A little over 200 years ago Australia was
sparsely inhabited by the aboriginal people. In
1788 the first European settlers arrived in the
First Fleet. From that small party we now have a
population of around 18 million.
The 1996 census showed there are 17,892,423
people in Australia on census night, an increase
of 6.2% from the 1991 figures.
The population is ageing with an average age of
34 years, with 12.1% aged 65 years and over.
Of all people, 73.9% were Australian born and of
those born elsewhere, 36.2% came from the United
Kingdom. New Zealand or Ireland, with the
majority of the remainder coming from Italy,
Vietnam, Greece, China and Germany. People of
aboriginal descent increased by a third from
265,458 in 1991 to 352,970. Of these, over half,
55.8%,were counted in New South Wales and
Queensland. In the Northern Territory the
indigenous proportion of the population was
23.7%.
The average wage for people 15 years and over was
$292.00, up from $268.00 in 1991.
Around 40% of the occupied dwellings in Australia
are owned by their occupants with 25.5% being
purchased and 28.7% rented.
There are more women (50.5%) than men (49.5%) in
all areas except the Northern Territory.
These figures were obtained from a news-sheet
issued from the Bureau of Statistics home page.
(See Below)
AUSTRALIAN
POPULATION BY STATE
The figures below show all persons living in the
Australian States and Territories at census time
in 1996. There is also a projected list from the
Bureau of Statistics for the year 2050.
STATE |
1986 |
1990 |
1992 |
1996 |
2050
Projected |
A.C.T Canberra |
259,000 |
282,000 |
295,000 |
308,000 |
483,000 |
New South Wales |
5,532,000 |
5,834,000 |
5,961,000 |
6,204,000 |
8,446,000 |
Northern Territory |
154,000 |
164,000 |
168,000 |
182,000 |
293,000 |
Queensland |
2,625,000 |
2,899,000 |
3,029,000 |
3,339,000 |
6,395,000 |
South Australia |
1,383,000 |
1,432,000 |
1,457,000 |
1,474,000 |
1,610,000 |
Tasmania |
446,000 |
462,000 |
470,000 |
475,000 |
449,000 |
Victoria |
4,161,000 |
4,379,000 |
4,455,000 |
4,561,000 |
5,250,000 |
Western Australia |
1,383,000 |
1,432,000 |
1,457,000 |
1,474,000 |
1,610,000 |
Bureau of
Statistics Home Page
THE GEOGRAPHY OF
AUSTRALIA
Australia is the earth's largest island and
its smallest continent.
The mainland comprises 5 states and 2
territories. The sixth state, Tasmania, is 200
kilometres south of Victoria and separated from
the mainland by Bass Strait.
To the east, Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands are
governed from Australia, as is the Antarctic
holding based around Mawson.
It is the driest continent on earth with around
1/3rd considered desert. It is approximately
3,700 km. long (north to south) and 4,000
kilometres wide.
The mainland section is roughly divided in the
east by the Great Dividing Range which lies
inland from the eastern seaboard and runs from
the Cape York Peninsula in Queensland to
Melbourne in Victoria. Included in the range is
Australia's highest peak, Mount Kosciusko (2,229
metres) near the New South Wales-Victoria border
in the snow capped alpine region of the Great
Dividing Range.
West of the dividing range the land is mainly
flat with a few low ranges including the Flinders
Ranges in South Australia and the MacDonnell
Ranges near Alice Springs.
The centre of the continent is mainly desert and
sparsely populated. Around 80% of the Australian
population lives within the eastern seaboard or
the coastal fringes of the continent.
Massive salt lakes, often dry for long periods,
will be found in the mid-north of South Australia
and these are fed by a large river system which
carries water for hundreds of kilometres to fill
them. The largest of these, Lake Eyre (9,475 sq
km.), was filled this year (1994) for the first
time in over a decade. What water does not
evaporate from these lakes is fed into the
Central Australian Artesian Basin, a vast natural
underground series of aquifers from which
occasional springs bubble in the most remote
desert areas, and from which Alice Springs draws
its water supply.
AUSTRALIAN
STATE DETAILS
The figures below show the area, coastline and
border length of all Australian states and the
islands off their shores.
STATE |
Total main- land
Area (sq km.) |
Island
Area |
Coastline (km) |
Borders (km) |
Australia |
7,659,861 |
32,163 |
59,736 |
N/A |
A.C.T Canberra |
2,358 |
none |
none |
327 |
New South Wales |
800,628 |
14 |
2,137 |
4,635 |
Northern Territory |
1,335,742 |
13,387 |
10,953 |
3,179 |
Queensland |
1,723,936 |
6,712 |
13,347 |
3,339 |
South Australia |
978,810 |
4,672 |
5,067 |
3,185 |
Tasmania |
64,519 |
3,882 |
4,882 |
none |
Victoria |
227,010 |
406 |
2,512 |
2,541 |
Western Australia |
2,526,786 |
3,089 |
20,781 |
1,862 |
EXTERNAL
TERRITORIES
External Territories are those remote from the
mainland Australia and governed by it.
SOME
INTERESTING FACTS AND STATISTICS
Some of the highest, lowest, oddest and
interesting facts about Australia.
