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Postal codes for the Northern Territory, Australia

Post code listings for Postal codes for the Northern Territory, Australia When available population data is included.

Sort by Postal Code | Name

0800 Darwin (93,080)
0801 Darwin General Post Office
0804 Parap
0810 Alawa
0810 Brinkin
0810 Casuarina
0810 Coconut Grove
0810 Jingili
0810 Lee Point
0810 Millner
0810 Moil
0810 Nakara
0810 Nightcliff
0810 Rapid Creek
0810 Tiwi
0810 Wagaman
0810 Wanguri
0811 Casuarina
0812 Anula
0812 Karama
0812 Leanyer
0812 Malak
0812 Marrara
0812 Sanderson
0812 Woodleigh Gardens
0812 Wulagi
0813 Sanderson
0814 Nightcliff
0815 Charles Darwin University
0820 Bagot
0820 Coonawarra
0820 East Point
0820 Fannie Bay
0820 Larrakeyah
0820 Ludmilla
0820 Parap
0820 Stuart Park
0820 The Gardens
0820 The Narrows
0820 Winnellie
0820 Woolner
0821 Winnellie
0822 Angurugu
0822 Croker Island
0822 Daly River
0822 Darwin Mail Centre
0822 Delissaville
0822 Galiwinku
0822 Goulbourn Island
0822 Maningrida
0822 Milingimbi
0822 Minjilang
0822 Nguiu
0822 Oenpelli
0822 Pularumpi
0822 Ramingining
0822 Umbakumba
0822 Wadeye
0822 Winnellie
0828 Berrimah
0829 Pinelands
0830 Archer
0830 Driver
0830 Farrar
0830 Gray
0830 Marlow Lagoon
0830 Moulden
0830 Palmerston (2,500)
0830 Woodroffe
0830 Yarrawonga (5,604)
0831 Palmerston (2,500)
0832 Bakewell
0832 Bellamack
0832 Gunn
0832 Mitchell
0832 Rosebery
0835 Howard Springs
0836 Humpty Doo
0837 Noonamah
0838 Berry Springs
0840 Dundee Beach
0845 Batchelor
0846 Adelaide River
0847 Pine Creek
0850 Katherine (10,141)
0851 Katherine (10,141)
0852 Daly Waters
0852 Katherine (10,141)
0852 Lajamanu
0852 Larrimah
0852 Maranboy
0852 Mataranka
0852 Ngukurr
0852 Numbulwar
0852 Victoria River Downs
0853 RAAF Base Tindal
0854 Borroloola
0860 Tennant Creek (3,889)
0861 Tennant Creek (3,889)
0862 Elliott
0862 Newcastle Waters
0862 Tennant Creek (3,889)
0862 Warrego
0087 Kintore
0870 Alice Springs (26,188)
0871 Alice Springs (26,188)
0872 Ali Curung
0872 Alice Springs (26,188)
0872 Areyonga
0872 Barrow Creek
0872 Finke
0872 Haasts Bluff
0872 Hermannsburg
0872 Kaltukatjara
0872 Papunya
0872 Santa Teresa
0872 Ti Tree
0872 Yuendumu
0872 Yulara
0880 Nhulunbuy (3,202)
0880 Yirrkala
0881 Nhulunbuy (3,202)
0885 Alyangula (1,289)
0886 Jabiru



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AUSTRALIA CONSERVATION NEWS

Frog in Australia goes from 'extinct' to very, very endangered

(03/08/2010) Facing habitat loss, pollution, climate change, and the devastating chytrid fungus, there has been little positive news about amphibians recently. However, a story out of Australia brings a much needed respite from bad news. In 2008 Luke Pearce, a fisheries conservation officer, stumbled on a frog that had been thought to be extinct for over thirty years. Not recorded since the 1970s, Pearce rediscovered the yellow-spotted bell frog (Litoria castanea) on rural Australian farmland in the Southern Tableland of New South Wales.


Healthy coral reefs produce clouds and precipitation

(03/03/2010) Twenty years of research has led Dr. Graham Jones of Australia's Southern Cross University to discover a startling connection between coral reefs and coastal precipitation. According to Jones, a substance produced by thriving coral reefs seed clouds leading to precipitation in a long-standing natural process that is coming under threat due to climate change.


Australia pledges $30m to reduce deforestation in Sumatra

(03/03/2010) Australia will contribute A$30 million to a project to reduce deforestation in the province of Jambi, on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, reports Reuters.


W Australia has hottest and driest summer on record

(03/02/2010) Western Australia endured its hottest summer on record, according to the state weather bureau.


Could toxins from plantation trees be causing cancer cluster, oyster deaths in Tasmania?

