Australia Amazing Continent

Australia - UNESCO World Heritage List

Australia - UNESCO
Properties inscribed on the World Heritage List Cultural
Royal Exhibition Building and Carlton Gardens (2004)
Sydney Opera House (2007) Natural
Australian Fossil Mammal Sites (Riversleigh / Naracoorte) (1994)
Fraser Island (1992)
Gondwana Rainforests of Australia (1986)
Great Barrier Reef (1981)
Greater Blue Mountains Area (2000)
Heard and McDonald Islands (1997)
Lord Howe Island Group (1982)
Macquarie Island (1997)
Purnululu National Park (2003)
Shark Bay, Western Australia (1991)
Wet Tropics of Queensland (1988) Mixed
Kakadu National Park (1981)
Tasmanian Wilderness (1982)
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park (1987)
Willandra Lakes Region (1981)
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Seal of Australia

Seal of Australia

Australian Globe Map

Australian Globe Map

More about Australia

Australia was first inhabited over 40,000 years ago by Aboriginal people. These tribes of Aborigines in the states and across the country spoke over 200 languages and dialects. However, more than half of these dialects are now extinct, as over ninety percent of the original Aborigines were killed when the British settled the continent, mostly as a result of diseases the Europeans brought over.

Marine Turtle

Marine Turtle

Horizontal Waterfall

Horizontal Waterfall

Natural Wonder of Talbot Bay

Natural Wonder of Talbot Bay

Montgomery Reef

Montgomery Reef

White Cockatoo in Australia

White Cockatoo in Australia

Eucalyptus

Eucalyptus

Tropical Flower at Rainforestation

Tropical Flower at Rainforestation
near Kuranda and Cairns, Australia

Australia Faq Sheet

Being the sixth largest country on earth, Australia is around the same size of the 48 mainland states of the USA, in-fact its double the size of Europe and has the lowest population density found anywhere on earth- with the exception of Antarctica- not counting the seals and penguins

Barrier

Barrier

Sun Tree

Sun Tree

Twelve Apostoles Rocks

Twelve Apostoles Rocks

Australian Lighthouse Island

Australian Lighthouse Island

Australian Fish

Australian Fish

Whales

Whales

Red flower Ginger Plant at Carins

Red flower Ginger Plant at Carins

Flower Ginger Plant - Rainforest

Flower Ginger Plant - Rainforest
Near Kuranda and Carin

Blue Tongue Lizard

Blue Tongue Lizard

Natural Painting in the Rock

Natural Painting in the Rock

Australian Kangaroo

Australian Kangaroo

Australian Art

Australian Art

Australian Craft

Australian craft
"But perhaps the greatest acknowledgement is due to the people I did not meet; the photographers, diarists, artists, commentators, craftsmen of yesteryear who, in letters, literature and art/craft works, left an enduring, human account of how people wrested life from a harsh land and came to love it." Murray Walker 1978
Along with opal jewellery and red wine, craft is one of the few examples of high culture in Australia. It is refined in style, highly skilled in the production process and unique to Australia.

Native animals Pets

Keeping Australian Native Animals as Pets
Living with the Australian environment
It is being argued that with 59 mammals at risk of extinction, the survival of many Australian species relies on bringing them into the family home as pets. Not only would pet ownership result in a vast increase in the population of native animals, it would also result in an ideological shift in the Australian community that would bring it closer to Australian native animals. Instead of seeing themselves as disconnected from the ecosystem, keeping native animals as pets would help Australians feel a part of it.

The native animal survived the ecosystem's collapse

The Rise of Firestick Farming
The native animals that survived the ecosystem's collapse were those that humans found difficult to hunt. The Kangaroo was one such animal. Although it congregates in groups, unlike a sheep or cow, the Kangaroo is not a herd animal. If a mob of Kangaroos is attacked, individuals run in different directions which makes them difficult to kill on mass. Humans soon adapted by using fire in hunting. With fire, a mob of Kangaroos could be herded towards a group of people waiting with spears.
Unfortunately, the use of fire further contributed to the drying of Australia and continued the expansion of the desert. Eventually, eucalyptus forests, which recover quickly from fire damage, were all that remained in Australia. Koalas aside, eucalypts are not suitable for large browsing animals. A bountiful land of rainforests and large animals had become a land of desert, eucalyptus and small animals adept at avoiding humans.



  • CIA The world factbook of Australia
  • Australian Museum OnLine - Nature, Culture and Discover




South Australian Trees

South Australian Trees

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Blog Archive

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      • Native Craft - Megafauna Australian Tribute
      • The Extintion of Australian Megafauna
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      • Australia - UNESCO World Heritage List
      • Australia Continent

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Australian Prehistory

Australian Prehistory

The Lost World of the BradshawsThe world's oldest depictions of a decorated and ornate people can be found spread over 50,000 square kilometres of northern Australia. The exact age of the paintings can't be determined as the pigment has become part of the rock. A fossilised wasp covering one painting has been dated at 17,000 years.
CitiesAt the time of European settlement, the Australian continent lacked a high-yield agricultural crop as well as animals that could be enclosed in pens. As a consequence, it was not possible for farming communities to develop using native flora and fauna. Tens of thousands of years ago; however, Australia had animals that could have been enclosed in pens, and may have had high-yield agricultural crops. If so, farming communities may have developed.

