Images about the Mutton Bird:



EMBED: 

Citation:

Migration, n.d., Map, Parks & Wildlife Service Tasmania/Griffiths Island Shearwater ("mutton-bird") Colony, Port Fairy, accessed 21 May 2014, .

Level of Authority: Medium to High

EMBED: 

Citation:

Lyell, M n.d., Short-tailed Shearwaters rafting, Photography, Parks & Wildlife Service Tasmania, accessed 21 May 2014, .

Level of Authority: High

EMBED: 

Citation:

Hooper, M M Hooper 2013, Another dead shearwater, Photograph, Flickr, accessed 21 May 2014, , Creative Commons license: .]

Level of Authority: Low to Medium


Authority:

Parks and Wild Life/Port Fairy Brochure and Flickr Member Michael Hooper

Currency:

Two of these three images are out dated by a few years, but even so the content they have is still current and relevant today.

Relevancy/Suitability to Client:

These three images each capture what my client wanted, you see them in large groups as my client would have seen them in the Derwent River, and there is a clearly understandable migration pattern table which shows the route in which they take, then there is an image that brings it full circle with the death that often befalls the birds because of their long journey and so they wash up on beaches exhausted.


1 comment:

  1. Hi Teanji,

    Your blog looks wonderful! Thank you for presenting this morning.
    We have had a good look through your blog and will just need you to expand on a few areas before we mark you off:

    Please included Annotated Citations for both your images.

    Also, when writing your Annotated Citations, please remember to include whether the source is of a low/medium/or high authority. If you could go through all of your citations and give them an update.

    Chandra

    ReplyDelete