COM
Mongabay.com seeks to raise interest in and appreciation of wild lands and wildlife, while examining the impact of emerging trends in climate, technology, economics, and finance on conservation and development (more)
CONTENTS
WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
INTERACT
AUSTRALIA CONSERVATION NEWS
Pygmy hippo shot and killed in…Australia
(11/17/2009)
Hunters going after pigs in Australia's Northwest Territories got a big surprise when they shot an animal they mistook for a pig, only to find out it was a pygmy hippopotamus, reports the Northwest Territory News.
45 new snail species discovered on Australian islands
(09/17/2009)
Surveys on islands off the coast in the Kimberley region of Western Australia have discovered at least 45 new species of snail.
Oil spill off Australia potential 'disaster' for marine wildlife
(08/30/2009)
Oil is leaking from an offshore drilling rig in the Timor Sea near Australia's Northwest coast. Authorities say it will be weeks before the leak is plugged: they are awaiting the arrival of a drilling rig from Singapore to plug the leak.
Loss of Great Barrier Reef due to global warming would cost Australia $37.7 billion
(08/12/2009)
A recent study reports that the loss of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef due to climate change poses a catastrophe not just for marine life, but would cost $37.7 billion during the next century.
Tasmania gets Australia's first CCB-certified REDD deal
(07/27/2009)
A forest conservation project in Tasmania has become Australia's first Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) project to meet Climate, Community and Biodiversity Standards.
Temperate forests store more carbon than tropical forests, finds study
(07/17/2009)
Temperate forests trump rainforests when it comes to storing carbon, reports a new assessment of global forest carbon stocks published July 14th in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The findings have important implications for efforts to mitigate climate change by protecting forests. Sampling and reviewing published data from nearly 100 forest sites around the world, Heather Keith, Brendan G. Mackey, and David B. Lindenmayer of Australian National University found that Australia's temperate Eucalyptus forests are champions of carbon storage, sequestering up to 2,844 metric tons of carbon per hectare, a figure that far exceeds previous estimates. These forests, located in the Central Highlands of Victoria in southeastern Australia, are dominated by giant Mountain Ash (Eucalyptus regnans) trees, which can reach a height of 320 feet and live for more than 350 years. They are also favored by the timber industry. Mountain Ash forests have been widely logged across Australia, with only limited old-growth stands remaining.
A Tasmanian tragedy? : How the forestry industry has torn an island apart
(07/02/2009)
This is by no means a new battle: in fact, Tasmanian industrial foresters and environmentalists have been fighting over the issue of clearcutting the island’s forests for decades. The battle—some would probably prefer 'war'—is over nothing less than the future of Tasmania. Some Tasmanians see the rich forests that surround them in terms of income, dollars and cents; they see money literally growing on trees, or more appropriately growing on monoculture plantations and government owned native forests. They see the wilderness of Tasmania as an exploitative resource.
The living dead - Australia's disappearing landscape
(06/24/2009)
Gum trees dot the hills and valleys of south-eastern Australia, a vivid fixture of the rolling landscape. But despite the seeming health of these iconic trees, they have earned the morbid nickname "the living dead" among ecologists, who say natural changes and human actions are threatening the next generation of gum trees. The gum trees that are scattered through the landscape are naturally dying off at a rate of one to two percent each year. With no replacement, researchers fear more than 100,000 square kilometers of land could be virtually treeless within the next 100 years.
Will jellyfish take over the world?
(06/16/2009)
It could be a plot of a (bad) science-fiction film: a man-made disaster creates spawns of millions upon millions of jellyfish which rapidly take over the ocean. Humans, starving for mahi-mahi and Chilean seabass, turn to jellyfish, which becomes the new tuna (after the tuna fishery has collapsed, of course). Fish sticks become jelly-sticks, and fish-and-chips becomes jelly-and-chips. The sci-fi film could end with the ominous image of a jellyfish evolving terrestrial limbs and pulling itself onto land—readying itself for a new conquest.
Extinction of Christmas Island Pipistrelle bat predicted in less than six months
(06/03/2009)
The Australasian Bat Society predicts that the Christmas Island Pipistrelle bat has less than six months left until extinction, unless measures are taken immediately to set-up a captive breeding population.
Australia delays climate measures, but raises targets
(05/06/2009)
Australia on Monday abruptly shifted its climate policy to give polluting industries more time to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
New Australian dolphin spits at food
(04/13/2009)
Only recognized as a new species in 2005, the snubfin dolphin has been observed spitting jet streams of water at schools of fish. Spitting at the fish helps the dolphins round them up into groups where they are easier to catch.
