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Mainland Australia

Mainland Australia is the main landmass of the Australian continent, excluding the Aru Islands, New Guinea, Tasmania, and other Australian offshore islands. The landmass also constitutes the mainland of the territory governed by the Commonwealth of Australia, and the term, along with continental Australia, can be used in a geographic sense to exclude surrounding continental islands and external territories. Generally, the term is applied to the states of New South Wales,[a] Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, and Western Australia, as well as the Australian Capital Territory, Jervis Bay Territory, and Northern Territory.

Mainland Australia
Geography
Area7,591,608 km2 (2,931,136 sq mi)
Administration
Demographics
Population25,895,442

The term is typically used when referring to the relationship between Tasmania and the other Australian states,[1][2] in that people not from Tasmania are referred to as mainlanders.[3] Tasmania has been omitted on a number of occasions from maps of Australia, reinforcing the divide between Tasmania and the mainland. The 1982 Commonwealth Games in Brisbane left Tasmania off the map of Australia during the opening ceremony, as did the designs of the Australian Swim Team uniform for the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.[3]

The land mass covers 7,591,608 km2 (2,931,136 sq mi), about 98.7% of the area of the country of Australia and 1.5% of Earth's surface.[4] It is sometimes described as an island, in which case it would be the largest island by area–more than three times the size of Greenland.[5] Its population is about 25.9 million, 98% of Australia's total population. Mainland Australia has a variety of climatic regions, ranging from tropical rainforests and deserts to cool temperature rainforests to snow-covered mountains.[6] It is in these mainland regions that much of Australia's native flora and fauna can be found.

History edit

Early in the Cretaceous period, 130 million years ago,[7] Australia (and Antarctica) separated from a supercontinent known as Gondwana. Antarctica's separation from Australia began roughly 85 million years ago, at a rate of a few millimetres per year.[8] It took over 30 million years (53 million years ago), toward the end of the Palaeocene epoch,[7] for Australia to fully separate from Antarctica and set course for where we see the two continents today.

During the last ice-age around 35,000 years ago,[9] sea levels (around Australia) dropped by 120 metres (390 ft), developing a continuous stretch of land between now day Papua New Guinea, Australia and Tasmania. Over the next 6,000[10] years the ice gradually melted, increasing sea-levels, cutting off Papua New Guinea and Tasmania from mainland Australia.

Prehistory edit

It has been estimated that Australian Aborigines occupied mainland Australia up to 50,000 to 60,000[11] years ago, well before the last ice-age. Although an exact figure has not been decided on, numerous DNA studies all confirm that Aboriginal Australians are one of the oldest living populations in the world[12] outside of Africa. Prior to the arrival of Europeans on the Australian mainland in the late 18th century, over 500[13] different clan groups (nations) each with unique cultures, beliefs and languages inhabited territories on the mainland. Currently, Indigenous people living on the mainland make up 2.4%[13] of the total Australian population, encompassing over 250 language groups.[14]

European colonization edit

The first documented encounter of the Australian mainland was by Willem Janszoon in 1606, as he sailed around Australia's north coast arriving in present-day Cape York, Queensland.[15] These explorations led way to the term 'Terra Australis', Latin for South Land, which was hypothesised on the notion there must be land in the Southern Hemisphere to balance the land mass in the Northern Hemisphere.[16] This encounter led several other Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese and British journeyings to Terra Australis throughout the 17th and 18th century, progressively mapping what we now know to be as (mainland) Australia. The most famous and well documented expedition of Australia occurred 164 years after Janszoon's journey, through British navigator and explorer James Cook. He documented the first interaction of the Eastern Australian coastline, and on 23 April 1770, Cook made the first recorded observation of Indigenous Australians[17] at nowadays Brush Island. This journey, coupled with numerous other reports, ultimately led the British to establish a penal colony in Australia, firstly at Botany Bay.

