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Chart and table of population level and growth rate for the Wollongong, Australia metro area from 1950 to 2025.
A collaborative project between SPC, the World Fish Centre and the University of Wollongong has produced the first detailed population estimates of people living close to the coast in the 22 Pacific Island Countries and Territories (PICTs). These estimates are stratified into 1, 5, and 10km zones. More information about this dataset: https://sdd.spc.int/mapping-coastal
Access this dataset from the Pacific Data Hub
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Landslide in Australia, for the most part, is not seen as a major threat to our urban communities. However, this general belief is far from the reality of the situation. Our history of landsliding is highlighted with devastating events such:
In Australia, there have been 37 recorded fatal landslides since 1842, which have been responsible for the deaths of 83 people. It is almost certain that these statistics are incomplete and that the number of fatalities is much higher.
The city of Wollongong is on Australia's east coast, approximately 80 km south of Sydney. Today, Wollongong has one of the highest population growth rates in NSW. Since 1887, 478 landslides have been recorded at Wollongong, at least two people have been killed, more than 200 buildings destroyed or damaged and there is constant disruption to infrastructure and services. It is estimated that between 1989 and 1996, the cost of landsliding to railway infrastructure alone in Wollongong was A$25 million annually. Extensive areas of the Wollongong hinterland are prone to landsliding from heavy rainfall events, as demonstrated by the August 1998 storms. During this event, 148 landslides were reported and access to the city was cut by landslides and floodwaters for up to 24 hours. It is estimated that up to A$100 million dollars damage resulted.
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A recently published paper, titled “Coastal proximity of populations in 22 Pacific Island Countries and Territories” details the methodology used to undertake the analysis and presents the findings. Purpose * This analysis aims to estimate populations settled in coastal areas in 22 Pacific Island Countries and Territories (PICTS) using the data currently available. In addition to the coastal population estimates, the study compares the results obtained from the use of national population datasets (census) with those derived from the use of global population grids. * Accuracy and reliability from national and global datasets derived results have been evaluated to identify the most suitable options to estimate size and location of coastal populations in the region. A collaborative project between the Pacific Community (SPC), WorldFish and the University of Wollongong has produced the first detailed population estimates of people living close to the coast in the 22 Pacific Island Countries and Territories (PICTs).
The Regional Overview Collection shows a graphic representation of the population of the Illawarra region at the SA3 level. The Population data used for this representation has been sourced from the 2011 Australian Census. This collection describes total Electricity and Water use and use per capita plus total General Waste production and General Waste production per capita at the SA4 and SA3 levels in 2010. Water Data has been supplied by Sydney Water. Electricity Data has been supplied by Endeavour Energy. Waste Data has been supplied by REMONDIS.
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Census employment and income data for persons working in creative industries and creative occupations.
This dataset consists of 14 individual datasets that underpin the interactive dashboards on the project's Data Tables webpage.
Project background:
Australian cultural and creative activity: A population and hotspot analysis is an Australian Research Council Linkage project (LP160101724) being undertaken by QUT and the University of Newcastle, in partnership with Arts Queensland, Create NSW, Creative Victoria, Arts South Australia and the Western Australian Department of Local Government, Sport and Cultural Industries.
This comprehensive project aims to grasp the contemporary dynamics of cultural and creative activity in Australia. It brings together population-level and comparative quantitative and qualitative analyses of local cultural and creative activity. The project will paint a complete national picture, while also exploring the factors that are producing local and regional creative hotspots.
Creative hotspots for study were selected in consultation with state research partners:
Queensland – Cairns, Sunshine Coast + Noosa, Gold Coast, Central West Queensland
New South Wales – Coffs Harbour, Marrickville, Wollongong, Albury
Victoria – Geelong + Surf Coast, Ballarat, Bendigo, Wodonga
Western Australia – Geraldton, Fremantle, Busselton, Albany + Denmark
South Australia – to be confirmed shortly
Statistical summaries drawn from a diverse range of data sources including the Australian Census, the Australian Business Register, IP Australia registration data, infrastructure availability lists and creative grants and rights payments as well as our fieldwork, inform hotspot reports.
This data collection contains all currently published nucleotide (DNA/RNA) and protein sequences from the Australian research institution,University of Wollongong.The nucleotide (DNA/RNA) and protein sequences have been sourced through the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) and Universal Protein Resource (UniProt), databases that contains comprehensive sets of nucleotide (DNA/RNA) and protein sequences from all organisms that have been published by the International Research Community.
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Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Chart and table of population level and growth rate for the Wollongong, Australia metro area from 1950 to 2025.