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Tully is a rural town and locality in the Cassowary Coast Region, Queensland, Australia. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It is adjacent to the Bruce Highway , approximately 140 kilometres (87 mi) south of Cairns by road and 210 kilometres (130 mi) north of Townsville .
The Tully, together with the Herbert and the Burdekin rivers, were part of the proposed Bradfield Scheme to divert the upper reaches of the three rivers west of the Great Dividing Range and into the Thomson River designed to irrigate and drought-proof much of the western Queensland interior, as well as large areas of South Australia.
On the Liverpool Creek near Japoonvale (between Tully and Innisfail) The Cassowary Coast Region is a local government area in the Far North Queensland region of Queensland, Australia, south of Cairns and centred on the towns of Innisfail, Cardwell and Tully. It was created in 2008 from a merger of the Shire of Cardwell and the Shire of Johnstone.
Lower Tully State School, 2022 Outdoor area at the school, 2022. Lower Tully State School is a government primary (Prep-6) school for boys and girls at 6 Collins Road (10] [11] In 2016, the school had an enrolment of 57 students with 6 teachers (4 full-time equivalent) and 7 non-teaching staff (3 full-time equivalent). [12]
Tully Training Area is approximately 13,300 hectares (33,000 acres). It is 11 kilometres (6.8 mi) north-west of Tully. [1]The Tully Military Training Area (TTA) is part of the Wet Tropics biogeographic region, which runs along the coast from the Cedar Bay/Daintree region in the north to just short of Townsville in the south, and includes the elevated Atherton plateau.
Tully Heads is a coastal town and locality in the Cassowary Coast Region, Queensland, Australia. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] In the 2021 census , the locality of Tully Heads had a population of 354 people. [ 1 ]
The Tully Falls, a horsetail chute waterfall on the Tully River, is located in the UNESCO World Heritage–listed Wet Tropics in the Far North region of Queensland, Australia. It formed the eastern boundary of the Dyirbal .
Kleberg was offered a lease by the Queensland Government on 21,501 hectares (53,130 acres) of land, which at the time was largely covered in lowland tropical rainforest. It is sited on the traditional lands of the Dyirbal people. The land was made available to Kleberg by the government for A$5 per acre for forest and A$2 per acre for open field ...