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At the 2006 census, Eaglehawk Neck had a population of 269.
He worked at Eaglehawk, Victoria, as a teacher for three years and then became a union official.
In his first season at Eaglehawk he topped the league's goal-kicking with 64 goals.
They hid in the thick bush and walked to Eaglehawk Neck.
He was a brilliant rover who was recruited from Eaglehawk.
At Eaglehawk Neck the rocks have made many strange shapes and patterns.
This was the basis for his best-known publication, Eaglehawk and Crow (1899).
It is connected by a very narrow piece of land (isthmus) called Eaglehawk Neck.
In 1889 Williams returned to the Assembly as the member for Eaglehawk, serving until 1902.
The fire changed direction late on February 7, when the weather changed, and headed back towards Eaglehawk.
Eaglehawk is another name for the Wedge-tailed Eagle.
Eaglehawk drew level with Sandhurst in 2007 when they won their 26th premiership.
However, he managed to swim across the purportedly shark-infested Eaglehawk Neck, the first person to do so.
This is called Eaglehawk Neck.
Carlton recruited Strauch, a forward, from Eaglehawk in 1957 and he made 19 appearances for them that season.
He originally arrived at Hawthorn from Eaglehawk.
Another story credits him with creating or finding Crow women (and thus marriage partners for the Eaglehawk moiety).
He was a teacher at Eaglehawk High School, in Bendigo, from 1976 to 1979.
Eaglehawk may also refer to:
Produced by EagleHawk.
At Eaglehawk, Victoria on 23 January 1918 he married Bessie Washington.
Crapper was then signed by North Melbourne but would only play three games for them in 1931 before returning to Eaglehawk.
Curtis died after a long illness at his home in Eaglehawk Neck, Tasmania on 15 February 2007.
He got a clearance to Eaglehawk in 1968 and spent two years at the Bendigo Football League club.
They are the second most successful club in BFL history with 26 premierships, one behind Eaglehawk.
Aquila audax, the binomial name of the Wedge-tailed Eagle.
Wedge-tailed eagle (Aquila audax)
The Tasmanian Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax fleayi) is an endangered bird of Tasmania.
Over 180 species of bird have been recorded within the Gorge, from the tiny weebill (Smicrornis brevirostris) to the wedge-tailed eagle (Aquila audax).
Known predators of the wallaby include; feral cats and dogs, dingoes (Canis lupus) wedge-tailed eagles (Aquila audax) and large pythons.
In this article, the term 'Wedge-tailed eagle', etc. refers to the Tasmanian Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax fleayi), unless otherwise indicated.
The longest-winged eagle ever was an Australian Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax) at 2.83 m (9.3 ft), though this species is not as large as the previous species.
The breeding season diet of the Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax) in western New South Wales and the influence of Rabbit Calicivirus Disease.
However the bone is closer in appearance to the modern species Aquila audax, Aquila chrysaetos and Aquila fasciata though is distinct enough to be considered a separate species.
Diets of Wedge-tailed Eagles (Aquila audax) and Little Eagles (Hieraaetus morphnoides) beeding near Canberra, Australia, Journal of Raptor Research 44: 50-61.
The subspecies from Tasmania (Aquila audax fleayi) is listed as endangered by the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act) with fewer than 200 pairs left in the wild.
The main threats to the species are the destruction and degradation of its foraging and breeding habitat causing it to come into competition with the larger and more dominant Wedge Tailed Eagle or Aquila audax, (Olsen and Fuentes, 2005).
The Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax), sometimes known as the Eaglehawk (a slight misnomer, as it is among the largest raptors) in its native range, is the largest bird of prey in Australia, and is also found in southern New Guinea.
There is some evidence of prey partitioning between little eagles and the sympatric, larger wedge-tailed eagle (Aquila audax), with the latter tending to take larger prey and to eat more carrion (Baker-Gabb 1984; Debus and Rose 1999; Olsen et al. 2006, 2010).