Geography edit

 
Physical map of Australia

The Australian mainland's geology and climate is one of its defining features. Despite being surrounded by ocean, approximately 20% of the Australian mainland is classified as desert.[6] This is due to the extremely variable rain patterns across the mainland. Toward the barren centre of the mainland, the rainfall pattern is concentric and sparse, whereas there is higher intensity rainfall toward the mainland's tropics and coastal areas. Australia lies on the middle of the Indo-Australian tectonic plate[18] and as a result is not influenced by any severe tectonic activity. Over millions of years, the shifting of these tectonic plates has seen the Australian mainland undergo many physical changes. Mountain ranges and seas have come and gone, and the forces of weathering and erosion have formed much of the mainlands current topography.[19] These physical changes developed four primary landform divisions spread throughout the mainland states and territories; the Coastal Plains, the Eastern and Southern highlands, the Central Lowlands (and Deserts) and the Western and Northern Plateaus (and Basins).

Coastal Plains edit

 
Eastern coast of Australia

Along the Eastern seaboard of the mainland are the Coastal Plains; a narrow strip of land along the East coast of Australia from Queensland to Victoria.[20] This division is host to some of the mainlands major cities, namely, Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne, due to its hospitable conditions. Some sources refer to the Coastal Plains as the entire coastline of the mainland, outspreading beyond the East Coast.[19]

Eastern Highlands edit

Approximately 100 km (62 mi) inland, the Eastern Highlands (including the Great Dividing Range) cover almost 10% of the mainland.[21] Incorporating several mountain ranges which extend 3,700 km (2,300 mi)[22] the Highlands run parallel to the east coast of the mainland; covering Queensland, New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory and Victoria. The highlands were formed around 80 million years ago,[23] and are some of the oldest and most prominent in the world. This area is very rugged and primarily consists of a series of tablelands and plateaus. The highlands are much more prominent toward the south east of the mainland and form the Southern Highlands, which are located across (south) New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory and Victoria. These Southern highlands experience snowfall for more than half the year during the winter due to their higher altitude.

Central Lowlands edit

Occupying approximately 25% of the Australian mainland,[21] the Central Lowlands (and Deserts) are low-lying with an average height of under 200 metres (660 ft) above sea level. It is home to the Sturt and Simpson deserts and closer to Central Australia lie some desert mountain ranges (MacDonnell and Musgrave). The Central Lowlands incorporates three primary drainage basins: in the North, the Carpentaria Lowlands, Lake Eyre toward the centre and the Murray-Darling Basin down South.[19] The lowest point on the mainland is found in this division at Lake Eyre, at 50m below sea level.[24]

Western Plateau edit

 
Western Plateau, Northern Territory

Approximately 144 to 65 million years ago (Cretaceous period), there lay a great inland sea, stretching over one quarter of the mainland.[25] The evaporation of this ocean left behind what we now know as the Western Plateau. The Western and Northern Plateaus incorporate nearly all Western Australia and the Northern Territory and parts of South Australia. Over one-third of the mainland, the Plateaus are made of one stable block of igneous and metamorphic rock which is up to 3.6 billion years old.[21] Despite this, the Plateau is a huge area of tablelands, averaging 500m above sea level in some parts.[19] It is home to Uluru, Kata Tjuta, the Finke River, the Victorian Desert, the Great Sandy Desert and the Gibson Desert. Much of the Western Plateau receives minimal rainfall and thus appears red in colour. Conversely, the Northern Plateau experiences heavy rainfall throughout the wet season (November to April),[24] due to its more tropical location compared to the Western Plateau.

Natural resources edit

Australia's separation from the other continents resulted in a long period of uplift, erosion and thick terrigenous deposition in rift valleys.[7] It was these processes which over millions of years has led to the accumulation of Australia's main known mineral, oil and gas resources. Most of Australia's oil and gas exploration occurs off the mainland. However, on the mainland, the abundance of minerals (and thus metals) has formed the basis of Australia's dependence on mining;[26] exporting much of these natural occurring resources overseas.

 
Super Pit gold mine on Kalgoorlie's Golden Mile in Western Australia

Mining edit

The Australian mainland is host to some of the world's largest open-cut and underground mines. Across the mainland states (besides the ACT), there are over 350 operating mines, producing 19 useful rocks and minerals. These mines allow Australia to be one of the world's largest producers of iron ore, coal, bauxite (aluminium ore), manganese, nickel, copper, gold, silver, cobalt, lead, copper, uranium, opal and diamond.[27] Some of the largest mines on the Australian mainland are listed below:

Major mines on the Australian mainland
Mine Owner State Type Minerals produced Size
Mount Arthur BHP New South Wales Open cut Coal

