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  2. The best muscle pain relief creams of 2025, according to ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-muscle-pain-relief...

    Cost: $7 | Active ingredients: Lidocaine | Type: Cream | Amount: 4.3 ounces. Lidocaine is another popular ingredient found in pain relief creams. It's a topical anesthetic that's often used to ...

  3. Mallee emu-wren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mallee_emu-wren

    The mallee emu-wren is restricted to open mallee woodland with spinifex understory in north-western Victoria and south-eastern South Australia. This region is rich in Triodia or as it is commonly known spinifex. The spinifex grass often grows to 1 metre (3 feet 3 inches) in height and provides the optimal habitat for the mallee emu-wren. [9]

  4. Emu-wren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emu-wren

    The common name of the genus is derived from the resemblance of their tails to the feathers of an emu. [2] The genus was defined by French naturalist René Lesson in 1831 after his visit to Port Jackson on the 1823-5 voyage of the Coquille, although the southern emu-wren had already been encountered and described soon after European settlement at Sydney Cove. [3]

  5. Southern emu-wren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_emu-wren

    Commonly known as the Mount Lofty Ranges Southern Emu-wren (MLSREW [13]), it is an endangered species under both the EPBC Act (Cwth) and the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 (SA). Its largest population inhabits the swamplands of the lower Finniss River , estimated to be 52–100 individuals, while fewer than 50 have been observed in Deep ...

  6. Australasian wren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australasian_wren

    In the late 1960s, morphological studies began to suggest that the Australo-Papuan fairywrens, the grasswrens, emu-wrens and two monotypic wren-like genera from New Guinea were related and, following Charles Sibley's pioneering work on egg-white proteins in the mid-1970s, Australian researchers adopted the family name Maluridae in 1975. [1]

  7. Eucalyptus halophila - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eucalyptus_halophila

    Eucalyptus halophila, also known as salt lake mallee, [2] is a species of mallee or a shrub, that is endemic to Western Australia. It has smooth white and grey bark, sometimes rough and fibrous on the lower trunk, linear to narrow elliptic adult leaves, flower buds usually in grows of seven, white flowers and shortened spherical to barrel-shaped fruit.

  8. Eucalyptus albopurpurea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eucalyptus_albopurpurea

    Eucalyptus albopurpurea is a mallee that grows to a height of 5 m (20 ft) or sometimes a tree 5–18 m (20–60 ft) high and has a lignotuber.It has rough, loose, fibrous bark on the lower part of the trunk and smooth coppery to pinkish grey bark that is shed in strips higher up.

  9. Splendid fairywren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splendid_fairywren

    Also named the turquoise wren. It is found in mulga and mallee country across much of South Australia and the southern Northern Territory. It has lighter blue or turquoise upperparts than the splendid fairywren, as well as a black rump. Black-backed fairywren (M. s. melanotus) – Gould, 1841: Originally described as a separate species. [17]