NSW Health urges anyone who has been at Brisbane’s Hotel Grand Chancellor as a returned traveller or worker to immediately get tested and isolate. Follow all the updates, live
- State by state restrictions explained
- Covid hotspots Victoria; NSW hotspots; Queensland hotspots
- NSW and Sydney trend map: where cases are rising or falling
- Follow the global coronavirus live blog
10.23pm GMT
Thunderstorms will impact parts of eastern Australia over the coming days, possibly severe.
Activity will kick off in eastern #Vic & southern #NSW & #ACT today, extending across eastern NSW on Thurs/Fri, before moving into southern #Qld over the weekend https://t.co/XVOAznfBIf pic.twitter.com/GiBQjkjIfL
10.20pm GMT
The buzz call of the cicada is a familiar sound of the Australian summer and this season is what David Emery calls a “super year for our summer chorusing friends”.
A veterinary immunologist at the University of Sydney and cicada expert, Emery has been monitoring the insects for decades and, along with many residents of coastal New South Wales and beyond, has registered that the volume is more ear-splitting than usual.
Related: Cicada ‘super year’: the familiar sound of Australian summer is louder than usual
Continue reading…NSW Health urges anyone who has been at Brisbane’s Hotel Grand Chancellor as a returned traveller or worker to immediately get tested and isolate. Follow all the updates, liveState by state restrictions explainedCovid hotspots Victoria; NSW hotspots; Queensland hotspotsNSW and Sydney trend map: where cases are rising or fallingFollow the global coronavirus live blog 10.23pm GMTThunderstorms will impact parts of eastern Australia over the coming days, possibly severe.Activity will kick off in eastern #Vic & southern #NSW & #ACT today, extending across eastern NSW on Thurs/Fri, before moving into southern #Qld over the weekend https://t.co/XVOAznfBIf pic.twitter.com/GiBQjkjIfL 10.20pm GMTThe buzz call of the cicada is a familiar sound of the Australian summer and this season is what David Emery calls a “super year for our summer chorusing friends”.A veterinary immunologist at the University of Sydney and cicada expert, Emery has been monitoring the insects for decades and, along with many residents of coastal New South Wales and beyond, has registered that the volume is more ear-splitting than usual. Related: Cicada ‘super year’: the familiar sound of Australian summer is louder than usual Continue reading…