Gold

12 km2
Peak Downs BHP Queensland Open cut Coal 688 km2[28]
Cannington South32 Queensland Underground Silver

Lead

5.25 km (multiple tunnels)[29]
Carmichael Bravus Mining and Resources (Adani) Queensland Open cut Coal 447 km2
Olympic Dam BHP South Australia Underground Copper

Uranium

Gold

Silver

450 km (multiple tunnels)[30]
Argyle Rio Tinto Western Australia Underground Diamond 40 km (multiple tunnels)[30]
Boddington Newmont Western Australia Open cut Gold

Copper

212 km2[31]
Fimiston Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mines Western Australia Open cut Gold 5.25 km2 (360m deep)[30]
Roy Hill Hancock Prospecting Western Australia Open cut

Underground

Iron ore 4,000 km2
Worsley Alumina South32 Western Australia Open cut Bauxite 5,000 km2[32]
Yandicoogina Rio Tinto Western Australia Open cut Iron ore 267 km2[33]

Renewables edit

The Australian mainland's various geology and climate, has led to the increased utilisation of renewable energy (solar, wind and hydro) over recent decades.[34] In 2021, approximately 28.9% of the mainland's total electricity generation was from renewable energy sources with South Australia at 66.5% renewable energy generation, Victoria at 33.4%, Western Australia at 31.5%, New South Wales at 26.0% and Queensland at 19.6%.[35] The majority of this renewable energy was generated through wind and solar, proportionally contributing 35.9% and 38.3% respectively.

Politics edit

Australian political decisions are typically deliberated and enacted within the limits of homeland (mainland Australia) soil. Despite Tasmania being one of Australia's six British establishment colonies, Tasmania has often been looked over due to the state's small size and general isolation. This is observed through the states and territories of mainland Australia representing 146 of the 151 members in Parliament.[36]

State formation edit

From 1788 to 1859, Britain established five colonies on the Australian mainland,[37] and one in Tasmania. All six colonies were constitutionally connected to Britain, each with their own parliament and courts, with their respective laws subject to the laws of British Parliament.

These colonies formed the six states of Australia; New South Wales, Victoria, Western Australia, South Australia (included the Northern Territory at this time), Queensland and Tasmania. In 1901, the six states were united as the Commonwealth of Australia, under a new federal constitution.[38] In 1911, the Northern Territory was transferred from South Australia to the Commonwealth and formed a territory.[37]

Capital selection edit

 
Location of Canberra

After Federation in 1901,[38] it was always assumed the Australian capital would be on the mainland. However, the location of the capital sparked years of negotiating between politicians in New South Wales and Victoria, the two most prominent states, who each wanted their capital, Sydney and Melbourne respectively, to become the new country's capital.

After years of debate to no avail, the two states decided on a compromise that met the requirements of the Australian Constitution. A separate territory (the Australian Capital Territory) was to be established on land given by New South Wales, however it must be at least 100 miles (160 km) from Sydney.[39] This territory would contain the official capital of Australia, and Parliament would sit in Melbourne until the city (now Canberra) was built. In 1909, this compromise was agreed upon and was finally legislated in 1911.[40]

On 12 March 1913, Canberra was officially named as the capital of Australia.[41] In 1915, Jervis Bay territory was added to the Australian Capital Territory to ensure the Commonwealth had a seaport.[42]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Parts of New South Wales, such as Lord Howe Island, are part of the mostly submerged continent of Zealandia.