Revolutionary new theory overturns modern meteorology with claim that forests move rain
(04/01/2009)
Two Russian scientists, Victor Gorshkov and Anastassia Makarieva of the St. Petersburg Nuclear Physics, have published a revolutionary theory that turns modern meteorology on its head, positing that forests—and their capacity for condensation—are actually the main driver of winds rather than temperature. While this model has widespread implications for numerous sciences, none of them are larger than the importance of conserving forests, which are shown to be crucial to 'pumping' precipitation from one place to another. The theory explains, among other mysteries, why deforestation around coastal regions tends to lead to drying in the interior.
Have Australian cane toads finally met their match?
(03/31/2009)
This weekend in Queensland, Australia the government held the first 'Toad Day Out' where hundreds of locals went hunting for the invasive cane toad, catching an estimated 10,000 toads to be euthanized. At the same time, researchers announced in the journal Functional Ecology that they may have discovered a native Australian species that will finally rout the cane toad—and it's not man. The meat ant is a notoriously aggressive and abundant insect which is known to consume anything edible, including the scientists argue, cane toads.
Ebay bidders to decide new shrimp's name
(03/24/2009)
A new way to raise conservation funds has captured attention worldwide. The Australian Marine Conservation Society (AMCS) has auctioned the naming rights of a newly discovered species of shimp Ebay. "The shrimp is in the group or genus of shrimps known as Lebbeus, but is awaiting the addition of a unique species name," said Anna McCallum, a Melbourne scientist who discovered the new species in deep waters off the Southwest coast of Australia.
Time to give up on Tasmanian tiger, says DNA expert
(03/02/2009)
Money and energy spent on finding the Tasmanian tiger should be used for other conservation purposes, according to Dr. Jeremy Austin from the University of Adelaide’s Centre for Ancient DNA. The Tasmanian tiger, or Thylacine, has captured the imagination of cryptozoologists ever since the last known individual died in the 1936 in the Hobart Zoo, which closed the next year. There have been several unreported sightings throughout the island since the 1930s, including inconclusive photos taken by German tourists.
Little-known flatback sea turtle receives extra attention at symposium in Australia
(02/17/2009)
Beginning today in Brisbane, Australia, the 29th annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation will feature the flatback sea turtle, native to Australia and probably the least-studied of the marine turtle species. For a hundred years biologists debated as to how closely the flatback marine turtle was related to the green sea turtle. Several unique attributes of the flatback came to the forefront. The name ‘flatback’ describes the turtle’s distinct flattened carapace. The species also lays the largest eggs of any sea turtles, proportional to their size. However, perhaps most distinctly the flatback is the only marine turtle to call one nation home. The flatback forages, mates, and lays eggs along Australia’s coats; its penchant for swimming, rather than riding oceanic currents, keeps it from migrating across oceans as other turtle do.
Japanese paper firms contribute to destruction of old-growth forests in Tasmania
(02/15/2009)
A new report released by Australian conservation groups The Wilderness Society and Still Wild, Still Threatened shows that despite claims to the contrary, Japanese paper manufacturers are the purchasers of wood chips derived from the destruction of Tasmania’s old growth forests.
Ocean acidification is killing the Great Barrier Reef
(01/01/2009)
Since 1990 the growth of coral in Australia's Great Barrier Reef has slowed its lowest rate in at least 400 years as a result of warming waters and ocean acidification, report researchers writing in Science. The finding portends a bleak near-term future for the giant reef ecosystem as well as calcifying marine organisms around the world.
A cure for the Tasmanian devil's strange and fatal cancer?
(11/21/2008)
Researchers have announced that two Tasmanian devils have survived a cancer devastating their species after receiving inoculations of dead tumor cells, according to the International Herald. However, the inoculations have not worked on every devil – despite being inoculated four devils died from the cancer during the work.
T-SHIRTS
Madagascar Wildlife
Dancing lemurs
Don't fall asleep the sloths will eat you
Sucking on this frog may make you insane
CALENDARS
Mount Kenya
East Africa Safari Wildlife
Kenya's Turkana People
Peru
African Wildlife
Alaska
China
Madagascar Chameleons
CANVAS BAGS
Hallucinogenic frog bag
Madagascar wildlife bag
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