A jury is expected to travel more than 100km to inspect the rural scene of an alleged murder.
Robert John Crawford, 48, returned to court on Monday for a pre-trial hearing over his wife's death.
The former RAAF pilot has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Frances Elizabeth Crawford and interfering with her corpse.
Ms Crawford was found dead near a ride-on mower at the bottom of a sandstone retaining wall at the couple's Upper Lockyer property west of Brisbane in July 2024.
Crawford's appearance was not required for Monday's hearing in Brisbane Supreme Court, but he sat quietly at the back of the courtroom as lawyers argued over the evidence.
The court was told a jury should visit the Upper Lockyer property before or during the trial to properly understand the steep, three-dimensional layout of the scene.
'It's an agreed position that it's one of those scenes that it's not possible to understand unless you've stood there, so the parties agree that it would be appropriate,' defence barrister Saul Holt said.
'It's a significant trip out there and back. The scene itself is comparatively contained. I suspect it would be two to three hours on the property at most.'
Former RAAF pilot Robert John Crawford (above) is accused of killing his wife, Frances Elizabeth Crawford, and moving her body to stage an accident with a ride-on lawnmower
Frances Elizabeth Crawford was found dead at the base of a retaining wall at a rural Upper Lockyer property, west of Brisbane, in July 2024
Crawford was charged three months later with her murder
Prosecutors allege Crawford strangled his wife and staged the scene to look like an accident while moving the lawnmower.
The defence has previously attacked the case as weak and claim Ms Crawford's injuries could be explained by the accident.
The trial is expected to commence later this year.
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