au
Carol Mudford speaks two languages: health and shearing
Her grassroots charity, SHedway is dedicated to suicide prevention and positive mental health in the shearing industry. Source link
Why the Powerhouse is calling for ideas to be buried for 100 years
The Powerhouse Museum buried technologies such as a solar calculator and cardboard box camera in 1981. Now they want to know what to bury in 2026. Source link
Bureau of Meteorology ordered to fix new website after torrent of complaints
Environment Minister Murray Watt tells the Bureau of Meteorology that its new $4.1 million website needs to be fixed after complaints from users. Source link
Trump's granddaughter handed entry into LPGA event
Kai Trump receives an invitation to play in a tournament in Florida ahead of starting her collegiate golf career. Source link
Hurricane Melissa makes landfall as Jamaica's strongest-ever storm
Hurricane Melissa made landfall in western Jamaica as a powerful category five storm and the strongest ever to directly hit the Caribbean nation of 2.8 million people. Source link
High PFAS exposure could impact male fertility, study finds
A study using mice has found high exposure to PFAS lowered the male’s sperm count, decreased testosterone and disrupted embryo development. Source link
Massacre apology prompts debate over Stirling name across WA
The WA governor’s apology for the Pinjarra Massacre sparks fresh debate over the renaming of roads and places that honour the state’s first governor, James Stirling. Source link
India's Shreyas Iyer recovering with lacerated spleen from Australian ODI
The Indian team confirms Shreyas Iyer is on the mend after a freak injury left him in hospital with a lacerated spleen in an incident during his side’s ODI win over Australia. Source link
Oil spill, emissions error trigger gas giant investigation
An oil spill that leaked into Darwin Harbour and the substantial under-reporting of toxic emissions have put one of Australia’s biggest gas companies under federal investigation. Source link
The triple zero questions that won't go away
Analysis: Why did carriers wait to block handsets they knew were a danger? Source link