Summarize this content to 2000 words in 6 paragraphs Michael Bachelard’s groundbreaking investigation into the evidence surrounding Robert Farquharson’s murder conviction for the drowning deaths of his three children won two awards on the night, one alongside McKenzie, Ruby Schwartz and The Age visual stories team for Good Weekend feature “Road to Ruin“, and a second with Schwartz for the ”Trial by Water″ podcast on the case.The Age’s visual stories team, alongside investigative reporters Charlotte Grieve and Simone Fox Koob and photographer Jason South, won the Indigenous Affairs Reporting Quill for ”Carbon sharks“, an investigation into allegations of predatory behaviour by some carbon companies.“No newsroom in the country has consistently generated such a high standard of impactful, public interest journalism as The Age has over many years now,” Elligett said.“Our winners and finalists deserve every bit of recognition, as do the producers, editors and newsroom staff who work tirelessly behind the scenes and the subscribers who support their work.”Marija Ercegovac won the Quill for Artwork for her illustration ”Seeing Red“, on the parlous state of the Victorian economy.The cartoon category was a guaranteed win for The Age, with Badiucao beating out his colleagues, Joe Benke, Matt Golding and Megan Herbert to win the gong for his cartoon “Albo’s Choice”.“Albo’s choice”Credit: BadiucaoThe Age’s Hannah Kennelly won the Quill for Coverage of Women in Sport for a co-production with The Mansfield Courier, ”‘There’s nowhere for them to go’: When girls are booted out of football“. The story focused on young female AFL players who have to travel for hours to play the sport they love because of a dearth of facilities in regional areas.Melissa Fyfe won the award for Sport Feature for her Good Weekend profile of jockey Jamie Kah, ”Reining queen“.Columnist Waleed Aly won the Keith Dunstan Quill for Commentary, with judges praising his opinion pieces as “demonstrating deep thought and masterful writing”.Christopher Hopkins won the News Photograph Quill for a picture taken at the protests surrounding Melbourne’s Land Forces Expo in September of last year.Mounted police tried to stop protesters taking over a major arterial in Southbank.Credit: Chris HopkinsThe Age was also highly commended in numerous categories, including Breaking News or Live Coverage for the publication’s coverage of the arrest of a suspect in the Easey Street murders cold case; Best Coverage of an Idea, for Aisha Dow, the visual stories team and Julia Carr-Catzel’s investigation into scammers targeting vulnerable Australians; Business News/Feature for Sarah Danckert and Carla Jaeger’s story on organised crime figures’ involvement in an ASX-listed company; Cartoon (Megan Herbert’s work “How to cook Australia’s energy transition”); and Features Photograph (Justin McManus’ ”Dyurrite Dreaming“). John Silvester was also highly commented in the commentary category, and Carla Jaeger was highly commended in the Young Journalist of the Year category, which she won last year.In the Innovation in Journalism category, there were two high commended entrants from The Age, the visual stories team and Shane Wright for an analysis of 123 years of budget speeches; and the visual stories team for the ″Faster, higher, stronger series″ pitting today’s Olympians against those in 1924, which was also highly commented in the Sports Feature category.There were also two Age highly commended entrants in the category of Multicultural Affairs and Media: Abbir Dib, for ”Every morning I check WhatsApp to make sure my Teta in Lebanon is still alive’’, and Benjamin Preissfor ”More than one community, this was an attack on Melbourne’s multicultural fabric“.