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Golden Whistler
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/golden-whistler/The Golden Whistler belongs to the Family Pachycephalidae, which means 'thick-head' after the group's robust necks and heads. This species is one of Australia's loudest and most beautiful songsters.
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Figbird
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/figbird/The Figbird nests in small, semi-colonial groups, with nests often quite close together.
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Eastern Yellow Robin
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/eastern-yellow-robin-eopsaltria-australis/Eastern Yellow Robins belong to the genus Eopsaltria which translates as 'dawn-harper'. Appropriately, they are among the first birds to be heard at dawn.
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Eastern Rosella
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/eastern-rosella/The Eastern Rosella uses one of its feet (usually the right foot) to hold food when eating on the ground or perched on a tree.
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Dinosaurs - Wintonotitan wattsi
https://australian.museum/learn/dinosaurs/fact-sheets/wintonotitan-wattsi/Wintonotitan wattsi, dubbed ‘Clancy’, after a poem by Banjo Patterson, was a primitive titanosauriform and one of three new dinosaurs recently named from the Winton Formation in central Queensland.
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Dinosaurs - Rhoetosaurus brownei
https://australian.museum/learn/dinosaurs/fact-sheets/rhoetosaurus-brownei/Rhoetosaurus brownei, a primitive sauropod from the Middle Jurassic of Queensland, is one of the largest and most complete Australian dinosaurs known.
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Dinosaurs - Leaellynasaura amicagraphica
https://australian.museum/learn/dinosaurs/fact-sheets/leaellynasaura-amicagraphica/Leaellynasaura amicagraphica was a tiny ornithopod from the Early Cretaceous of Victoria (perhaps a juvenile because of its small size).
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Channel-billed Cuckoo
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/channel-billed-cuckoo/The Channel-billed Cuckoo is the largest parasitic cuckoo in the world.
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Brown Treecreeper
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/brown-treecreeper/Brown Treecreepers are highly sociable birds, living and breeding communally. Each year, the previous year's offspring will remain to help the breeding male feed the female and rear new chicks. Interestingly, it is usually only males which remain to perform this duty.
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Blue Angelfish, Pomacanthus semicirculatus (Cuvier, 1831)
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/blue-angelfish-pomacanthus-semicirculatus/Blue Angelfish, Pomacanthus semicirculatus (Cuvier, 1831)
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