Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Anbangbang Billabong, Kakadu National Park, Australia, at the beginning of the dry season. Anbangbang Billabong lies in the shadow of Burrunggui (Nourlangie Rock) within Kakadu National Park and is a good place to view a wide range of wildlife.
Kakadu National Park is a protected area in the Northern Territory of Australia, 171 km (106 mi) southeast of Darwin.It is a World Heritage Site. Kakadu is also gazetted as a locality, covering the same area as the national park, with 313 people recorded living there in the 2016 Australian census.
Males move around more, 69 m (75 yd) per day on average versus 23 m (25 yd) for females at Kakadu National Park. [12] In the same area, male lizards were found to have an average home range of 1.96 ha (4.8 acres) during the dry season and 2.53 ha (6.3 acres) during the wet season ; females used 0.63 ha (1.6 acres) and 0.68 ha (1.7 acres) for ...
Deutsch: Jim Jim Creek im Kakadu National Park, Kakadu, Northern Territory, Australien English: Jim Jim Creek at Kakadu National Park , Kakadu, Northern Territory , Australia This is a photo of a cultural heritage monument of Australia with id: 105041
This species can live in areas where saltwater crocodiles cannot, and are known to inhabit areas above the escarpment in Kakadu National Park and in very arid and rocky conditions (such as Katherine Gorge, where they are common and are relatively safe from saltwater crocodiles during the dry season). However, they are still consistently found ...
Kakadu language, an extinct Australian Aboriginal language; Kakadu (people), an Australian Aboriginal people; Kakadu, a large sailplane built in 1928 by Julius Hatry; Kakadu (software), a software library for encoding and decoding JPEG 2000 images; Kakadu Storm, a rugby team in the Darwin Rugby League
The Oenpelli python or Oenpelli rock python (Simalia oenpelliensis or Nyctophilopython oenpelliensis) is a species of large snake in the family Pythonidae.The species is endemic to the sandstone massif area of the western Arnhem Land region in the Northern Territory of Australia.
About six pairs were found to use the 29 square kilometres of the Keoladeo National Park. [33] One breeding pair has been observed in Bhagalpur district, western Bihar. [34] In Sri Lanka, the species is a rare breeding resident, with 4–8 breeding pairs in Ruhuna National Park. [35]