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The South Australian Museum is a natural history museum and research institution in Adelaide, South Australia, founded in 1856 and owned by the Government of South Australia. It occupies a complex of buildings on North Terrace in the cultural precinct of the Adelaide Parklands .
Immigration to South Australia, maritime history, fleet of historic ships South Australian Whale Centre: Victor Harbor: Fleurieu Peninsula: Natural history: website, whales and regional marine life South Australian Museum: Adelaide: Adelaide: Natural history: Natural history museum and research institution South Australia Police Historical ...
Since 1955, South Australia had major rural roads numbered as part of national routes and Highways. In 1998/1999 South Australia introduced "Trailblazers" with A, B and M route numbers in the Metropolitan area and tourist areas of Victor Harbor and the Barossa Valley. [1] [2] This system was extended to cover country uouverreas starting in 1999 ...
Route numbers have been allocated to South Australia's roads since 1955, with the introduction of National Routes across all states and territories in Australia, symbolised by a white shield with black writing; National Route 1 ('Highway 1') was one of the best-known numbered national routes, due to its fame for circumnavigating the continent.
The Trust was established as a body corporate under the David Tonkin government in 1981 by the History Trust of South Australia Act 1981.This Act repealed the Constitutional Museum Act 1978, but does not affect the operation of the South Australian Museum Act 1976 (which governs the South Australian Museum), nor the later Aboriginal Heritage Act 1988 or Heritage Places Act 1993.
The National Motor Museum, formerly also known as The Old Mill and Birdwood Mill after its initial location, is a social history museum of the History Trust of South Australia focused on Australian motoring history and automobile museum in the Adelaide Hills in the township of Birdwood, South Australia.
This page was last edited on 28 December 2019, at 10:48 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Old Princes Highway is a 41.1-kilometre-long (25.5 mi) [1] state-controlled highway in South Australia linking the towns of Nairne, Kanmantoo, Callington, Monarto South and Murray Bridge. [2] It follows the previous alignment of the Princes Highway which used to run through these towns but was subsumed into the South Eastern Freeway , but ...