Highest Mountain: Mainland: Mount
Kosciuszco 2,229 metres. The highest point is
Mawson Peak on Heard Island at 2,754 m.
Australia is the lowest continent
in the world with an average of only 330 metres.
and the lowest point is Lake Eyre in South
Australia at 15 m. below sea level.
The most southerly mainland point
is South Point, on Wilson's Promontory south of
Melbourne. South East Point in Tasmania is the
most southerly point of the main continent
excluding the Antarctic.
The longest river is the Murray
River and its tributary the Darling River, which
joins it at Wentworth in the south-west corner of
New South Wales. Together totalling 3,370 km.
their drainage basin comprises more then 1
million square kilometres or around 14% of
Australia.
The largest state is Western
Australia with an area of over 2.5 million square
kilometres. The largest island is Australia
itself, followed by Tasmania, but offshore the
largest is Melville Island of 5,786 sq km. near
Darwin.
The smallest state is Tasmania.
The hottest temperature recorded
in Australia was 53 degrees celsius at Cloncurry
in Queensland in 1889.
The coldest temperature recorded
was at Charlottes Pass in the snowfields of the
Great Dividing Range near Mt. Kosciuszko of -23
degrees celsius in 1994.
The highest rainfall ever in
Australia was 907mm. of rain at Crohamhust in
Queensland on February 1893. The highest average
rainfall recorded was at Bellenden Ker in
Queensland where 11,251 mm. fell in 1979.
The driest place in Australia is
Lake Eyre with an average annual rainfall of less
than 125mm.
The most extreme range of
temperature has been recorded at White Cliffs, an
opal mining centre in Western New South Wales
with extremes of 57.2 degrees between below-zero
winter nights and hot summer days.
Australien ist das einzige Land der Erde,
daß sich über einen ganzen Kontinent erstreckt.
Inklusive Tasmanien und vorgelagerter Inseln ist
Australien knapp 7.700.000 qkm groß. Dies entspricht
etwa der Fläche der USA ohne Alaska oder 20 mal der
Fläche Deutschlands. Flächenmäßig rangiert Australien
auf Platz 6 in der Welt. Die Küstenlinie Australiens
beträgt etwa 37.500 km. Australien ist wahrlich ein Land
der Superlative. Von West nach Ost (Perth - Sydney) sind
es etwa 4.000 km Luftlinie (von 114 Grad bis 153 Grad
östlicher Lange). Von Nord nach Süd (mit Tasmanien)
sind es etwa 3.700 km Luftlinie (von 10 Grad bis 44 Grad
südlicher Breite).
Mit einer Bevölkerung von nur 18 Mio.
ist Australien recht dünn besiedelt. Statistisch gesehen
sind es nur knapp über 2 Einwohner pro qkm (Deutschland
218 Einwohner pro qkm). Knapp 60 % der 18 Mio. Einwohner
leben in den fünf großen Städten: Sydney (4 Mio.),
Melbourne (3 Mio.), Brisbane (1,2 Mio.), Perth (1,2
Mio.), Adelaide (1 Mio.). Weitere wichtige große
Städte: Hobart, die Hauptstadt Tasmaniens (300.000),
Canberra, die Bundeshauptstadt und einzige der genannten
Städte, die nicht am Meer liegt (300.000). Der größte
Teil der Bevölkerung Australiens lebt im fruchtbaren
Südosten des Kontinents.
Australien ist ein ganzjähriges
Reiseziel.
Der Norden ist
tropisch. Beste Reisezeit ist die Trockenzeit (etwa April
bis November). Während der Regenzeit fallen sehr
ergiebige Niederschläge (Monsum), die temporär das
Fortkommen unmöglich machen können. Während der
Regenzeit und die erste Zeit danach ist das Baden im Meer
in küstennahen Bereichen wegen der Würfelqualle (box
jelly fish) nicht möglich (Lebensgefahr!). Der tropische
Norden ist auch Verbreitungsgebiet der
Salzwasserkrokodile. Vorsicht ist wegen der
Salzwasserkrokodile ganzjährig vor allem in und an den
Unterläufen der Flüße geboten.
Der Süden hat
ausgeprägte Jahreszeiten. Die Sommer (Dezember bis
Februar) sind im allgemeinen wärmer als in Deutschland.
Oktober, November und März, April sind ebenfalls gute
Reisezeiten für den Süden.
Das Zentrum ist
sehr trocken. In den australieschen Sommermonaten kann es
extrem heiß werden. In den Wintermonaten kann die
Nachttemperatur unter den Gefrierpunkt fallen.
Internationale Airports:
Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Darwin, Brisbane,
Cairns
Flugzeit: ca. 16
(Darwin) bis 21 Stunden, zzgl. Zwischenlandung, auf der
Asienroute in Singapur, Bangkok oder Hongkong.
Australien wird von vielen renomierten Fluggesellschaften
angeflogen: z.B. Qantas (die wichtigste Fluggesellschaft
Australiens, täglich z.B. ab Frankfurt), Air New Zealand
(Route über die USA), Singapore Airlines, Cathay
Pacific. Je nach Saison kostet ein Flugticket mit einer
dieser Airlines in der Touristenklasse zwischen DM
1.800,00 und DM 2.700,00.
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