Australian animals

The KangarooAn unusual Australian
"To compare it to any European animal would be impossible as it has not the least resemblance of any one I have seen." Sir Joseph Banks
The DingoUnfairly judged?

"On the evidence, juries have always convicted the dingo, but it is a largely circumstantial case," Dr Stephen Wroe
It is hard to define whether the Dingo is a native or introduced species. Unlike the marsupials, it didn't evolve on the Australian continent - being introduced between 3,000 and 10,000 years ago. But since its introduction, the Australian continent has shaped the Dingo so that it it unlike any other canine around the world.
Curiously, its behaviour has evolved to more closely resemble that of the Tasmanian Tiger, the marsupial wolf that it is said to have eliminated from mainland Australia.
Tasmanian Devil - The marsupial bites back
"We'd be able to achieve two goals - separating the devils from the cancer, and restoring the ecological balance on the mainland. Devils prey on fox cubs and compete with adult foxes for food." Chris Johnson, an ecologist at James Cook University.
Since European colonisation, mainland Australia has lost 50 per cent of its marsupial species. Tasmania, however, has only lost one species of marsupial - the Tasmanian Tiger. The preservation of Tasmania's marsupials has been attributed to the Tasmanian Devil preventing foxes from ever being able to gain a foothold, and keeping the population of feral cats under control.
The Emu
A curious wanderer
"If we had a military division with the bullet-carrying capacity of these birds it would face any army in the world." Major Meredith
Emus have been walking the plains of Australia in something reasonably close to their present form for about 80 million years. The Emu was around when the dinosaurs still walked the plains. They knew Australia when it was covered in rainforest. They saw the McDonald Ranges when they were the height of the Himalayas.
The Emu's ability to survive such changes says much about its adaptability. According to folklore, Emus have a mysterious mechanism that tells them where the rain is, and will travel for hundreds of kilometers to take advantage of a deluge.

The Echdna

The Echidna
A hardy wanderer
“They're such wonderful, attractive, enigmatic animals. They have a rolling, waddling gait. Their spines make them look formidable, but they're really quite gentle animals. To see their little beaks and their little eyes looking up at you, it's Lord of the Rings all over. You think: 'Here is a wise little gnome.'” Dr. Peggy Rismiller


Tansmania Demons

Tansmania Demons

Dingo

Dingo

The Emu

The Emu

Purnululu UNESCO Heritage

Purnululu UNESCO Heritage

Purnululu

Purnululu

Purnululu National Park

Purnululu National Park

Purnululu Land

Purnululu Land

View of Purnululu National Park

View of Purnululu National Park

Brief Description By UNESCO

Brief Description

The 239,723 ha Purnululu National Park is located in the State of Western Australia. It contains the deeply dissected Bungle Bungle Range composed of Devonian-age quartz sandstone eroded over a period of 20 million years into a series of beehive-shaped towers or cones, whose steeply sloping surfaces are distinctly marked by regular horizontal bands of dark-grey cyanobacterial crust (single-celled photosynthetic organisms). These outstanding examples of cone karst owe their existence and uniqueness to several interacting geological, biological, erosional and climatic phenomena.

Autralia Interactive National Parks Map

  • Autralia Interactive National Parks Map
  • Australia's National Parks Page

Aborignes of Australia

Aborignes of Australia

Australian Face

Australian Face

Aborigenes art in Rock

Aborigenes art in Rock

Flag

Flag

Australia

Australia

Australia Facts

The climate of Australia varies widely, but by far the largest part of Australia is desert or semi-arid – 40% of the landmass is covered by sand dunes. Only the south-east and south-west corners have a temperate climate and moderately fertile soil. The northern part of the country has a tropical climate: part is tropical rainforests, part grasslands, and part desert.
Rainfall is highly variable, with frequent
droughts lasting several seasons thought to be caused in part by the El Niño-Southern Oscillation. Occasionally a duststorm will blanket a region or even several states and there are reports of the occasional large tornado. Rising levels of salinity and desertification in some areas is ravaging the landscape.
Australia's tropical/subtropical location and cold waters off the western coast make most of western Australia a hot desert with aridity a marked feature of a greater part of the continent. These cold waters produce precious little moisture needed on the mainland. A 2005 study by Australian and
American researchers[1] investigated the desertification of the interior, and suggested that one explanation was related to human settlers who arrived about 50,000 years ago. Regular burning by these settlers could have prevented monsoons from reaching interior Australia.
See also:
Drought in Australia and Wet season
The rainfall patterns across Australia are highly seasonal. Compared to the Earth's other continental landmasses Australia is very dry. More than 80 percent of the continent has an annual rainfall of less than 600 millimetres; only Antarctica receives less rainfall than Australia. From one extreme to another, parts of the far North Queensland coast annually average over 4000 mm, with the Australian annual record being 12461 mm, set at the summit of Mount Bellenden Ker in 2000. There are four main factors that contribute to the dryness of the Australian landmass:
Cold ocean currents off the west coast
Low
elevation of landforms
Dominance of high-pressure systems
Shape of the landmass

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Australasia - New Guinea - The new Land Plenty - BBC

Wild Australian Lizard - BBC

Australian Megafauna

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