FABULOUS FACTS ABOUT AUSTRALIA

 Take a look at our States page

A distinctive landscape* How big is Australia?

* Where is its centre?

* Which State shares its borders with all other mainland States?

* Locate and map any feature of interest using AUSLIG's Master Names File data.

 While the dimensions of Australia are impressive, the country is, in fact, the smallest of the continents. It is also the lowest, the flattest and, apart from Antarctica, the driest.

Its landscape is strikingly distinctive, with a variety of landforms ranging from extensive plains and plateaux behind narrow coastal uplands in the east, to great expanses of sandy and stony desert and low tablelands in the arid centre and the west. These landscape features are described as the 'western plateau', the 'interior lowlands' and the 'eastern uplands'.

* How many deserts are there in Australia?

* Which is the highest mountain?

* Which is the tallest waterfall?

 A complex mosaic of land tenure stretches across Australia, comprising freehold, leasehold and Aboriginal land, and reserves for nature conservation, forestry, water and the like.

 * How much land is dedicated as nature conservation reserve?

* Which has the greater area - public or privately-held land?

Read on to discover more about the dimensions, landforms and land tenure of Australia, and the answers to these questions. or look at our States page.   



DIMENSIONS


1: AREA



How big?
STATE/TERRITORY                MAINLAND   ISLAND       TOTAL

                                   AREA     AREA        AREA 

                                     (square kilometres)

----------------------        ---------    -----   ---------

Queensland                    1 723 936    6 712   1 730 648

New South Wales                 800 628       14     800 642

Victoria                        227 010      406     227 416

Tasmania                         64 519    3 882      68 401

South Australia                 978 810    4 672     983 482

Western Australia             2 526 786    3 089   2 529 875

Northern Territory            1 335 742   13 387   1 349 129

Australian Capital Territory      2 358        -       2 358

Jervis Bay Territory                 72        1          73

AUSTRALIA                     7 659 861   32 163   7 692 024
source: AUSLIG 100K Coastline database 1993.
Note: these new calculations supersede those appearing in the Australian Yearbook, but are not yet official.
 

How small?

The Canberra - Yass district was chosen as the site of the new national capital in 1908, and an area covering 2 358 square kilometres was ceded to the Commonwealth in 1911, forming the Australian Capital Territory. It was considered that the capital should have its own port and, consequently, the Jervis Bay Territory was formed in 1915. This land was surrendered to the Commonwealth by NSW.

 


2: STATE BORDERS


STATE                           LENGTH

                             (kilometres)       

------------------------       -------

Queensland                      3 339 

New South Wales                 4 635 

Victoria                        2 541 

South Australia                 3 185 

Western Australia               1 862 

Northern Territory              3 179 

Australian Capital Territory      306 

Jervis Bay Territory               32

source: AUSLIG 100K Coastline database 1993.

The 'Corners' of South Australia

South Australia shares a border with all the mainland States, as well as the Northern Territory. Where the border meets another State, or changes direction, it has been officially named, except where it meets the NSW - Victorian border.

The following table lists the 'corners' of the South Australian border.

POINT            NAME                            COORDINATES

                                             latitude  longitude 

------------     -------------------------   --------  ---------

SA - WA - NT     Surveyor General's Corner     26º S     129º E

SA - NT - Qld    Poeppel Corner                26º S     138º E

SA - Qld         Haddon Corner                 26º S     141º E

SA - Qld - NSW   Cameron Corner                29º S     141º E


You can use these coordinates to look the 'Corners' up on a map
 


3: COASTLINE


STATE/TERRITORY       MAINLAND        ISLAND          TOTAL
                         LENGTH        LENGTH         LENGTH 
                                   (kilometres)
--------------------  ---------    ----------     ---------
Queensland              6 973          6 374         13 347
New South Wales         2 007            130          2 137
Victoria                1 868            644          2 512
Tasmania                2 833          2 049          4 882
South Australia         3 816          1 251          5 067
Western Australia      12 889          7 892         20 781
Northern Territory      5 437          5 516         10 953
Jervis Bay Territory       54              3             57
--------------------   ---------    ----------     ---------
AUSTRALIA              35 877         23 859         59 736 



source: AUSLIG 100K Coastline database 1993.

4: Centre of the Continent



Where is the centre of the continent? *

There are several methods available for calculating the centre of mainland Australia, depending on the application. The following four 'centres' enclose an area which includes the town of Alice Springs and the MacDonnell Ranges, two icons of central Australia. 