References edit

  1. ^ . Basslink. Hydro Tasmania. Archived from the original on 18 July 2016. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  2. ^ . Department of State Growth, Transport. Tasmanian Government. Archived from the original on 24 March 2020. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  3. ^ a b . National Museum of Australia. NMA. Archived from the original on 30 December 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  4. ^ "Area of Australia - States and Territories | Geoscience Australia". Ga.gov.au. 12 January 2001. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  5. ^ McMahon, Elizabeth (2010). "Australia, the Island Continent: How Contradictory Geography Shapes the National Imaginary". Space and Culture. 13 (2): 178–187. Bibcode:2010SpCul..13..178M. doi:10.1177/1206331209358224. S2CID 131158261.
  6. ^ a b "The Australian Continent". australia.gov.au. Australian Government.
  7. ^ a b c Veevers, J.J.; McElhinny, M.W. (July 1976). "The separation of Australia from other continents". Earth-Science Reviews. 12 (2–3): 139–143. Bibcode:1976ESRv...12..139V. doi:10.1016/0012-8252(76)90003-9.
  8. ^ "Antarctic Geology". Australian Antarctic Program. Australian Government. October 2021.
  9. ^ corporateName=National Museum of Australia; address=Lawson Crescent, Acton Peninsula. "National Museum of Australia - Separation of Tasmania". www.nma.gov.au. Retrieved 12 April 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Hope, Pandora (2005). "The weather and climate of Australia at the Last Glacial Maximum". School of Earth Sciences, the University of Melbourne.
  11. ^ Clarkson, Chris; Arnold, Lee (2017). "Human occupation of northern Australia by 65,000 years ago". Nature. 457 (7663): 306–310. Bibcode:2017Natur.547..306C. doi:10.1038/nature22968. hdl:2440/107043. PMID 28726833. S2CID 205257212.
  12. ^ Curnoe, Darren (23 September 2011). "DNA confirms Aboriginal culture one of Earth's oldest". Australian Geographic.
  13. ^ a b "Our people". australia.gov.au. Australian Government.
  14. ^ "Indigenous Australians: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people". IATSIS. Australian Government. 12 July 2020.
  15. ^ Sigmond, J.P.; Zuiderbaan, L.H. (1979). Dutch Discoveries of Australia: Shipwrecks, treasures and early voyages off the West Coast. Adelaide: Rigby.
  16. ^ Pearson, Michael (2005). Great Southern Land: The maritime exploration of Terra Australis. Australian Government. ISBN 0642551855.
  17. ^ "Cook's Journal: Daily Entries, 22 April 1770". Retrieved 21 September 2011.
  18. ^ Young, Emma (6 October 2011). "Earthquakes in Australia". Australian Geographic.
  19. ^ a b c d Swanson, Louise; Kriewaldt, Jeana; Ford, Nicole; Bowden, Karen; Harrison, Adrian (18 November 2016). Geoactive (4 ed.). Jacaranda. ISBN 9780730330325.
  20. ^ "Landforms of Australia". Skwirk.com.au. 2014.
  21. ^ a b c "Landforms: Major Landforms and Divisions of Australia". The Australian Environment.
  22. ^ Tikkanen, Amy. "Great Dividing Range". Britannica.
  23. ^ Monroe, M (21 October 2016). "Australia: The Land Where Time Began". austhrutime. Kangaroo Press.
  24. ^ a b "Australian Landforms and their History" (Government Document). Geoscience Australia. Australian Government. 15 May 2014.
  25. ^ Bowler, James; Wasson, Robert (1984). "Glacial age environments of inland Australia. Late Cainozoic Palaeoclimates of the Southern Hemisphere". 1. 1: 183–208.
  26. ^ Knights, P; Hood, M. "The minerals sector". Parliament of Australia.
  27. ^ "Australian Mineral Facts". Geoscience Australia. Australian Government. 4 March 2018.
  28. ^ "Peak Downs/Caval Ridge Coal Mines". Thiess.
  29. ^ "Cannington Silver and Lead Mine, Queensland". Mining Technology.
  30. ^ a b c Casey, JP (7 March 2019). "Super mines: Australia's biggest mining projects". Mining Technology.
  31. ^ Newmont 2020 Annual Report (PDF). Western Australia: Newmont. 31 December 2020.
  32. ^ "Worsley Alumina Refinery & Boddington Bauxite Mine Site Tour" (PDF). Western Australia: South32. 6 December 2018.
  33. ^ Zhou, Vanessa (13 May 2019). "Rio Tinto cleared to expand West Angelas iron ore project". Strate Worldwide.
  34. ^ de Atholia, Timothy (19 March 2020). "Renewable Energy Investment in Australia" (Bulletin). Bulletin (March).
  35. ^ Clean Energy Council Australia. "Clean Energy Australia Report 2022" (PDF). Clean Energy Australia. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  36. ^ "Number of Members". Parliament of Australia. Australian Government.
  37. ^ a b "Documenting a Democracy - Places". Museum of Australian Democracy.
  38. ^ a b "The Federation of Australia". Parliamentary Education Office. Commonwealth of Australia.
  39. ^ "Defining Moments - Federation". National Museum of Australia. Australian Government.
  40. ^ "Federation and the National Capital" (Government Fact Sheet). National Capital Authority. Australian Government.
  41. ^ Coombes, Jennifer (8 March 2013). "The Naming of Canberra, 1913". National Film and Sound Archive of Australia.
  42. ^ "A quick history of Canberra". Visit Canberra. ACT Government. 1 November 2019.

