Australia’s coastal and inland towns have long resented the dominance of the capital cities, not only as the major seats of government, commerce and transport, but as the dominant sites for sportin

Harvard University Museum of Comparative Zoology, 2009. Website masthead featuring Kronosaurus queenslandicus. The central importance of this specimen for the museum is indicated by its appearance in 2009 in side view in white on black on the masthead of its website.

The newly unveiled Kronosaurus queenslandicus display in the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology viewed by Alfred S. Romer and a research assistant. From H.O. Fletcher, ‘A giant marine reptile from the cretaceous rocks of Queensland’, Australian museum magazine, 13/2, June 1959

Visiting the Harvard University Museum of Comparative Zoology is a startling experience for many Queenslanders: pride of place in this American institution goes to an enormous (12.8 metre) skeleton

The Endeavour anchor, James Cook Historical Museum, Cooktown. Postcard by Murray Views, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Copyright © Murray Views Collection c1970-2000, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

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