1. Centre of Gravity Method
Over 50 000 digitised points representing the coastline of mainland Australia were assigned a unit weight. The moments were calculated assuming equal units of latitude and longitude, the latter varying with the cosine of latitude. The result of this calculation gave the centre as:
23 degrees 7 minutes south latitude, 132 degrees 8 minutes east longitude.

2. Lambert Gravitational Centre
In 1988 the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia determined, as a Bicentennial project, the geographical centre of Australia. A monument was erected to mark the location and named in honour of Bruce Lambert, a former director of AUSLIG, for his achievements in the national survey, levelling and mapping of the continent. Similar to the centre of gravity method, the location was calculated from 24 500 points at the high water mark of Australia's coastline. The computed result was:
25 degrees 36 minutes 36.4 seconds south latitude, 134 degrees 21 minutes 17.3 seconds east longitude.

3. Furthest Point From The Sea
A series of concentric circles drawn on transparent material were moved over the top of a 1:5 million scale map of Australia until one circle was found to touch the coast at three points. The centre of the circle was then marked and the coordinates scaled from the map. This method resulted in a good agreement with the centre of gravity method and gave coordinates of:
23 degrees 2 minutes south latitude, 132 degrees 10 minutes east longitude.

4. Median Point
The median point was calculated as the midpoint between the extremes of latitude and longitude of the continent, giving the following coordinates:
24 degrees 15 minutes south latitude, 133 degrees 25 minutes east longitude.

* Officially, there is no centre of the continent.

 


5: CONTINENTAL EXTREMITIES



Australia is approximately 3700 kilometres long, from its most northern point to its most southern point, and it is almost 4000 kilometres wide, from east to west.
            FEATURE                            LATITUDE            LONGITUDE
----- --------------------------         ------------------  -----------------
North: Cape York   (Cape York Peninsula)  10º  41'  21" S,  142º  31' 50" E 
East:  Cape Byron  (Byron Bay)            28º  38'  15" S,  153º  38' 14" E 
West:  Steep Point (Shark Bay)            26º  09'   5" S,  113º  09' 18" E 
South: South East Cape (Tasmania)         43º  38'  40" S,  146º  49' 30" E 
The most southern point of the mainland is :
         South Point (Wilson's Promontory) 39º  08' 20" S,   146º  22' 26" E
These coordinates will help you look up the continental extents on a map of Australia.

   


6: CLIMATIC EXTREMES



Temperatures

 Several places can claim to be the hottest in Australia, depending on how the temperature is measured: the place with the highest recorded temperature, the most frequent occurrences of high temperatures, or the hottest yearly average.

The hottest place ever recorded in Australia is Cloncurry, in Queensland, which registered a temperature of 53º Celsius in 1889.

Western NSW is the area with the most frequent occurrences of temperatures over 50º C.

The highest average monthly temperatures, and longest hot spells have been recorded at Marble Bar, in the north of Western Australia, which has had 160 consecutive days over 37.8ºC. In terms of average annual temperatures, the hottest place is Wyndham, also in northern WA.

The coldest place in Australia is Charlotte Pass in the snowfields of NSW, not far from Mount Kosciuszko. In June 1994, Charlotte Pass recorded a new minimum temperature of minus 23ºC, breaking its own previous record of minus 22.2º C, held since July 1945.

 The area with the greatest difference between its highest and lowest recorded temperatures is White Cliffs, in western NSW, with an extreme range of 57.2º C.

 Rainfall

 Although Australia's average annual rainfall is 465 mm, rainfall across Australia is highly uneven and variable from year to year. Areas with less than 500mm of rain annually are often classified as semi-arid, while areas with less than 250mm are considered arid.

The driest area in Australia is the Lake Eyre drainage basin in the north-east corner of South Australia, which averages less than 125mm of rain per year.

The area with the most rain also varies, depending on how it is measured.

The wettest places are found in north-east Queensland and south-west Tasmania, at the northern and southern extremities of the continent.

The most rain ever recorded in a single day fell in southern Queensland, at Crohamhurst, which recorded 907mm of rain on the 3rd of February 1893.

 The coastal region of north-east Queensland, between Cairns and Cardwell, has recorded the highest yearly rainfall, at Bellenden Ker, where 11 251 mm of rain fell in 1979. This area has also recorded the nation's highest median annual rainfall (4048mm).