(02/22/2010) A local medical doctor, a marine ecologist, and oyster farmers are raising an alarm that a nearby monoculture plantation of Eucalyptus nitens may be poisoning local water reserves, leading to rare cancers and high oyster mortality in Tasmania. However, the toxin is not from pesticides, as originally expected, but appears to originate from the trees themselves.


UN to protect seven migratory sharks, but Australia opts out

(02/17/2010) One hundred and thirteen countries have signed on to an agreement to protect seven migratory sharks currently threatened with extinction byway of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), according to the UN Environment Program (UNEP). The agreement prohibits hunting, fishing, or deliberate killing of the great white shark, basking shark, whale shark, porbeagle shark, spiny dogfish, as well as the shortfin and longfin mako sharks. However, Australia has declared it will ignore certain protections.


Australia starts 10 million dollar initiative to find new species

(02/15/2010) Known as the 'Bush Blitz', Australia will spend 10 million Australian dollars (8.88 million US dollars) over the next three years to conduct biodiversity surveys in far-flung places, reports Sydney Morning Herald. The program hopes to both uncover new species and gather more data about innumerable little-known plants and animals on the continent.


Desertification threatens 38 percent of the world

(02/10/2010) Over one third of the world's land surface (38 percent) is threatened with desertification, according to a new study published in theInternational Journal of Life Cycle Assessment. The study found that eight of fifteen eco-regions are threatened by desertification, including coastal areas, the prairies, the Mediterranean region, the savannah, the temperate steppes, the temperate deserts, tropical and subtropical steppes, and the tropical and subtropical deserts.


Why top predators matter: an in-depth look at new research

(02/02/2010) Few species have faced such vitriolic hatred from humans as the world's top predators. Considered by many as pests—often as dangerous—they have been gunned down, poisoned, speared, 'finned', and decimated across their habitats. Even where large areas of habitat are protected, the one thing that is often missing are top predators. However, new research over the past few decades is showing just how vital these predators are to ecosystems. Biologists have long known that predators control populations of prey animals, but new studies show that they may do much more. From controlling smaller predators to protecting river banks from erosion to providing nutrient hotspots, it appears that top predators are indispensible to a working ecosystem. Top predators sit at the apex of an ecosystem's food chain. Wolves in Alaska, tigers in Siberia, lions in Kenya, white sharks in the Pacific are all examples of top predators.


New study: overhunting by humans killed off Australia's megafauna

(01/21/2010) For over a century and a half researchers have debated whether humans or climate change killed off Australia's megafuana. A new paper in Science argues with new evidence that Australia's giant marsupials, monstrous reptiles, and large flightless birds were brought to extinction not by an unruly climate, but by the arrival of humans.


Rich logging countries open logging loophole in plan to reduce deforestation

(12/15/2009) While one tropical forest policy group saw hopeful signs emerging in the most recent revision of the negotiating text on the reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) mechanism at climate talks in Copenhagen, activist groups are warning that there remains a substantial logging loophole for developed countries.


Photos: ten beloved species threatened by global warming

(12/14/2009) The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has released a list of ten species that are likely to be among the hardest hit by climate change, including beloved species such as the leatherback sea turtle, the koala, the emperor penguin, the clownfish, and the beluga whale. The timing of the list coincides with the negotiations by world leaders at the UN Climate Change Conference to come up with an international agreement to combat climate change.


Developed countries plan to hide emissions from logging

(12/09/2009) While developing countries in the tropics have received a lot of attention for their deforestation emissions (one thinks of Brazil, Indonesia, and Malaysia), emissions from logging—considered forest cover change—in wealthy northern countries has been largely overlooked by the media. It seems industrialized countries prefer it this way: a new study reveals just how these countries are planning to hide forestry-related emissions, allowing nations such as Canada, Russia, and the EU to contribute to climate change without penalty.


Current decade is the warmest on record

(12/08/2009) As 192 countries meet in Copenhagen to wrangle out a complex and at times sticky agreement to combat climate change, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has released new evidence that the world is undergoing warming. According to the WMO the current decade is likely the warmest on record.


EBay bid to name new shrimp species raises $2,900 for conservation from NBA star

(12/07/2009) Former NBA basketball player for the Chicago Bulls, Luc Longley, has won the EBay auction to name a wild looking red-polka dotted shrimp species. Longley won with a bid of 3,600 Australian dollars (2,900 US dollars): all of the funds go to the Australian Marine Conservation Society (AMCS). He named the shrimp Lebbeus clarehanna as a gift for his daughter, Clare Hanna Longley's fifteenth birthday.


What would the Dalai Lama do?: spiritual leader speaks out on climate change

(11/30/2009) The Dalai Lama has given up taking baths in favor of showers and makes certain all lights are off when he leaves a room to help lower his carbon footprint, he told a crowd of reporters in Sydney Australia today.


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.




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