27°S 133°E / 27°S 133°E / -27; 133

mainland, australia, this, article, about, main, landmass, australian, continent, continent, australia, continent, main, landmass, australian, continent, excluding, islands, guinea, tasmania, other, australian, offshore, islands, landmass, also, constitutes, m. This article is about the main landmass of the Australian continent For the continent see Australia continent Mainland Australia is the main landmass of the Australian continent excluding the Aru Islands New Guinea Tasmania and other Australian offshore islands The landmass also constitutes the mainland of the territory governed by the Commonwealth of Australia and the term along with continental Australia can be used in a geographic sense to exclude surrounding continental islands and external territories Generally the term is applied to the states of New South Wales a Queensland South Australia Victoria and Western Australia as well as the Australian Capital Territory Jervis Bay Territory and Northern Territory Mainland AustraliaGeographyArea7 591 608 km2 2 931 136 sq mi AdministrationAustraliaDemographicsPopulation25 895 442The term is typically used when referring to the relationship between Tasmania and the other Australian states 1 2 in that people not from Tasmania are referred to as mainlanders 3 Tasmania has been omitted on a number of occasions from maps of Australia reinforcing the divide between Tasmania and the mainland The 1982 Commonwealth Games in Brisbane left Tasmania off the map of Australia during the opening ceremony as did the designs of the Australian Swim Team uniform for the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow 3 The land mass covers 7 591 608 km2 2 931 136 sq mi about 98 7 of the area of the country of Australia and 1 5 of Earth s surface 4 It is sometimes described as an island in which case it would be the largest island by area more than three times the size of Greenland 5 Its population is about 25 9 million 98 of Australia s total population Mainland Australia has a variety of climatic regions ranging from tropical rainforests and deserts to cool temperature rainforests to snow covered mountains 6 It is in these mainland regions that much of Australia s native flora and fauna can be found Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 European colonization 2 Geography 2 1 Coastal Plains 2 2 Eastern Highlands 2 3 Central Lowlands 2 4 Western Plateau 3 Natural resources 3 1 Mining 3 2 Renewables 4 Politics 4 1 State formation 4 2 Capital selection 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesHistory editSee also Natural history of Australia Early in the Cretaceous period 130 million years ago 7 Australia and Antarctica separated from a supercontinent known as Gondwana Antarctica s separation from Australia began roughly 85 million years ago at a rate of a few millimetres per year 8 It took over 30 million years 53 million years ago toward the end of the Palaeocene epoch 7 for Australia to fully separate from Antarctica and set course for where we see the two continents today During the last ice age around 35 000 years ago 9 sea levels around Australia dropped by 120 metres 390 ft developing a continuous stretch of land between now day Papua New Guinea Australia and Tasmania Over the next 6 000 10 years the ice gradually melted increasing sea levels cutting off Papua New Guinea and Tasmania from mainland Australia Prehistory edit See also Aboriginal Australians It has been estimated that Australian Aborigines occupied mainland Australia up to 50 000 to 60 000 11 years ago well before the last ice age Although an exact figure has not been decided on numerous DNA studies all confirm that Aboriginal Australians are one of the oldest living populations in the world 12 outside of Africa Prior to the arrival of Europeans on the Australian mainland in the late 18th century over 500 13 different clan groups nations each with unique cultures beliefs and languages inhabited territories on the mainland Currently Indigenous people living on the mainland make up 2 4 13 of the total Australian population encompassing over 250 language groups 14 European colonization edit The first documented encounter of the Australian mainland was by Willem Janszoon in 1606 as he sailed around Australia s north coast arriving in present day Cape York Queensland 15 These explorations led way to the term Terra Australis Latin for South Land which was hypothesised on the notion there must be land in the Southern Hemisphere to balance the land mass in the Northern Hemisphere 16 This encounter led several other Dutch Spanish Portuguese and British journeyings to Terra Australis throughout the 17th and 18th century progressively mapping what we now know to be as mainland Australia The most famous and well documented expedition of Australia