Athletics
Discus thrower Dani Samuels has qualified for the final with a throw of 64.46.
She fouled her first throw but threw a 59.42 on her second before moving into second position with her third throw.
The qualifying round was briefly delayed, along with the rest of the track and field events, due to heavy rain.
The final will be held tomorrow morning, Rio time.
Ella Nelson has qualified eleventh for the women's 200 metres semi-finals.
Meanwhile Australia's Madeline Heiner Hills and Genevieve Lacaze finished seventh and ninth in the women's 3000 metre steeplechase.
Both women ran personal best times and were the first Australia women to reach an Olympic final in the event.
Lauren Wells finished fourth in her heat for the women's 400 metres hurdles.
She did not qualify automatically for the semi-final but was still able to get through in 19th place with a time of 56.26.
In the men's pole vault final, Thiago Braz Da Silva won Brazil's first athletics gold medal with an Olympic record.
Da Silva beat the 2012 Olympic champion, France's Renaud Lavillenie, in a hard-fought final, jumping 6.03 metres.
Cycling
Olympic cycling veteran Anna Meares has missed out on a place in the women's sprint final after finishing second in her repecharge.
Australia's flagbearer has finished 10th in the women's sprint, the event she won in London, but leaves Rio with a bronze medal from the keirin.
When she lost her second-round repechage on Monday, consigning her to a ride-off for ninth to 12th, Meares tearfully hugged riders, coaches and staff from Australia and rival countries.
Glenn O'Shea has finished seventh in the men's omnuim race.
O'Shea saw his medal hopes fade after he was unable to avoid a crash in the middle of the race. He was able to get back up again but was not able to get back into a medal position.
Annette Edmonson finished fifth in their third race of the women's omnium. She is sitting in seventh place overall after three of six races.
Speaking to reporters after the event, Meares said she would take time to consider her future in the sport.
But she said she was proud of her legacy.
"I’ve loved being able to be a headline enough to send it into the lounge rooms of everyone in Australia," Meares said.
"We’re not a hugely high profile sport back home in Australia and these Olympic Games and Commonwealth Games are the main chances we get to get exposure and it’s nice for me to be able to share that sport with so many people."
Meares said she was proud of the bronze medal she won in the keirin, an event she had set a goal to improve in.
"I’m very proud of the bronze medal I did win in the keirin and that was where all my goals lay and I know that we are very much driven by a winning culture and gold medals ... and even though it ended the way that it did I’m very proud of achieving what I set out to achieve," she said.
"I hope that people, when they look at my career as a whole, take from the fact that I haven’t always been successful.
"I’ve lost more races than I’ve won in my time, but I have become the most successful in my sport in the world because I’ve used, looked at, turned inside out those moments that I’ve lost and looked for the lessons and looked for where I’m weak and how I can improve myself and then worked a plan around who can help me be better again."
Sailing
Australia will have to wait at least another day to find out which medal we'll pick up in the men's and women's laser races.
Tom Burton goes into the laser medal race in second place, 10 points behind Tonci Stipanovic, but needs to finish five places ahead of the Croatian to snatch the gold.
Australia's 49er sailors Nathan Outteridge and Iain Jensen have put themselves back into medal contention, climbing to third overall after three good races on Monday.
But, at 33 points behind New Zealand leaders Peter Burling and Blair Tuke, the best they could hope for is silver.
Ashley Stoddart headed into the race women's laser radial medal race in fourth place while Tom Burton is guaranteed a medal in the men's laser race but is racing for the gold.
Canoe sprint
Murray Stewart has dominated his semi-final of the men's canoe sprint.
He will head into the final, to be held tomorrow, in first position.
Women's double 500 metres sprint pair Alyssa Bull and Alyce Burnett finished third in their semi-final and have qualified for the medal final.
Hockey
Australia's Rio hockey campaign is over after the women's team lost to New Zealand 4-2 in their quarter final.
The Hockeyroos fought hard to catch up with a strong New Zealand team but they weren't able to catch them.
Their loss follow's the Kookaburra's demise at the hands of the The Netherlands on Sunday.
The men's team lost 4-0.
The women's team have not made it to an Olympic semi-final since the Sydney 2000 Games.
Swimming
Chelsea Gubecka has finished 15th in the women's 10km marathon swimming in her Olympic debut.
The 17-year-old was very happy with her race, which she finished in a time of 1:58:12.7.
It was not that far behind gold medal winning Sharon Van Rouwendaal who won in 1:56:32.1.
Water polo
The women's water polo team has been knocked out in their quarter final match against Hungary.
The game came down to a penalty shoot-out after scores were tied at 8-8 at final time.
Hungary managed to find the net for all five of their shots while Australian women missed one shot.
It is the end of Australia's Rio water polo campaign.
Wrestling
Ivan Popov has gone down heavily to Sweden's Johan Magnus Euren in the opening round of the men's 130kg Greco Roman wrestling.
Australia's wrestling hopes now lie with Talgat Ilyasov and Sahit Prizreni.
Diving
Australia's Grant Nel has qualified for the final of the men's three metre springboard final.
Fellow diver Kevin Chavez Banda missed out on the final.
Meanwhile Maddison Keeney and Esther Qin finished fifth and sixth respectively in the women's three metre springboard final.
Synchronised swimming
Women's synchronised swimming duet pair Nikita Pablo and Rose Stackpole have missed out on a spot in the final.
The Australian girl finished in last place after performing their four routines.
Australia will still compete in the teams competition, which begin on August 17.
- with AAP