Private Timber Reserve (Tasmania)
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Private Timber Reserve (Tasmania)
A private timber reserve is an area of privately owned land, used or intended to be used, for growing timber within the Australian state of Tasmania. Landowners can have their land declared as a Private Timber Reserve and protect their right to use private land to grow timber. Private land or freehold land refers to land registered under Torrens title. A landowner is the person(s) and/or legal entity registered on the Torrens Title. Private Timber Reserves are unique, with no other State in Australia, or internationally, providing the land owner with protection of their rights to use their planted land, land they intend to plant or native forests areas, to grow timber. Growing timber is long term investment with trees often taking decades to grow to maturity. Forest and tree owners need certainty that they will be able to harvest in the future. Securing the right to use land to grow timber provides some certainty that the owner will be able to harvest in the future. In the ...
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PTR Chart 2021
PTR can refer to: * Particle transfer roller, for cleaning motion picture film * Peak-to-trough ratio, a parameter in pharmacokinetics * Petir LRT station (LRT station abbreviation), Singapore * PetroChina (NYSE: PTR) * Photothermal Ratio, light/temperature ratio for a plant * Physical transmission right in the electricity market * Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt, later Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, a German research institute * Pitrilysin, an enzyme * Planar ternary ring in algebra * Pool Test Reactor, Canada * Proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry, used in chemical analysis * PTR rifle, made by PTR Industries, Inc., US * List of DNS record types#PTR, A type of DNS record in computer networking * Pointer_(computer_programming), Pointer in computer programming (e.g. the PTR keyword in x86 assembly language) * Palanivel Thiagarajan, an Indian politician {{disambig ...
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Pierre Slicer
Pierre is a masculine given name. It is a French language, French form of the name Peter (given name), Peter. Pierre originally meant "rock" or "stone" in French (derived from the Greek word πέτρος (''petros'') meaning "stone, rock", via Latin "petra"). It is a translation of Aramaic כיפא (''Kefa),'' the nickname Jesus gave to apostle Saint Peter, Simon Bar-Jona, referred in English as Saint Peter. Pierre is also found as a surname. People with the given name * Abbé Pierre, Henri Marie Joseph Grouès (1912–2007), French Catholic priest who founded the Emmaus Movement * Monsieur Pierre, Pierre Jean Philippe Zurcher-Margolle (c. 1890–1963), French ballroom dancer and dance teacher * Pierre (footballer), Lucas Pierre Santos Oliveira (born 1982), Brazilian footballer * Pierre, Baron of Beauvau (c. 1380–1453) * Pierre, Duke of Penthièvre (1845–1919) * Pierre, marquis de Fayet (died 1737), French naval commander and Governor General of Saint-Domingue * Prince Pier ...
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Forestry In Australia
Australia has many forests of importance due to significant features, despite being one of the driest continents. , Australia has approximately 147 million hectares of native forest, which represents about 19% of Australia's land area. The majority of Australia's trees are hardwoods, typically eucalypts, rather than softwoods like pine. While softwoods dominate some native forests, their total area is judged insufficient to constitute a major forest type iAustralia's National Forest Inventory ThForests Australiawebsite provides up-to-date information on Australia's forests. Detailed information on Australia's forests is available froAustralia's State of the Forests Reportsthat are published every five years. Forest types There are 458 forest communities distributed across Australia. These have been grouped into the following seven native forest types, which are characterised by dominant species and the structure of the forest: * Rainforests * Melaleuca forests * Eucalypt fores ...
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List Of Types Of Formally Designated Forests
This is a list of types of formally designated forests, as used in various places around the world. It is organized in three sublists: by forest ownership, protection status, and designated use. By ownership * Church forests of Ethiopia - protected sacred forests around rural churches * Community forest ** Community forests in England * County forest * Crown land * Municipal forest * National forest ** National forest (Brazil) - a type of sustainable use protected area ** The National Forest (England) - a government-supported, "environmental project in central England" ** National forest (France) - a forest that is owned by the French state, originating with the Edict of Moulins of 1566 ** National forest (United States) - classification of Federal lands in the United States * National reserve - legal designation in the United States, beginning in 1978 * Private forest ** Corporate forest ** Private nonindustrial forest land ** Private landowner assistance program - a cla ...
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Tasmanian Conservation Trust
Tasmanian Conservation Trust is a Tasmania's oldest non-profit conservation organisation; it was formed in 1968. The Trust has a comprehensive and interactive website Tasmanian Conservation Trust and operates a Facebook page. The Trust is an independent advocate and guardian for conservation and biodiversity in Tasmania. The Trust publishes a quarterly journal ''Tasmanian Conservationist'' on current conservation issues, campaigns and news updates. See also *Queensland Conservation Council The Queensland Conservation Council (QCC) or Queensland Conservation is a non-governmental organisation that represents all the major conservation organisations of Queensland state in Australia. The organisation have been working to protect, cons ... References Further reading * Armstrong, Lance J.E. (1997). ''Good God, He’s Green! A History of Tasmanian Politics 1989-1996''. Wahroonga, N.S.W., Pacific Law Press. * Lines, William J. (2006) ''Patriots : defending Australia's natural h ...
