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Frisky frogs, Australian Geographic // 22 January 2011

HAVING MULTIPLE SEXUAL PARTNERS at the same time is often frowned upon, but in the frog world, the more the merrier.

New Australian research shows that individual females of the grey foam-nest tree frog (Chiromantis xerampelina) which mate with up to 12 partners at the same time, produce more resilient offspring than those individuals that mate with just one partner.

In what is documented as the most extreme form of ‘polyandry’ (sex with multiple male partners) in vertebrates, the unusual mating process lasts a few hours during a single night.

Read my article for the Australian Geographic in full here.

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Violent Light, Agenda Sydney // 21 February 2011

Polish your cultural halo this Friday night by dipping into the sunlight-infused film works that make up Sean Rafferty’s Violent Light.

Housed at the arthouse Chauvel Cinema in Paddington, Rafferty’s convention-defying mix of cinema and fiendish light trickery replaces the traditional movie screen with a cardboard canvas, and experiments with sunlight, cinema projections, landscape and memory. The cinema-and-gallery installation is a one-night-only production, and it’s also a cheap date – that is, admission is free, so bring your struggling artist friends.

The five-minute film focuses on an outdoor cinema screen over the course of a day. As the day fades into night, darkness brings with it a film within a film – or as Rafferty puts it, a “junk-film montage” made from projectionists’ clippings. Rafferty says it’s “an artwork about cinema and optics, memory and the ‘physicality’ of light. It is about landscape, its representation, and its residual effect – how we project things onto the landscape and it projects things onto us.” Who are we to argue?

Armed with a drink from the mezzanine bar, absorb the inspirations behind, offshoots of and by-products of Violent Light before heading into Cinema 2, where the short film will be shown.

As the week fades into the weekend, there aren’t many better ways to kick Friday night into action – beer in hand, surrounded by new art in the old grandeur of the Chauvel.

Or, read my piece in today’s Agenda here.

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Whipping race horses ineffective, Australian Geographic // 7 February 2011

WHIPPING HORSES TO SPEED them up is an age-old tradition, but its effectiveness is in doubt, according to new research from the University of Sydney.

Condoned by racing bodies the world over, whippng is believed to spur acceleration in horses in the final stages of races. But a new report, authored by two veterinarians and funded by the RSPCA, shows that whipping “did not significantly affect velocity…enough to change the likelihood of being placed in the first three.”

Read the rest of my Australian Geographic news piece here…

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Historical treasures escape worst of Qld floods, Australian Geographic // 21 January 2011

AS SHOCKED QUEENSLANDERS PULL together to cope with the aftermath of last week’s floods, many of the State capital’s museums and libraries are breathing a sigh of relief after only minimal interruptions to usual summer business. For an unlucky few, however, the big clean up involves salvaging some precious and unwieldy exhibits.

Read the rest of my Australian Geographic piece here…

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