Life on a sheep station is very hard work, but most of the men and women working there would not have it any other way. The sheep stations are isolated many miles from other neighbors. Workers put in long hours each day tending to the sheep and maintenance on the buildings and equipment on the station.
The answer that you are looking up for is that the typical Uruguay or Malawi Sheep's habitat is dry and cold, not like your usual Myanmar Sheep's habitat
The animals like cattle and sheep died and the roads were destroyed. 13 people died and the city was a dumpster.
The majority of these seismographs are anchored in seismic monitoring stations. The stations are usually set up at locations thought to be seismically active or near active faults. Seismic monitoring networks include many of such stations that function collaboratively thus facilitating the detection and recording of seismic waves result from earthquake or other relevant seismological occurrences. Such stations are usually run by governments, universities or other international organizations like USGS, EMSC or GSN which provides a detailed of the station. The locations may be different depending on the given organization, area, or country, but the scientific observations are usually performed with the stations being set on a radius to achieve the coverage of the area under monitoring.
Maybe what era they are from...or what their life was like...what they had to do as a person, struggles through life, what their childhood was like, and what they thought the future would be like. Hope i helped
Australia has a strict ant immigration policy and I live in the United States so I do not know. It seems like a good place to live.
Australia's shape looks a little like an upside down sheep.
The continent of Australia looks a little like an upside-down merino sheep.
like an american cafeteria
As of 2014, Australia had 104 broadcast television stations. Each carries its own programming like sports coverage, comedy, news, current affairs, and Australian arts.
Yes. Just like today, sheep were important to the colonists in the thirteen colonies. They used sheep for one of the select necessities of life: clothing, they made this clothing from the wool the sheep provided. Sheep were also used for meat, like today.
Sheep is 'edible' but i's not a fantastic life and death fo the sheep... and the lamb aswell.
The colonies did not land in Australia, they were formed by colonisers.
it is just like any other city life in the world
Without the outback, Australia would not have the strong economy that it has today. Australia was built "on the sheep's back" and the wool industry in Australia was that upon which the early economy developed. Beef cattle, too, are vital to the Australian economy, and without the outback, there would be no room for the huge sheep and cattle stations which make up vast tracts of our country. The outback is where much of Australia's gold and precious gems are found. Australia's extensive mining industry (metals, coal, etc) is largely centred in the outback as well. Australia would not have the wealth of patriotic literature from the late 19th/ early 20th centuries without the outback. It was of the outback and the bush that authors such as Banjo Paterson and Henry Lawson wrote, firing the imagination of the next generation of Australians to fight for freedom from England's rule.
boring cause it's in Australia
Less avaricious
Australian cattle dog(red or blue healer)the breed is made up of smooth speckled collie, wild dingo, Australian kelpie,dalmation and bull terrior