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Ewan Crawford
Ewan Charles Crawford, (born 8 April 1941) is an Australian judge and former Chief Justice of Tasmania. Early life Crawford was born in Launceston to parents Sir George and Lady Crawford. He went to Launceston Church Grammar School. He became a student of law in 1959 and worked as an Associate to Sir George Crawford. Career He graduated from University of Tasmania on 12 May 1964 with a Bachelor of Laws with Honours. He was employed by Douglas and Collins, Barristers and Solicitors, in Launceston as a barrister and solicitor. At his swearing-in, he related that he had to send away his first client so that he could ask somebody to help him with his advice. He then gave the wrong advice to his second client, and had to call him back to set it straight. He took a year off in 1965 to travel overseas and returned as an employed solicitor in 1966. In 1968 he was made a partner of the firm. In that same year he married Robyn on 18 May, and they now have two sons and a daughter. H ...
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Tasmanian Supreme Court
The Supreme Court of Tasmania is the highest State court in the Australian State of Tasmania. In the Australian court hierarchy, the Supreme Court of Tasmania is in the middle level, with both an appellate jurisdiction over lower courts, and decisions made by Court to be heard on appeal by the High Court of Australia. The ordinary sittings of the Court occur in Hobart, Launceston and Burnie in Tasmania. The Court's Appeal division sits only in Hobart. History of the Court The Supreme Court of Van Diemen's Land (as Tasmania was then known) was established by The Royal Letters Patent of 13 October 1823 and commenced activities on 10 May 1824. The Court is the oldest Supreme Court in Australia and predates the Supreme Court of New South Wales, if only by a period of just ten days. The supreme courts of Tasmania and New South Wales were initiated through the New South Wales Act 1823, and this gave those courts jurisdiction over New Zealand. Sir John Pedder, after whom La ...
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Shan Tennent
Shan Eve Tennent is a former Australian judge. She was a Judge of the Supreme Court of Tasmania between March 2005 and October 2017, and was the first woman to be appointed to the Court. Tennent studied law at the University of Queensland, subsequently moving to Tasmania in 1977. She practised law in Hobart, specialising in family law cases, and worked as a partner at Hobart firm Page Seager for fifteen years.Lower, Gavin. "Tassie gets first female Supreme Court judge". ''The Mercury'', 1 February 2005. In 1998 she was appointed as both a magistrate and a coroner, leading to her high-profile 2001 inquest into prisoner deaths in custody at Risdon Prison, the state's largest prison. The subsequent report resulted in a number of sackings, and ultimately led to the decision to completely rebuild the prison. Tennent was appointed to the Supreme Court of Tasmania on 15 March 2005 by Governor William Cox, making her the first woman to sit on the court in its 180-year history. Tenne ...
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Peter Underwood
Peter George Underwood, (10 October 1937 – 7 July 2014) was an Australian jurist and the Governor of Tasmania from 2008 until his death in 2014. He was the Chief Justice of Tasmania from 2004 to 2008, having been a judge of the Supreme Court of Tasmania from 1984. Early life and legal career Underwood was born on 10 October 1937 in the United Kingdom, and emigrated to Australia in 1950. He served in the Royal Australian Navy first as a National Serviceman and then in the Reserve as a sub-lieutenant. He graduated from the University of Tasmania in 1960, and practised law in Hobart for the law firm Murdoch, Clarke, Cosgrove and Drake. He was a distinguished trial advocate for over twenty years. He was appointed a Judge of the Supreme Court in August 1984. Underwood managed and taught postgraduate courses in advocacy and Supreme Court practice through the University of Tasmania's Centre for Legal Practice, and continued to teach advocacy in all states of Australia with the Ad ...
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Chief Justice Of Tasmania
The Chief Justice of Tasmania is the senior judge of the Supreme Court of Tasmania, and the highest ranking judicial officer in the Australian state of Tasmania. The Chief Justice is both the judicial head of the Supreme Court as well as the administrative head. They are responsible for arranging the business of the court and establishing its rules and procedures. The current Chief Justice is Alan Blow, who was appointed in 2013 by then Governor Peter Underwood who himself had been a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Blow CJ had been a puisne justice of the court since 2000. List of chief justices of Tasmania See also * Judiciary of Australia The judiciary of Australia comprises judges who sit in federal courts and courts of the States and Territories of Australia. The High Court of Australia sits at the apex of the Australian court hierarchy as the ultimate court of appeal on matter ... * Supreme Court of Tasmania References {{reflist Lists of judges of Australian ...
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Supreme Court Of Tasmania
The Supreme Court of Tasmania is the highest State court in the Australian State of Tasmania. In the Australian court hierarchy, the Supreme Court of Tasmania is in the middle level, with both an appellate jurisdiction over lower courts, and decisions made by Court to be heard on appeal by the High Court of Australia. The ordinary sittings of the Court occur in Hobart, Launceston and Burnie in Tasmania. The Court's Appeal division sits only in Hobart. History of the Court The Supreme Court of Van Diemen's Land (as Tasmania was then known) was established by The Royal Letters Patent of 13 October 1823 and commenced activities on 10 May 1824. The Court is the oldest Supreme Court in Australia and predates the Supreme Court of New South Wales, if only by a period of just ten days. The supreme courts of Tasmania and New South Wales were initiated through the New South Wales Act 1823, and this gave those courts jurisdiction over New Zealand. Sir John Pedder, after whom Lake Pedde ...
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Alan Blow
Alan Michael Blow (born 3 December 1949) is an Australian judge who is the current Chief Justice of Tasmania. After graduating from the University of Sydney with Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws degrees, he practised as a barrister in civil litigation, criminal and family law, before being appointed as a judge of the Supreme Court of Tasmania in 2000.APLEC 2012 Conference Program
Australasian Professional Legal Education Council, November 2012.
He has also a long time lecturer in Supreme Court Advocacy at the 's Centre for Legal Studies, teaching postgraduate legal practice students. In 2009, Blow presi ...
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