Conditions of Use Bureau of Meteorology tide predictions:

1) Disclaimer, Attribution and Copyright acknowledgement

a) Any publication of Bureau tide predictions must acknowledge copyright

in the Material in the Commonwealth of Australia represented by the

Bureau of Meteorology and must include the following disclaimer:

.The Bureau of Meteorology gives no warranty of any kind whether

express, implied, statutory or otherwise in respect to the availability,

accuracy, currency, completeness, quality or reliability of the

information or that the information will be fit for any particular

purpose or will not infringe any third party Intellectual Property

rights.

The Bureau’s liability for any loss, damage, cost or expense

resulting from use of, or reliance on, the information is entirely

excluded..

b) Where a user creates new products from the Bureau tide predictions

the Bureau should be acknowledged and a disclaimer displayed as

follows:

This product is based on Bureau of Meteorology information that

has subsequently been modified. The Bureau does not necessarily

support or endorse, or have any connection with, the product.

In respect of that part of the information which is sourced from the

Bureau, and to the maximum extent permitted by law:

(i) The Bureau makes no representation and gives no warranty of

any kind whether express, implied, statutory or otherwise in respect

to the availability, accuracy, currency, completeness, quality or

reliability of the information or that the information will be fit for any

particular purpose or will not infringe any third party Intellectual

Property rights; and

(ii) the Bureau’s liability for any loss, damage, cost or expense

resulting from use of, or reliance on, the information is entirely

excluded..

2) The disclaimers required will be displayed with the product or where this is

not possible a clear and obvious link to these as part of the copyright or

attribution notice will be required to ensure these terms are clearly and

adequately brought to the attention of the user.


Queensland tide times other than Bureau of Meteorology tide predictions

Provided by Department of Transport and Main Roads (Maritime Safety Queensland) 

The Department of Transport and Main Roads gives no warranty of any kind whether express, implied, statutory or otherwise in respect to the availability, accuracy, currency, completeness, quality or reliability of the information or that the information will be fit for any particular purpose or will not infringe any third party Intellectual Property rights. The Department of Transport and Main Roads liability for any loss, damage, cost or expense resulting from use of, or reliance on, the information is entirely excluded.

Marine Science News

Offshore oil and gas infrastructure brings localised, but limited regional benefits for marine organisms

World-first initiative Guardian of the Great Barrier Reef

Masses of scalloped hammerheads have returned to one of Australia’s busiest beaches. But we don’t need to panic

How clouds protect coral reefs, but will not be enough to save them from us

Six Supertrawlers in Antarctica Fishing for Krill Near Proposed Marine Park

Marine Science facts

The vampire squid gets its name not because it has a taste for blood but from the dark skin on its arms that makes it look like it’s wearing a Dracula-esque cape?

 

The oceans provide 99% of the living space on the planet containing 50-80% of all life.

 

The Oceans cover 70% of the earths suface

 

The deepest part of the ocean is called the Mariana Trench, which is around 7 miles deep and is located in the South Pacific Ocean.

 

 

The water pressure at the bottom of the Mariana Trench is eight tons per square inch. This means the pressure there is enough to crush you.

 

The largest mountain range is found underwater and is called the Mid-Oceanic Ridge that is around 65,000 kilometres long.

 

Sponges are older than dinosaurs.

 

Half the Oxygen we breath is produced in the Ocean.

 

 Irukandji jelly fish, with just a brush of venom leaves almost no mark. But after about a half hour you develop Irukandji syndrome, a debilitating mix of nausea, vomiting, severe pain, difficulty breathing, drenching sweating and sense of impending doom. You get so sick that your biggest worry is that you’re not going to die.

 

The most remote point in the oceans is called Point Nemo.

 

The Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian oceans are known as the three major oceans.