occurred 164 years after Janszoon s journey through British navigator and explorer James Cook He documented the first interaction of the Eastern Australian coastline and on 23 April 1770 Cook made the first recorded observation of Indigenous Australians 17 at nowadays Brush Island This journey coupled with numerous other reports ultimately led the British to establish a penal colony in Australia firstly at Botany Bay Geography editSee also Geography of Australia See also Climate of Australia nbsp Physical map of AustraliaThe Australian mainland s geology and climate is one of its defining features Despite being surrounded by ocean approximately 20 of the Australian mainland is classified as desert 6 This is due to the extremely variable rain patterns across the mainland Toward the barren centre of the mainland the rainfall pattern is concentric and sparse whereas there is higher intensity rainfall toward the mainland s tropics and coastal areas Australia lies on the middle of the Indo Australian tectonic plate 18 and as a result is not influenced by any severe tectonic activity Over millions of years the shifting of these tectonic plates has seen the Australian mainland undergo many physical changes Mountain ranges and seas have come and gone and the forces of weathering and erosion have formed much of the mainlands current topography 19 These physical changes developed four primary landform divisions spread throughout the mainland states and territories the Coastal Plains the Eastern and Southern highlands the Central Lowlands and Deserts and the Western and Northern Plateaus and Basins Coastal Plains edit nbsp Eastern coast of AustraliaAlong the Eastern seaboard of the mainland are the Coastal Plains a narrow strip of land along the East coast of Australia from Queensland to Victoria 20 This division is host to some of the mainlands major cities namely Brisbane Sydney and Melbourne due to its hospitable conditions Some sources refer to the Coastal Plains as the entire coastline of the mainland outspreading beyond the East Coast 19 Eastern Highlands edit Approximately 100 km 62 mi inland the Eastern Highlands including the Great Dividing Range cover almost 10 of the mainland 21 Incorporating several mountain ranges which extend 3 700 km 2 300 mi 22 the Highlands run parallel to the east coast of the mainland covering Queensland New South Wales the Australian Capital Territory and Victoria The highlands were formed around 80 million years ago 23 and are some of the oldest and most prominent in the world This area is very rugged and primarily consists of a series of tablelands and plateaus The highlands are much more prominent toward the south east of the mainland and form the Southern Highlands which are located across south New South Wales the Australian Capital Territory and Victoria These Southern highlands experience snowfall for more than half the year during the winter due to their higher altitude Central Lowlands edit Occupying approximately 25 of the Australian mainland 21 the Central Lowlands and Deserts are low lying with an average height of under 200 metres 660 ft above sea level It is home to the Sturt and Simpson deserts and closer to Central Australia lie some desert mountain ranges MacDonnell and Musgrave The Central Lowlands incorporates three primary drainage basins in the North the Carpentaria Lowlands Lake Eyre toward the centre and the Murray Darling Basin down South 19 The lowest point on the mainland is found in this division at Lake Eyre at 50m below sea level 24 Western Plateau edit nbsp Western Plateau Northern TerritoryApproximately 144 to 65 million years ago Cretaceous period there lay a great inland sea stretching over one quarter of the mainland 25 The evaporation of this ocean left behind what we now know as the Western Plateau The Western and Northern Plateaus incorporate nearly all Western Australia and the Northern Territory and parts of South Australia Over one third of the mainland the Plateaus are made of one stable block of igneous and metamorphic rock which is up to 3 6 billion years old 21 Despite this the Plateau is a huge area of tablelands averaging 500m above sea level in some parts 19 It is home to Uluru Kata Tjuta the Finke River the Victorian Desert the Great Sandy Desert and the Gibson Desert Much of the Western Plateau receives minimal rainfall and thus appears red in colour Conversely the Northern Plateau experiences heavy rainfall throughout the wet season November to April 24 due to its more tropical location compared to the Western Plateau Natural resources editAustralia s separation from the other continents resulted in a long period of uplift erosion and thick terrigenous deposition in rift valleys 7 It was these processes which over millions of years has led to the accumulation of Australia s main