TOP 50 ALICE SPRINGS Attractions (Things to Do & See)
Best places to visit in Alice Springs - Australia, video about all things to do in Alices Springs tourist attractions by Explore Australia. Alice Springs located between Adelaide and Darwin, the popular gateway to Red Centre in Northern Teritory.
Alices Springs has many beautiful places such as Desert Park, Larapinta Trail, Kangaroo Sanctuary, Anzac Hill, Ormiston Gorge, Finke Gorge National Park, Mount Gillen, Olive Pink Botanic Garden, Chambers Pillar, Ochre Pits, The Emily and Jessie Gaps, Simpsons Gap, Corroboree Rock Conservation Area, LAstragale, Owen Springs Reserve, John Hayes Rockhole etc.
Others popular things to do in Alice Springs is visiting Alices Springs Reptile Centre, Alice Springs Telegraph Station Historical Reserve, Road Transport Hall of Fame, National Pioneer Woe's Hall of Fame & Old Alice Springs Gaol, Yubu Napa Art Gallery, Araluen Arts Centre, Aboriginal Australia Culture Centre, Central Australia Aviation Museum, Camels Australia, John Flynn's Historical Reserve, Old Ghan Museum and Adelaide House Museum.
Also don't forget to visit some best places in Alice Springs such as Mbantua Fine Art Gallery, The Recidency, Henbury Meteorites Conservation Reserve, Iranti Art Gallery, Jila Arts, Talapi, Tangentyere Artist, Sounds of Starlight, Stuart Town Gaol, Megafauna Central - Museum and Art Gallery of NT, Kathleen Buzzacott Art Studio, Museum of Central Australia, Alice Springs RSL War Museum, Todd Mall Markets, Tropic of Capricorn Marker, Flynn Memorial Uniting Church, Johh McDouall Stuart, Supreme Court of North Teritory, David D Smith Park and Alice Springs Convention Centre.
For complete list of things to do in Alice Springs tourist attractions or best places to visit, simply watching this Top 50 Alice Springs attractions video.
ANZAC Day Dawn Service 2014 - Anzac Hill, Alice Springs
ANZAC Day Dawn Service at Anzac Hill, Alice Springs - 25 April 2014, as captured by CAAMA and Alice Springs RSL,
A moving dawn vigil to commemorate and remember all service men and women who suffered or continue suffer through war, and to honour the sacrifices of our service personnel.
ANZAC Day marks the anniversary of the first major military action fought by Australian and New Zealand forces during the First World War in 1915.
Lest We Forget.
RAAF remembered in NT
More than 100 people have commemorated the last RAAF mission of World War II that landed at a remote airfield south of Darwin.
Part 09. Commonwealth War Graves Commission - Researching Australians in the Great War
This video on researching war graves and commemorative information is provided by the Shrine of Remembrance to assist students and the community to research Australian service personnel of the Great War.
What are Australian politics doing wrong? And how can they change?
Insight brings together an audience of disenchanted young voters with politicians 'old and new' to thrash out what's wrong and what might be done about it.
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Alice Springs
Alice Springs (Arrernte: Mparntwe) is the third largest town in the Northern Territory, Australia. Popularly known as the Alice or simply Alice, Alice Springs is situated in the geographic centre of Australia near the southern border of the Northern Territory.
The site is known as Mparntwe to its original inhabitants, the Arrernte, who have lived in the Central Australian desert in and around what is now Alice Springs for thousands of years. Alice in the English language was named by surveyor W. W. Mills after Lady Alice Todd (née Alice Gillam Bell), wife of Sir Charles Todd. Alice Springs has a population of 28,605, which makes up 12.2 percent of the territory's population. Alice Springs is nearly equidistant from Adelaide, South Australia and Darwin.
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MOVING CENOTAPH: FRONTIER WARS & MASSACRES
Ghillar, Michael Anderson: It is now reassuring that the Anzac Day March in Canberra has accepted the fact that the Frontier Wars Commemorations are now acknowledged and we are advised that War Memorial officials and police will not obstruct us on this day in future. I also acknowledge that we are not yet part of the formalities of the Anzac Day March itself, but there is a reassuring factor that gives us heart to believe that the day will soon arrive when the Frontier Wars Commemorative March will be accepted. This assurance is based on the fact that for the first time in history Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander diggers were acknowledged in the formal procession and what was encouraging is that an Elder carried an Aboriginal Land Rights flag at the beginning of the March and Defence Force men and women in uniform also carried the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flag and the Australian flags side by side as part of the formal March. This is very significant.
