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Australia

Map of Australia 

Australia can be viewed in three ways; as an island, as a country and as a continent.


As an island, it is the world's largest.

As a country it is the sixth biggest in the world (after Russia, Canada, China, the U.S.A. and Brazil). It covers 7,682,300 square kilometres (Nicholson 1997) and is roughly the size of the continental United States, without the state of Alaska. Like the U.S.A, it is longer than it is tall, but unlike that country (which misses out on the tropic of cancer), Australia has a third of its land within the tropics.

And finally, as a continent, it is the worlds smallest.

Geographically, Australia distinguishes itself by its extreme flatness. It's biggest range is the Great Dividing range which separates the eastern coastal slice from the western majority of the continent. Read (1998) considers this range and the few others as relatively low tablelands and plateaus and not really mountain ranges.

It comprises a very distinct biogeographical realm that easily distinguishes itself from the Earth's other great biological regions that roughly correlate with the other continents.

  • Ecosystems
  • North Queensland
    This area of Australia is very diverse because it is jam packed full of very close, but very different, ecosystems, and their smaller vegetation communities; coral reefs, sea grass communities, mangroves, beaches, rocky shores, rainforest, wet sclerophyll forest, tropical open forests and woodlands.

  • Biology
    Biogeography is the science that deals with the distribution around the globe of flora and fauna. Australia is often divided into three main terrestrial regions

Study Tours

Plants

Figs
The 'Figs' are contained in the genus Ficus of about 1000 different species found worldwide, including as potted plants in many households. They are of one of the best known and widespread of all plant genera. It is not just the distribution that attracts interest, however, for the genus has some important and fascinating ecology.
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Birds

Magpie Geese
The Magpie Goose is so named because it resembles a goose and is coloured a striking ‘magpie’-like black and white. Despite the common name, it has been separated from both and is currently placed in it’s own single species family due to various differences. Unlike most ducks and geese that have fully webbed toes, Magpie Geese have only partially webbed feet. They also undergo a graduated moult, not a complete moult as do the ducks and geese after breeding.
magpie goose
Magpie Goose
 

Mammals

Dogs
The first animal to be deliberately introduced to Australia by humans was probably the dingo. This 'Australian Native Dog' is, despite common misconceptions, like all breeds of domestic dogs, merely a type of the Grey Wolf,Canis lupus.
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