- Series269 - Martha Macintyre and Simon Foale photographic prints of Lihir, Papua New Guinea
- 1 more...
- Item2 - An ore truck drives past a plastic covered second-grade ore stockpile. The plastic was part of a trail to mitigate Acid Rock Drainage (ARD) otherwise referred to as Acid Mine Drainage (AMD), whereby sulphuric acid is generated by the oxidation of the pyri
- Item3 - A child walks towards the church at Kinami, south Londolovit, with the massive cloud-shrouded edifice of Mount Katnaulen in the background. Kinami sits in the centre of one of the five old calderas that make up the island of Niolam.
- Item4 - A small boy holds a rainbow Lorikeet (also very common in Austalia) that has been downed with a slingshot (in background) on Masahet Island. Rubber from the tyre tubes that became abundantly available following the commencement of mining has been commonl
- Item5 - The flower of the ko (TOK Pisin: Pau) (Barrington edulis) tree. The nuts of this tree are edible, and the leaves are frequently used as plates, particularly at feast.
- Item6 - Flower girls - these young women are performing a Christian hymn and dance during a school fundraiser at Samo Village, 1998.
- Item7 - Three young girls wearing traditional adornment made from plants and natural pigments. The girl on the left holds a coral banch, from which lime is processed, then mixed with water and used as face and body paint.
- Item8 - Clansmen making an entrance to a large feast at Malie Island in 2002. The large baskets they carry are distinctive of the Lihirian culture. They usually carry betelnut (TP:buai), pepper (TP: daka), lime (TP: kambang), tobacco (TP: brus), and are decorat
- Item9 - Young girl wearing items of Lihirian adornment. Red pigment from the seeds of the Bixa tree is used as a face and body paint, ornamental leaves tied as a necklace and red hibiscus flowers worn in hair and sometime in armbands. The colour red is associat
- Item10 - Boys at Samo delivering talks about the items of body decoration they have chosen. The small bag of tol (red ochre) held by the boy is used for decorating the body and the face. The orchid plant is one of the few body decorations that is not grown close
- 5 more...