Interestingly enough with the Diggers March being in the front four units and the Commemorative Frontier War March at the end, symbolically, like the Kangaroo and Emu on the Australian Trademark/ “Coat of Arms” we had the whole of the colonial Defence Force wedged between us.
People should never forget the sacrifices of anyone who fights for their freedom. It is a right. It is a human obligation. It is a sacred duty to defend ourselves from tyrannical rule and oppression.
What now surprises the public when they see the Frontier Wars Commemorative March and over 50 metres of yellow fabric, listing over 1000 recorded conflicts, is that they don’t see a protest, but instead they see a moving cenotaph, which remembers many of those places where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been killed, poisoned and have also died as a result of germ warfare, when Governor Phillip’s crew released smallpox at Balmoral Beach, Sydney. This lead to historical accounts of the new comers finding hundreds of Aboriginal people dead and their bodies scarred with smallpox.
This Frontier Wars Commemorative March is our way of saying our Old People, who died defending their lands and freedoms, must also be remembered. Moreover, we ask the RSL, the War Memorial personnel and the public to communicate with us to commence a process of formally burying our dead, rather than continuing to have cattle, sheep and mining company vehicles drive over the bones of our murdered ancestors as they do on a daily basis. We remember our Old People, we want everyone to else to remember them as well. Their lives at the time were just as important as ours now.
Flags
This education publication has been developed for lower primary students to assist in developing students’ understanding of commemoration. It explores a variety of characters and their perspectives on Anzac Day. Balancing fictional characters, stylised illustrations and photographs, the publication shows students that Anzac Day is significant to many Australians, is an important part of Australian community life, and is a respectful event containing commemorative traditions and symbols. The publication is supported by education materials that align to the Australian Curriculum: Humanities and Social Sciences.
The town that inspired the Aboriginal flag refuses to fly it | by Just in AU
► The town that inspired the Aboriginal flag refuses to fly it | by Just in AU
► Updated March 25, 2018 12:54:13 In Alice Springs, a town marred by deep-seated racial divides, somet...
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ANZAC Day 2007 Newcastle
This clip was taken at Newcastle on ANZAC Day 2007, and shows how the rain and weather did not deter anybody from attending
Anzac Day 25/4/2015. Dawn Parade Mount Maunganui
ANZAC Day remembered
More than 3000 people turned out at a dawn service at Auckland Domain, the largest in the country to commemorate those who fought for our future. Meanwhile in Turkey, thousands of New Zealanders and Australians will mark the day at a service at Anzac Cove in Gallipoli.
Strange sunrise Anzac day 2019 Redland Bay Queensland Australia
Sunrise looks weird
Anzac Day 2016 Channel 9 Dawn Service telecast Part 1 (introduction)
Gawurra - Ratja Yaliyali (Preview)
Ratja Yaliyali is the single that was released Friday 11 March from the debut album by GAWURRA (Stanley Gawurra Gaykamangu) from Milingimbi, Arnhem Land. The debut album will follow on 8 April 2016 and is available for pre-order on iTunes
The physical album will be a double CD including a disc of traditional songs, and is available now for pre-order on CAAMA Music website and will be mailed out the week of 4 April. caamamusic.com.au
Sung in the Gupapuyngu language of East Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory of Australia, the title for this song and the lead single ‘Ratja Yaliyali’ means ‘Vine of Love’. Ratja Yaliyali is a songline coming from long way, from a long time ago. It is the thread of love that keeps everything connected. People feel the spirit of Ratja Yaliyali, feelings fading and coming back again. Ratja Yaliyali is a spirit, like the wind…
Gawurra won the NT song of the Year Award in the pop category for his song ‘Ratja Yaliyali’ in 2015, which is the title-track from this debut album.
Street View's New Look on Google Maps Australia
Check out the new experience of Street View on Google Maps. Learn the new ways to enter Street View, look at our full screen mode, navigate through driving directions, and more.
Street View is a feature of Google Maps that allows you to quickly and easily view and navigate high-resolution, 360 degree street level images of various cities in Australia.
See at