Western Tasmania has a similar amount of annual rainfall, but it is more evenly distributed throughout the year. Here, Lake Margaret has a median annual rainfall of 3565mm. This area also has the State's highest recorded annual rainfall, with 4505mm of rain in 1948.

The rainfall in Tasmania is more frequent than elsewhere in Australia, with rain falling in the Lake Margaret area on around 250 days of the year.

 For more detailed information on Australia's climate, see the Climate Volume of the Atlas of Australian Resources (AUSLIG).
 

Continue on to Landforms, or go to Land Tenure.
 



LANDFORMS


1: DESERTS



Apart from Antarctica, Australia is the driest continent in the world. About 35 per cent of the continent receives so little rain, it is effectively desert. In total, 70 per cent of the mainland receives less than 500mm of rain annually, making it arid or semi-arid.

 The major deserts in Australia are listed below. These are distributed throughout the western plateau and interior lowlands. The total area of these deserts is almost 20% of the total mainland area of Australia.

NAME              STATE(S)      SIZE
                              (sq. km)
---------------   ------------  --------- 
Great Victoria    WA, SA        348 750
Great Sandy       WA            267 250
Tanami            WA, NT        184 500
Simpson           NT, QLD, SA   176 500
Gibson            WA            156 000
Little Sandy      WA            111 500
Strzelecki        SA, QLD, NSW   80 250
Sturt Stony       SA, QLD, NSW   29 750
Tirari            SA             15 250
Pedirka           SA              1 250
Nullarbor Plain   WA, SA        105 750
                               ---------
Total                         1 476 750
source: AUSLIG Deserts database 1994.



2: HIGHEST MOUNTAINS



Which is Australia's highest mountain?

It is a little known fact that the highest point on Australian Territory, at a height of 2 745 metres, is Mawson Peak, on a mountain called Big Ben. This is an active volcano on Heard Island, well south of the Australian continent in the Southern Ocean, approaching the coast of Antarctica.

The highest mountains on the Australian mainland form part of the Great Dividing Range, which bounds the interior lowlands on the east. The highest are found near the border of NSW and Victoria. The ten highest are all in the Australian Alps, and are listed below.
 

NAME                        HEIGHT
                           (metres)
-----------------          --------
 1  Mount Kosciuszko        2 229
 2  Mount Townsend          2 209
 3  Mount Twynam            2 195
 4  Rams Head               2 190
 5  Abbott Peak             2 159
 6  Carruthers Peak         2 145
 7  The Sentinel            2 140
 8  Mount Northcote         2 131
 9  Mount Clarke            2 100
10  Mount Lee               2 080

source: AUSLIG National Geodetic database 1993
Some of the next highest mountains include:

Gungartan (2 068 metres), Mount Tate (2 068 m), Jagungal (2 061 m), Mount Stillwell (2 054 m), Mount Perisher (2 053 m), Watsons Crags (2 022 m), Dicky Cooper Bogong (2 003 m), Mount Anton (2 000 m), Back Perisher (2 000 m) and Mount Anderson (1 997 m), all in NSW.

With a height of 1 986 metres, Mount Bogong is the highest mountain in Victoria, followed by Mount Feathertop (1 922 m). Another well known Victorian mountain is Mount Hotham (1 868 m).

There is more information for those wishing to visit our highest mountains and the Australian Alps on AUSLIG's Australian Alps Tourist Map. For further information on the highest mountains for each state, click here to go to the state details.
 


3: ELEVATION


      ELEVATION          AREA    Percentage     Total
                                of Australia *
---------------     ---------    --------       ------
Below sea level         8 500      0.11 %        0.11 %
       0 - 200m     2 909 500     37.98 %       38.09 %
     200 - 500m     3 728 700     48.68 %       86.77 %
   500 - 1 000m       940 600     12.28 %       99.05 %
 1 000 - 1 500m        66 600      0.87 %       99.92 %
 1 500 - 2 000m         5 200      0.07 %       99.99 %
    over 2 000m           800      0.01 %      100.00 %

* Excludes islands
As already stated, Australia is the lowest continent in the world.   It has an average elevation of only 330 m, which is the lowest of all the continents, while the highest points on the other continents are all more than twice the height of  Mount Kosciuszko.   The worlds highest montain, Mount Everest (8 848 m) is 4 times as tall!
HIGHEST AND LOWEST POINTS

