The Australian Pelican (Pelecanus Conspiccilatus) is a large water bird. It can be found in Australia, wherever there is water with fish in it. For instance, if there’s water in Lake Eyre, in Outback South Australia, they will somehow know it, and be there. Naturally, they’re quite common at the seaside as well.
The Australian Pelican is usually white, with some black in its wings. The eyes are yellow, and its bill is enormous. It always looks to me as if the bill is a little bit over-sized compared to the rest of the body. But it sure makes them look very special.

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This particular one was sitting on a branch over the Paroo river, at the Corni Paroo Waterhole, in Western Queensland, close to the border of New South Wales.
Categories: Australia · Corni Paroo · Gum Tree · Outback · Photos · Travel
Tagged: Australia, Outback, Currawinya National Park, Corni Paroo Waterhole, Scenic, Nature, Queensland, QLD, Landscape, 2005, Wildlife, Wild life, Animal, Animals, Australian Pelican, Bird, Pelecanus Conspiccilatus, Remote, Natural, Uninhabited, Currawinya NP, Birds, Wilderness, Nobody
The Brush-tailed Rock Wallaby (scientific name: Petrogale penicillata) is one of the inhabitants on the Great Dividing Range of Australia. It is very agile and lacks any fear of heights, living on steep cliffs.
A good spot to look for them is Chaelundi Bluff (or Lucifer’s Thumb) in Guy Fawkes River National Park in New South Wales Australia. That is were the fellow below was photographed.

(Please, click here or on the photo to see more photos of this location)
Categories: Australia · Photos · Travel
Tagged: 2005, Animal, Animals, Australia, Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby, Central Eastern Rainforest Reserves of Australia, CERRA, Chaelundi Bluff, Fauna, Guy Fawkes River National Park, Guy Fawkes River NP, Lucifers Thumb, Mammal, Marsupial, Nature, New South Wales, NSW, Petrogale penicillata, Wild life, Wildlife, World Heritage Area