His fists start to bleed from the flinders of wood on the door, but he is oblivious to his own pain. |
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That whiny and disloyal Max the Dog is crushed along with the goods as they tumble down the slope and smash to flinders. |
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Will one of these rogues try to chop me to flinders with his mighty halberd? |
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Two shots in quick succession tore the wood into flinders that she kicked away. |
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The heat brought sweat and the sweat blinded. Black flinders gyrated in the fiery air like bats. |
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In 1923 Sir Flinders Petrie found another cache of fossils at Qua, wrapped in linen and carefully stored in rock tombs. |
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Captain Prisk and his men, together with the other mine owners in the Northern Flinders Ranges were in desperate need of teamsters. |
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The Flinders Ranges provide a home to Aborigines, farmers, miners and pastoralists. |
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Other languages, like Arabana of the Eyre Basin and Adnyamathanha of the Flinders Ranges, have survived, with vastly reduced numbers of speakers. |
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After more farmers, pastoralists and settlers had moved north, several government surveyors visited the Flinders Ranges. |
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The popularisation of orange juice, sold at a kiosk at Flinders Street Station, was one of his novelties. |
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Collections were transported on ice to Flinders University, where census data were obtained from intact galls without kleptoparasites. |
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Passengers on trains that need to go via Flinders Street first are most at risk of transposals. |
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By 1873 Francis had moved to the Flinders Ranges and acquired a saddlery and harnesshop in Blinman. |
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During her response to the welcome home, Captain Parry said she watered Windeward Bound at some of the same spots used by Flinders and found the water still pristine. |
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This is the last stop in Flinders Ranges National Park before the Trail weaves through sun-seared wilderness to Angorichina Tourist Village. |
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Incidentally, if you're on the train direct from Jolimont to Flinders St, you can actually see the dunnies from the train window if you know where to look. |
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From here Flinders sailed north into a gulf, which he named Spencer Gulf, and hoped that it would lead him well inland or even to the Gulf of Carpentaria. |
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The school year on Flinders Island was scheduled around the muttonbirding season so that the children could go with their families to the offshore birding islands. |
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Commuters were battered on the then unsheltered platforms at Flinders Street railway station, horses bolted, and hailstones filled the cable tram tracks. |
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Many of Flinders Petrie's discoveries remain in packing cases. |
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Cycle from the Adelaide Hills to the Flinders Ranges town of Blinman on the Mawson Trail's almost 900 kilometres of back roads and forest fire trails. |
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Explorer Matthew Flinders, in particular, has been credited with popularising the transfer of the name Terra Australis to Australia. |
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William Flinders Petrie is another man who may legitimately be called the Father of Archaeology. |
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Another is the Matthew Flinders Cairn on the side of Arthur's Seat, a small mountain on the shores of Port Phillip Bay, Australia. |
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The show was originally a collaboration between Beckett and Mesh Flinders, a 26-year-old aspiring filmmaker from Petaluma. |
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Trace a story as old as the earth in South Australia's largest mountain range. The majestic, timeworn Flinders Ranges sprawl across three national parks and stretch more than 430km from Crystal Brook to Lake Callabonna. |
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In 1906, the British Egyptologist Flinders Petrie suggested that the Marvingi recorded by Ptolemy as living near the Rhine were the ancestors of the Merovingian dynasty. |
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In 1814, Matthew Flinders published the book A Voyage to Terra Australis. |
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