NAME           STATE          HEIGHT
-----------   ------------    -----------------------
Mawson Peak   (Heard Island)   2 745 metres      
Mt. Kosciuszko  NSW             2 229 m
Lake Eyre      SA                 15 m below sea level  

source: AUSLIG GEODATA 250K database 1993

4: LARGEST LAKES


NAME                STATE            SIZE
                                   (sq. km)
 -------------       -----          --------
Lake Eyre            SA              9 475
Lake Torrens         SA              5 745
Lake Gairdner        SA              4 351

source: AUSLIG 1:2.5M database
These salt lakes, which are normally dry, are part of a major internal drainage system in the interior lowlands. They are found near the Tirari, Strzelecki and Sturt Stony deserts, on the border between SA, NSW and Queensland. Generally, the ephemeral rain in this area is absorbed by the surrounding deserts before any runoff can reach the lakes via a network of channels. However, when there is sufficient rain, water floods into these lakes. Lake Eyre has only been filled three times this century, and Lake Torrens only once.
 


5: LONGEST RIVERS



The Murray River, and its tributary the Darling River, are the main rivers in the Murray-Darling River Basin. This drainage basin comprises the major part of the interior lowlands of Australia, covering more than one million square kilometres, or about 14 per cent of Australia.

The Darling River flows south from the junction of the Culgoa and Barwon rivers. Although the Culgoa is longer than the Barwon, the source of the Darling is generally agreed to be the Barwon River as it has the greater volume of water. The headwaters of the Darling can be traced to the MacIntyre River, which starts in the Great Dividing Range, and forms part of the border between NSW and Queensland. It eventually flows south into the Barwon. The Barwon-MacIntyre section is sometimes referred to as the Upper Darling. When measured from its source in Queensland to its mouth on the coast south-east of Adelaide, the Murray-Darling river system is 3 370 kilometres long, about half the length of the world's longest river, the Nile.

The Murray-Darling River system

NAME                                 STATE             LENGTH
                                                    (kilometres)
-------------------------------     ---------          -----
Murray                               NSW/VIC/SA        2 520
Murrumbidgee                         NSW               1 575
Darling
  (from the Murray to Culgoa)        NSW               1 390
Upper Darling 
  (Barwon - MacIntyre Rivers)        NSW               1 140
Culgoa - Condamine                   NSW               1 350

source: AUSLIG GEODATA 250K database

6: TALLEST WATERFALLS



Where is the tallest waterfall?
NAME                  STATE                ESTIMATED HEIGHT 
                                              (metres)
------------           ---             --------------------------
Wallaman               QLD             305  (numerous ledges)
Wollomombi             NSW             220  (100m as single drop)
Ellenborough           NSW             200  (single drop)
These waterfalls occur on rivers forming a coordinated drainage system throughout the eastern uplands. Wollomombi includes a single drop of 100 metres. It is sometimes quoted as Australia's tallest waterfall, but this is only so if measured from its highest point, where the land has a much gentler gradient and the water does not truly 'fall'.

7: LARGEST ISLANDS



Australia is the world's largest island. It also has many hundreds of small fringing islands and numerous larger ones. These range in size from small rocks which are not covered by water at high tide, to some over twice the size of the Australian Capital Territory. Australia has several islands larger than 1000 square kilometres:
NAME              AREA (sq. km.)
--------------   ------    
Melville          5 786
Kangaroo          4 416
Groote Eylandt    2 285
Bathurst          1 693
Fraser            1 662
Flinders          1 359
King              1 091
Mornington        1 002

8: EXTERNAL TERRITORIES


Name                                        Area  (sq. km)
----------------------------------------   --------------
Australian Antarctic Territory
                      (including sea)         6 100 000
                      (excluding sea)         5 896 500
Coral Sea Islands Territory                     780 000 (aprox.)
Territory of Heard and MacDonald Islands            370
Territory of Christmas Island                       135
Macquarie Island                                    128 *
Norfolk Island                                       35 
Lord Howe Island                                     15 **
Territory of Cocos(Keeling)Islands                   14
Territory of Ashmore and Cartier Islands              2

*  A dependancy of Tasmania

** A dependancy of NSW


LAND TENURE



How much land is dedicated as nature conservation reserve?

