© 2018 Greg & Sylvia RAY

Bats, viruses, immunity and Covid-19

Three things in particular I have found striking, amongst the avalanche of information circulating about Covid-19 - the "novel coronavirus" now infesting humanity. One: whenever any group does random testing of groups of people, a surprising proportion proves to be infected with the virus but has no symptoms whatever. Two: the worst of the illness caused by the virus is actually wrought by the immune system of the host victim. Three: bats are apparently the reservoir for large numbers of viruses - and are said to be the source of this one - but tend not…

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Read more about the article Rail smashes: Murrurundi 1908 and Murulla 1926
Train smash at Murulla, NSW, September 13, 1926

Rail smashes: Murrurundi 1908 and Murulla 1926

Murrurundi: Good Friday 1908 It was Good Friday, April 17, 1908. At about 3.35am the Glen Innes train was just about to leave Murrurundi station, in the Upper Hunter Valley, when it was hit head-on by the Brisbane Mail train, travelling south. Ultimately, signalling staff at the small country station were held responsible for accidentally misleading the drivers of the trains into believing the tracks were clear. At the scene of the accident at Murrurundi, April 17, 1908. The impact of the smash was tremendous, and it was incredible that nobody was killed. Injuries amounted to…

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Audley Reay’s memories of Newcastle and the Hunter in the 1880s

Among some papers given to me by Barry Magor - son of transport collector Ken Magor - was a photocopied pamphlet titled: Memories of the Hunter and Newcastle in the Eighties, by Audley Reay. That name was unfamiliar to me, until I spent a morning interviewing centenarian Neville Chant, who unexpectedly brought up the same unusual name in the course of discussion, describing Audley Reay as Maitland Council's health inspector who once lived - according to Neville - "next-door to the pigyards". A newspaper photo of Mr Reay at the time of his retirement in 1939.…

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