Discussed elsewhere in these forums, here's an overview of material available online. Please add further information by way of replies to this thread, and I'll amalgamate new information into this post.
Online resourcesAusReprints.
https://ausreprints.net/ (beta site
https://ausreprints.net.au) James Zanata’s database of Australian comics, publishers, creators and miscellanrous information. Includes cover scans and some interior page scans.
Note: AusReprints has been having some issues recently, and is being rewritten. The beta site is a work-in-progress rewrite of the main site, and you may wish to use it if the main site is being problematic
Australian Comics Database is an initiative of the Australian Comics Art Awards, and is intended to serves as a 'call for entries' for the awards, with a secondary purpose of acting as a historical database of Australian comics. Site users acn add comics to the database, although the 'call for entries' aspect of the database will mean that current comics are better covered than historical entries.
Note: There's a list of Australian comics reference books that may be of interest
Comicoz.
https://www.comicoz.com/ Nat Karmichael’s publishing imprint website, which includes an actively updated Australian comics news blog with entries dating back to 2009.
Comics Down Under.
https://comicsdownunder.blogspot.com/ Kevin Patrick’s blog on the history of Australian comic books. There are approximately 200 posts about different aspects of Australian comics. No new posts since 2022
DigitalNZ.
https://digitalnz.org/ ‘DigitalNZ is the search site for all things New Zealand. We connect you to reliable digital collections from our content partners’
From Earth’s End.
https://fromearthsend.blogspot.com/ ‘A New Zealand comics blog by Adrian Kinnaid’
National Library of New Zealand. Research guide: comics and zines
https://natlib.govt.nz/researchers/guides/comics-and-zines Pikitia Press.
A blog on New Zealand and Australian comics and cartoonists. A lot of scanned images of comics covers and internal pages (including a few complete stories), as well as newspaper strips and spot illustrations. Accompanying text is often quite sparse. No new posts since 2023
Tabula Rasa.
https://www.tabula-rasa.info/AusComics/AustralianComics.html An eclectic and now somewhat out-of-date site on Australian comics, rather concentrating on the 1970s through to 2011
Trove.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/ ‘Search Trove to explore amazing collections from Australian libraries, universities, museums, galleries and archives. It’s free and available online all day, every day.’ Trove is an aggregator of digital information sources in Australia. Some records are digital or have been digitised, other records are physical and the digital catalogue of the physical repository can be searched via Trove. Catalogues often contain contextualising information about the items catalogued. Unfortunately, most comics are periodicals and the catalogues the run of the periodical not individual issues, although a list of issues held will be included. Collections of comics are often bequests from deceased comic collectors, although publishers may deposit a copy of the issues they publish. Very few comics are digitised.
Facebook pages:
Wikipedia pages:
MiscellaneousHardcopy resourcesBonzer: Australian comics 1900s-1990s. Edited by Shiell, Annette. Elgua Media, 1998. [not available online]
From ‘Sunbeams’ to Sunset: The Rise and Fall of the Australian Comic Book (1924-1965) : An Illustrated History. Cliffe, Graeme. Comicoz, 2019. [not available online]
Inkspot. The quarterly journal of the Australian Cartoonists’ Association. Articles range from historical to current events (skewing to current events, as the Australian Cartoonists’ Association is ongoing). [not available online]
Panel by Panel: A History of Australian Comics. Ryan, John. Cassell, 1979. [The text of this book is available via the Comicoz site, see above]