 Which has the greater area, public or privately-held land?

The first park to be dedicated for public use was Kings Park in Perth, in 1872. The oldest national park in Australia, Royal National Park, at Port Hacking (NSW), was established in 1879. However, it was not until the 1950s that conservation reserves began to be systematically dedicated in Australia.

 The following information is available from AUSLIG's Australian Land Tenure map (1993).

PUBLIC LAND                        ('000 square kilometres)                 
CATEGORY              QLD    NSW    VIC     SA      WA     NT    TAS    ACT   TOTAL 
------------------   ------------------------------ -------------------------------
Nature conservation 
reserve               54.2   38.1   30.6  203.7   155.0   27.8   13.5    1.2  524.1

Aboriginal freehold- 
nat. park               -      -      -      -       -     10.8     -     -    10.8

Vacant crown land      0.6    1.4     -     8.3   863.3    82.8    4.3    -   960.7

Other crown land      13.9    6.4    2.0    0.8    42.7    12.3    2.5    -    80.6

Forestry reserve      40.1   34.6   36.4    1.0    20.9      -    15.1   0.1  148.2
 
Water reserve          0.3    2.8    1.5    0.2     5.3      -     0.9    -    11.0

Defence land           3.8    0.4    0.4    3.6     6.6     3.5    0.3    -    18.6

Mining reserve         4.3     -     0.3     -      0.4      -      -     -     5.0

Mixed category lands   0.8    2.0    1.1     -      0.8      -     4.0   0.2    8.9
--------------------------   ----   ----  -----  ------   -----   ----   ---  ------
Total                118.0   85.7   72.3  217.6  1095.0   137.2   40.6   1.5 1767.9 


PRIVATE LAND                       ('000 square kilometres)           
CATEGORY          QLD    NSW    VIC     SA      WA     NT   TAS   ACT   TOTAL
---------------  -------------------------------------------------------------
Freehold         627.2  405.5  155.2  158.4   205.1    6.4  27.2    -   1585.0

Crown leasehold  939.8  308.9    0.1  418.4   899.9  666.6    -    0.9  3234.6
--------------- ------  -----  -----  -----  ------  -----   ----  ---  ------
Total           1567.0  714.4  155.3  576.8  1105.0  673.0  27.2   0.9  4819.6


ABORIGINAL AND TORRES 
STRAIT ISLANDER LAND               ('000 square kilometres) 
CATEGORY          QLD    NSW    VIC     SA     WA     NT    TAS    ACT    TOTAL
-----------      --------------------------------------------------------------
Freehold          20.5    0.4     -   189.0     -   516.8     -      -    726.7

Leasehold         18.9    1.1     -     0.6  126.1   19.2     -      -    165.9

Reserve            2.8     -      -      -   199.4     -      -      -    202.2
-----------       ----    ---         -----  -----   ----                 ----- 
Total             42.2    1.5     -   189.6  325.5  536.0     -      -   1094.8


TOTAL LANDS                        ('000 square kilometres) 
CATEGORY        QLD    NSW    VIC     SA      WA      NT    TAS   ACT   TOTAL
-------------   ----------------------------------------------------------------
Public         118.0   85.7   72.3  217.6  1095.0   137.2   40.6   1.5  1767.9

Private       1567.0  714.4  155.3  576.8  1105.0   673.0   27.2   0.9  4819.6

Aboriginal & 
Torres Strait
Islander        42.2    1.5     -   189.6   325.5   536.0           -   1094.8
-------------   ------  -----  ----- -----  ------  ------   ----  ---  ------
TOTAL         1727.2  801.6  227.6  984.0  2525.5  1346.2   67.8   2.4  7682.3


MARINE RESERVES                    ('000 square kilometres)             
          OTHER*   QLD    NSW    VIC    SA     WA     NT    TAS   ACT   TOTAL
          -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total     361.6    3.4    0.8    0.5    -    11.4    2.5     -     -    380.2

*Marine reserves in Commonwealth waters
source: AUSLIG Land Tenure database 1993. 
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AUSTRALIAN SURVEYING & LAND INFORMATION GROUP
Department of Industry, Science and Tourism
Scrivener Building, Dunlop Court, Fern Hill Park, Bruce ACT 2617
PO Box 2 Belconnen ACT 2616 Phone: +61 2 6201 4201 Fax: +61 2 6201 4366
© COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA 1997