known mineral oil and gas resources Most of Australia s oil and gas exploration occurs off the mainland However on the mainland the abundance of minerals and thus metals has formed the basis of Australia s dependence on mining 26 exporting much of these natural occurring resources overseas nbsp Super Pit gold mine on Kalgoorlie s Golden Mile in Western AustraliaMining edit See also Mining in Australia The Australian mainland is host to some of the world s largest open cut and underground mines Across the mainland states besides the ACT there are over 350 operating mines producing 19 useful rocks and minerals These mines allow Australia to be one of the world s largest producers of iron ore coal bauxite aluminium ore manganese nickel copper gold silver cobalt lead copper uranium opal and diamond 27 Some of the largest mines on the Australian mainland are listed below Major mines on the Australian mainland Mine Owner State Type Minerals produced SizeMount Arthur BHP New South Wales Open cut Coal Gold 12 km2Peak Downs BHP Queensland Open cut Coal 688 km2 28 Cannington South32 Queensland Underground Silver Lead 5 25 km multiple tunnels 29 Carmichael Bravus Mining and Resources Adani Queensland Open cut Coal 447 km2Olympic Dam BHP South Australia Underground Copper UraniumGoldSilver 450 km multiple tunnels 30 Argyle Rio Tinto Western Australia Underground Diamond 40 km multiple tunnels 30 Boddington Newmont Western Australia Open cut Gold Copper 212 km2 31 Fimiston Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mines Western Australia Open cut Gold 5 25 km2 360m deep 30 Roy Hill Hancock Prospecting Western Australia Open cut Underground Iron ore 4 000 km2Worsley Alumina South32 Western Australia Open cut Bauxite 5 000 km2 32 Yandicoogina Rio Tinto Western Australia Open cut Iron ore 267 km2 33 Renewables edit See also Renewable energy in Australia The Australian mainland s various geology and climate has led to the increased utilisation of renewable energy solar wind and hydro over recent decades 34 In 2021 approximately 28 9 of the mainland s total electricity generation was from renewable energy sources with South Australia at 66 5 renewable energy generation Victoria at 33 4 Western Australia at 31 5 New South Wales at 26 0 and Queensland at 19 6 35 The majority of this renewable energy was generated through wind and solar proportionally contributing 35 9 and 38 3 respectively Politics editSee also Politics of Australia Australian political decisions are typically deliberated and enacted within the limits of homeland mainland Australia soil Despite Tasmania being one of Australia s six British establishment colonies Tasmania has often been looked over due to the state s small size and general isolation This is observed through the states and territories of mainland Australia representing 146 of the 151 members in Parliament 36 State formation edit From 1788 to 1859 Britain established five colonies on the Australian mainland 37 and one in Tasmania All six colonies were constitutionally connected to Britain each with their own parliament and courts with their respective laws subject to the laws of British Parliament These colonies formed the six states of Australia New South Wales Victoria Western Australia South Australia included the Northern Territory at this time Queensland and Tasmania In 1901 the six states were united as the Commonwealth of Australia under a new federal constitution 38 In 1911 the Northern Territory was transferred from South Australia to the Commonwealth and formed a territory 37 Capital selection edit See also Canberra nbsp Location of CanberraAfter Federation in 1901 38 it was always assumed the Australian capital would be on the mainland However the location of the capital sparked years of negotiating between politicians in New South Wales and Victoria the two most prominent states who each wanted their capital Sydney and Melbourne respectively to become the new country s capital After years of debate to no avail the two states decided on a compromise that met the requirements of the Australian Constitution A separate territory the Australian Capital Territory was to be established on land given by New South Wales however it must be at least 100 miles 160 km from Sydney 39 This territory would contain the official capital of Australia and Parliament would sit in Melbourne until the city now Canberra was built In 1909 this compromise was agreed upon and was finally legislated in 1911 40 On 12 March 1913 Canberra was officially named as the capital of Australia 41 In 1915 Jervis Bay territory was added to the Australian Capital Territory to ensure the Commonwealth had a seaport 42 See also edit nbsp Australia portal nbsp Geography portal Fauna of Australia Flora of Australia Natural history of Australia Geography of Australia List