Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Queensland tropical rain forests ecoregion (WWF ID: AA0117) covers a portion of the coast of Queensland in northeastern Australia and belongs to the Australasian realm. The forest contains the world's best living record of the major stages in the evolutionary history of the world's land plants, including most of the world's relict species ...
Module:Location map/data/Australia Queensland is a location map definition used to overlay markers and labels on an equirectangular projection map of Queensland. The markers are placed by latitude and longitude coordinates on the default map or a similar map image.
Tropical Queensland is a region of the state of Queensland, Australia that lies north of latitude 23.5 degrees South in the tropical latitude. It contains Tropical North Queensland including Far North Queensland , North Queensland and Mackay Region as well as the Gulf Country in the west and parts of Central Queensland .
On 9 November 2012, the Australian Government also acknowledged the Indigenous heritage of the area as being nationally significant. The Aboriginal Rainforest People of the Wet Tropics of Queensland have lived continuously in the rainforest environment for at least 5000 years, and this is the only place in Australia where Aboriginal people have permanently inhabited a tropical rainforest ...
မေႃႇၵျူး:Location map/data/Australia Queensland/doc; Usage on simple.wikipedia.org Module:Location map/data/Australia Queensland; Module:Location map/data/Australia Queensland/doc; Usage on si.wikipedia.org Module:Location map/data/Australia Queensland; Module:Location map/data/Queensland; Module:Location map/data/Australia ...
Great Basalt Wall is a national park in Queensland, Australia, 1124 km northwest of Brisbane.This national park protects 35,200 ha of land containing the Great Basalt Wall, a geological formation of the Toomba flow.
Woombye is located on the Sunshine Coast hinterland in Queensland, Australia, approximately 100 kilometres (62 mi) north of the Brisbane CBD.The name is derived from words from the local Aboriginal language - a place (wumbai) of black snake, or (wambai) black myrtle or axe handle made from black myrtle.
Map of Australia and New Zealand showing the progress of the dust affected area and dust plume at various intervals. According to the New South Wales regional director of the Bureau of Meteorology, Barry Hanstrum, the cause was an "intense north low-pressure area" which "picked up a lot of dust from the very dry interior of the continent". [11]