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| Centaur Memorial Caloundra | 
The tanker in the distance to the left of the memorial is around where the Centaur now lays.
      On 12 May 1943 Centaur sailed  from Sydney at            0945 hours carrying her crew and normal staff, as well as stores and            equipment of the 2/12th Field Ambulance but no patients. It was sunk            without warning by a torpedo from a Japanese submarine on 14 May 1943            at approximately 0400 hours.
  Of the 332 persons on board, only 64 survived. These survivors spent            35 hours on rafts before being rescued. Sister Ellen Savage, the only            one of twelve nursing sisters on board to survive, though injured herself,            gave great help to the other survivors and was awarded the George Medal            for this work. 
     Australian Government           delivered an official protest to Japan over the incident. The Japanese           did not acknowledge responsibility for the incident for many years           and the War Crimes Tribunal could not identify the responsible submarine.           However, the Japanese official war history makes clear that it was           submarine 1-177, under the command of Lt Commander Nakagawa who had           sunk the  Centaur 
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| Centaur Today | 
   A search team  led by David Mearns in 2009 found Centaur  located about 30 nautical miles off the southern tip of Moreton Island, off  Queensland’s south-east coast.
 Caloundra and the Pumicestone Passage 
      The Pumicestone Passage is seething with wildlife both above and below the sparkling blue expanse before you. Formed by a 35km channel, which runs between Bribie Island and the  Caboolture coastline, Pumicestone Passage is a protected marine park and  safe haven for wildlife.  
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| Sailboarding on Pumicestone Passage | 
It boasts more bird species than Kakadu so birdwatchers will revel in a day out on the water.
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Across Pumicestone Passage to Caloundra 
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| Fishing the aqua waters | 
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| Looking up to Point Cartwright from Caloundra | 
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| Boating Pumicestone Passage |  |  |  
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