of islands of Australia States and territories of Australia European exploration of AustraliaNotes edit Parts of New South Wales such as Lord Howe Island are part of the mostly submerged continent of Zealandia References edit A quick look back Basslink Hydro Tasmania Archived from the original on 18 July 2016 Retrieved 24 July 2016 Ex interstate vehicles Department of State Growth Transport Tasmanian Government Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 24 July 2016 a b Separation of Tasmania National Museum of Australia NMA Archived from the original on 30 December 2014 Retrieved 24 July 2016 Area of Australia States and Territories Geoscience Australia Ga gov au 12 January 2001 Retrieved 28 November 2018 McMahon Elizabeth 2010 Australia the Island Continent How Contradictory Geography Shapes the National Imaginary Space and Culture 13 2 178 187 Bibcode 2010SpCul 13 178M doi 10 1177 1206331209358224 S2CID 131158261 a b The Australian Continent australia gov au Australian Government a b c Veevers J J McElhinny M W July 1976 The separation of Australia from other continents Earth Science Reviews 12 2 3 139 143 Bibcode 1976ESRv 12 139V doi 10 1016 0012 8252 76 90003 9 Antarctic Geology Australian Antarctic Program Australian Government October 2021 corporateName National Museum of Australia address Lawson Crescent Acton Peninsula National Museum of Australia Separation of Tasmania www nma gov au Retrieved 12 April 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hope Pandora 2005 The weather and climate of Australia at the Last Glacial Maximum School of Earth Sciences the University of Melbourne Clarkson Chris Arnold Lee 2017 Human occupation of northern Australia by 65 000 years ago Nature 457 7663 306 310 Bibcode 2017Natur 547 306C doi 10 1038 nature22968 hdl 2440 107043 PMID 28726833 S2CID 205257212 Curnoe Darren 23 September 2011 DNA confirms Aboriginal culture one of Earth s oldest Australian Geographic a b Our people australia gov au Australian Government Indigenous Australians Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people IATSIS Australian Government 12 July 2020 Sigmond J P Zuiderbaan L H 1979 Dutch Discoveries of Australia Shipwrecks treasures and early voyages off the West Coast Adelaide Rigby Pearson Michael 2005 Great Southern Land The maritime exploration of Terra Australis Australian Government ISBN 0642551855 Cook s Journal Daily Entries 22 April 1770 Retrieved 21 September 2011 Young Emma 6 October 2011 Earthquakes in Australia Australian Geographic a b c d Swanson Louise Kriewaldt Jeana Ford Nicole Bowden Karen Harrison Adrian 18 November 2016 Geoactive 4 ed Jacaranda ISBN 9780730330325 Landforms of Australia Skwirk com au 2014 a b c Landforms Major Landforms and Divisions of Australia The Australian Environment Tikkanen Amy Great Dividing Range Britannica Monroe M 21 October 2016 Australia The Land Where Time Began austhrutime Kangaroo Press a b Australian Landforms and their History Government Document Geoscience Australia Australian Government 15 May 2014 Bowler James Wasson Robert 1984 Glacial age environments of inland Australia Late Cainozoic Palaeoclimates of the Southern Hemisphere 1 1 183 208 Knights P Hood M The minerals sector Parliament of Australia Australian Mineral Facts Geoscience Australia Australian Government 4 March 2018 Peak Downs Caval Ridge Coal Mines Thiess Cannington Silver and Lead Mine Queensland Mining Technology a b c Casey JP 7 March 2019 Super mines Australia s biggest mining projects Mining Technology Newmont 2020 Annual Report PDF Western Australia Newmont 31 December 2020 Worsley Alumina Refinery amp Boddington Bauxite Mine Site Tour PDF Western Australia South32 6 December 2018 Zhou Vanessa 13 May 2019 Rio Tinto cleared to expand West Angelas iron ore project Strate Worldwide de Atholia Timothy 19 March 2020 Renewable Energy Investment in Australia Bulletin Bulletin March Clean Energy Council Australia Clean Energy Australia Report 2022 PDF Clean Energy Australia Retrieved 8 September 2022 Number of Members Parliament of Australia Australian Government a b Documenting a Democracy Places Museum of Australian Democracy a b The Federation of Australia Parliamentary Education Office Commonwealth of Australia Defining Moments Federation National Museum of Australia Australian Government Federation and the National Capital Government Fact Sheet National Capital Authority Australian Government Coombes Jennifer 8 March 2013 The Naming of Canberra 1913 National Film and Sound Archive of Australia A quick history of Canberra Visit Canberra ACT Government 1 November 2019 27 S 133 E 27 S 133 E 27 133 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mainland Australia amp oldid 1192753830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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