Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408:front:0:p43
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408
Segment Type: other
Provision Reference: 
Character Range: 119635–122883

with all approvals in place, demolition of the 2001 Anzac Hall commenced, prior to the finalisation of this HMP. The demolition work was completed by late September that year with more than 90% of the structural steel and concrete components from the building being recycled.

    2.6   Endnotes

   1 Pearson, M and Crockett, G, Australian War Memorial: Conservation Management Plan, report prepared for Bligh Voller Architects and The Australian War Memorial, April 1995.
   2 Tindale, N 1940, Map showing the distribution of the Aboriginal tribes of Australia, T.F.E Moore, Government Photolithographer, Adelaide.
 3 Flood, J 1980, The moth hunters: Aboriginal prehistory of the Australian Alps, Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, Canberra
   4 Officer 1989 Namadgi pictures: the Aboriginal rock art sites within the Namadgi National Park, ACT: their recording, significance, analysis and conservation. Heritage Unit & ACT Parks and Conservation Service, ACT.
   5 Flood, J 1980, The moth hunters: Aboriginal prehistory of the Australian Alps, Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, Canberra; Butlin, N 1984, 'Macassans and the Aboriginal smallpox: the "1789" and "1829" epidemics', Working papers in economic history, Australian National University No. 22, Canberra.
   6 Officer, K 1989, Namadgi pictures: the Aboriginal rock art sites within the Namadgi National Park, ACT: their recording, significance, analysis and conservation, Heritage Unit & ACT Parks and Conservation Service, ACT.
 7 Shumack, S, 'Canberra Blacks', Sydney Morning Herald, 11 June 1927, p 9.
 8 Goulburn Herald, 9 November 1872.
 9 Flood, J 1980, The moth hunters: Aboriginal prehistory of the Australian Alps, Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, Canberra.
 10  Australian War Memorial website, 'Lieutenant Colonel John Linton Treloar' <http://www.awm.gov.au/people/327.asp>.
   11  Funeral Service of the Unknown Australian Soldier, speech by Paul Keating <http://australianpolitics.com/executive/keating/93-11- 11_unknown-soldier.shtml>.
   12  Michael Pearson Heritage Management Consultants and Graeham Crockett Marleesh 1995, Australian War Memorial: Conservation Management Plan.
   13  See for instance Inglis, KS 2008, Sacred places, War Memorials in the Australian Landscape, Melbourne University Press, third edition; Seal, G 2007, 'ANZAC: the sacred in the secular', Journal of Australian Studies, March 2007.
   14  Johnson Pilton Walker Pty Ltd, Australian War Memorial Campbell Precinct Site Development Plan Review, report prepared for Australian War Memorial, November 2017, p 16.

      3.0
      Understanding the Place—Physical Context

   This section provides a description of the physical fabric of the AWM.

      3.1   Topographic Context

   The AWM lies on the lower southwest-facing basal slopes of the Mount Ainslie and Mount Pleasant ridgeline water catchment. An unnamed tributary that drained into the Molonglo River (now Lake Burley Griffin) is located along the eastern boundary of the site.

   The bedrock geology of the area is dominated by the Ainslie volcanics, which consist of Devonian rocks including rhyolite, dacite, tuff, and quartz porphyry.1 Soils within the area typically include red earths and