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Political & Physical
Features of Australia
Australia’s Political
Features
Australian Territories and States
(8 total)
States: Tasmania, Victoria, South Australia,
Western Australia, New South Wales,
Queensland
Territories: Northern Territory and Australian
Capital Territory
Tasmania
Island off the southeast coast
of the mainland
Almost half of Tasmania is
unspoiled land that is
protected by the government
Tasmanian Devil?
Victoria
State closest to Tasmania in the
Southeast part of the mainland
Capital is Melbourne; it’s the
most urban state in Australia!
The many rivers of the region are
a good source of fresh water for
farming
South Australia
State in south-central Australia
The Great Victoria Desert is
located here…
Western Australia
Largest state; makes up 1/3 of
the mainland
Most of Western Australia is
desert (Great Victoria Desert &
Great Sandy Desert are
located here)
Great Sandy Desert
New South Wales
North of Victoria, on the eastern
coast
Has more people than any other
Australian state. The capital,
Sydney, is the most populated
city in Australia – 3.5 million
people live there!
Australian Capital Territory is
located here
Sydney, New South Wales
Queensland
Second largest state; 7 times the size
of England!
In the northeastern part of the
mainland
Great Barrier Reef is located off its
coast in the Coral Sea
More than half of Queensland’s
population lives in the capital:
Brisbane
Brisbane
Northern Territory
Northern coast of the
mainland, between Western
Australia and Queensland
Largest population of
Aborigines in Australia
Australian Capital Territory
Located in New South Wales
The national capital, Canberra,
is located here
Canberra (Australia’s Capital)
Australia’s Physical Features
Australia…
The only country on the world’s smallest
and flattest continent
Has Earth’s oldest and least fertile soils
Includes Tasmania, an island south of
the mainland
Surrounded by the Indian and Pacific
Oceans
Huge desert plains stretch across
the country’s middle--central
Australia’s climate is hot and dry
(Only Antarctica get less rainfall
per year!)
Milder climates along the
southeastern and southwestern
coasts
Most Australians live in the
southeastern coastal region
Great Barrier Reef
World’s largest coral reef!
Lies off the northeast coast of
Queensland--over 1,200 miles
long
Contains an amazing variety of
marine life including:
400 types of coral
1,500 species of fish
4,000 mollusks (snails, clams, octopi,
& squid)
Also includes rare species like the
sea cow and the large green turtle
Great Barrier Reef from satellite
Coral Sea
An important source of coral for the
Great Barrier Reef
Part of the Pacific Ocean
Off the northeast coast of Australia
When the earth’s crust moved millions
of years ago, it created the Coral Sea
and the Great Dividing Range (largest
mountain range in Australia)
Coral Sea islands are scattered over
thousands of miles of ocean where no
one lives except for a small group of
weather specialists
Ayers Rock
A huge, reddish rock located
in the center of Australia
It’s a monolith, which is a
single, large rock sticking out
of the earth
Appears reddish because its
iron content “rusts” at the
surface
Nearly 12 stories high and
almost 6 miles wide!
Ayers Rock
Aborigines call it “Uluru”, which is its
official name
European surveyor visited the rock
in 1873 and named it after Sir Henry
Ayers, an English government
official in South Australia
In 1950, Australia created UluruKata Tjuta National Park around
Ayers Rock in the southwest corner
of the state called Northern Territory
Great Victoria Desert
Stretches through the states of
South Australia and Western
Australia
Receives only 8 to 10 inches of
rain each year, and it never
snows!
Some grasslands in the desert
along with sandhills and salt
Great Victoria Desert
First Europeans to cross the desert
named it after British Queen
Victoria in 1875
160,000 miles long protected
wilderness area
Very few Australians live here
because it’s too hot and dry