Description: Young Pseudonaja textilis (Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1854), Eastern Brown Snake, around 40 cm in length, Black Mountain, Canberra, ACT, 11 April 2011. Date: 11 April 2011, 10:04. Source: Pseudonaja textilis. Author: Donald Hobern from Copenhagen, Denmark. Camera location35° 16′ 10.2″ S, 149° 06′ 07.91″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-35.269501; 149.102196.
This image contains digital watermarking or credits in the image itself. The usage of visible watermarks is discouraged. If a non-watermarked version of the image is available, please upload it under the same file name and then remove this template. Ensure that removed information is present in the image description page and replace this template with {{Metadata from image}} or {{Attribution metadata from licensed image}}. Caution: Before removing a watermark from a copyrighted image, please read the WMF's analysis of the legal ramifications of doing so, as well as Commons' proposed policy regarding watermarks. If the old version is still useful, for example if removing the watermark damages the image significantly, upload the new version under a different title so that both can be used. After uploading the non-watermarked version, replace this template with {{Superseded|new filename|version without watermarks}}. Description: Northern Victoria. (Pseudonaja textilis VS Tiliqua scincoides scincoides). Date: 20 November 2012, 23:00. Source: Eastern Brown Snake eating an Eastern Blue tongue. Uploaded by SunOfErat. Author: Matt from Melbourne, Australia.
Description: A trip to the dunny is on the daily rounds of every well-respected Eastern Brown snake (Pseudonaja textilis). Dunns Swamp, Wollemi National Park, NSW Australia, January 2009. Date: 6 January 2009, 15:01. Source: Just popped in to spend a penny. Author: John Tann from Sydney, Australia. Camera location32° 50′ 03.19″ S, 150° 12′ 16.85″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-32.834220; 150.204680.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Eastern Brown Snake (juvenile) near the village of Nerrigundah, NSW, Australia. Date: October 1997. Source: Own work. Author: Poyt448 Peter Woodard. Licensing[edit] Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse. : I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. This applies worldwide. In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so: I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law. Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse.
Description: Eastern Brown, World's No 2 most poisonous, in the restaurant!. Date: 8 May 2014, 18:41. Source: Snake Hour, Australia. Author: Rod Waddington from Kergunyah, Australia.
This image contains digital watermarking or credits in the image itself. The usage of visible watermarks is discouraged. If a non-watermarked version of the image is available, please upload it under the same file name and then remove this template. Ensure that removed information is present in the image description page and replace this template with {{Metadata from image}} or {{Attribution metadata from licensed image}}. Caution: Before removing a watermark from a copyrighted image, please read the WMF's analysis of the legal ramifications of doing so, as well as Commons' proposed policy regarding watermarks. If the old version is still useful, for example if removing the watermark damages the image significantly, upload the new version under a different title so that both can be used. After uploading the non-watermarked version, replace this template with {{Superseded|new filename|version without watermarks}}. Description: Northern Victoria. (Pseudonaja textilis VS Tiliqua scincoides scincoides). Date: 5 March 2010, 14:27. Source: Eastern Brown Snake eating an Eastern Blue tongue. Uploaded by SunOfErat. Author: Matt from Melbourne, Australia.
Description: Young Pseudonaja textilis (Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1854), Eastern Brown Snake, around 40 cm in length, Black Mountain, Canberra, ACT, 11 April 2011. Date: 11 April 2011, 10:04. Source: Pseudonaja textilis. Author: Donald Hobern from Copenhagen, Denmark. Camera location35° 16′ 10.2″ S, 149° 06′ 07.91″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-35.269501; 149.102196.
This snake was found freshly dead by some children. It was under a rock right at the edge of the ocean, and it looked like when one of the children jumped on the rock it moved a little and crushed the snake. Luckily no child was bitten!
This image contains digital watermarking or credits in the image itself. The usage of visible watermarks is discouraged. If a non-watermarked version of the image is available, please upload it under the same file name and then remove this template. Ensure that removed information is present in the image description page and replace this template with {{Metadata from image}} or {{Attribution metadata from licensed image}}. Caution: Before removing a watermark from a copyrighted image, please read the WMF's analysis of the legal ramifications of doing so, as well as Commons' proposed policy regarding watermarks. If the old version is still useful, for example if removing the watermark damages the image significantly, upload the new version under a different title so that both can be used. After uploading the non-watermarked version, replace this template with {{Superseded|new filename|version without watermarks}}. Description: South-west Melbourne area. Date: 2 October 2012, 00:52. Source: Eastern Brown Snake (Pseudonaja textilis) Uploaded by SunOfErat. Author: Matt from Melbourne, Australia.
This image contains digital watermarking or credits in the image itself. The usage of visible watermarks is discouraged. If a non-watermarked version of the image is available, please upload it under the same file name and then remove this template. Ensure that removed information is present in the image description page and replace this template with {{Metadata from image}} or {{Attribution metadata from licensed image}}. Caution: Before removing a watermark from a copyrighted image, please read the WMF's analysis of the legal ramifications of doing so, as well as Commons' proposed policy regarding watermarks. If the old version is still useful, for example if removing the watermark damages the image significantly, upload the new version under a different title so that both can be used. After uploading the non-watermarked version, replace this template with {{Superseded|new filename|version without watermarks}}. Description: Northern Victoria. (Pseudonaja textilis VS Tiliqua scincoides scincoides). Date: 20 November 2012, 23:02. Source: Eastern Brown Snake eating an Eastern Blue tongue. Uploaded by SunOfErat. Author: Matt from Melbourne, Australia.
Description: Young Pseudonaja textilis (Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1854), Eastern Brown Snake, around 40 cm in length, Black Mountain, Canberra, ACT, 11 April 2011. Date: 11 April 2011, 10:05. Source: Pseudonaja textilis. Author: Donald Hobern from Copenhagen, Denmark. Camera location35° 16′ 10.2″ S, 149° 06′ 07.91″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-35.269501; 149.102196.