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Australia
Australia is the lowest and flattest
of the continents and has no high mountains despite
its vast extent. Approximately three-quarters of its
area is covered by a plateau that rarely rises above
500m. The Great Western Plateau is mostly desert or
semi-arid scrub country. the few uplands occurring there
are mere pimples on the extensive peneplain. The ancient
shield topography is missing only in the east where
a chain of low ranges runs parallel to the coastline.
The western uplands include the Hamersley Range in the
north and the Stirling Range in the extreme south. The
Hamersley and its eastern extension, the Opthalmia Range,
are aligned east-west with Mount Bruce (1,235m) being
the high point. The rocks are mainly Palaeozoic crystallines.
The climate is subtropical with summer rain. The Stirling
Range near the south coast is a small lava outcrop capped
by Bluff Knoll (1,167m). This area has a temperate climate
favoured with winter rainfall.
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| 18.Kangaroo, Australia _ Kangaroos in eucalyptus
forest near Flinders Range. This marsupial of the
family Macropodidae is native to Australia
and nearby islands. |
The central uplands are ringed by deserts
in all four directions. These are all low hills with
a predominantly north-east strike. The Macdonnell Ranges
in the north and Musgrave Ranges in the south enclose
the dry lake of Amadeus. Much of these upland areas
are designated as Abo riginal Reserves and there are
seven in all. The only range in South Australia, Flinders'
Range, trends north-south along a structural fault fronting
Spencer Gulf near Adelaide (Plate 18). The highest point
is St. Mary Peak (1,165m). The nearby uplands, known
as Barrier Range to the east and Gawler Range to the
west, are merely low knolls approaching 500m. These
are of much-eroded Palaeozoic rock formations with ridges
of hard quartzite.
The Great Dividing Range extends over
3,200 km from Cape York Peninsula in the north to Bass
Strait in the south. It is an eroded plateau ranging
from 900 to 1,500m. The highest point, Mt. Kosciusko
(2,230m), in the extreme south, was named in 1840 after
Thaddeus Kosciusko, a Polish revolutionary. The topography
is subdued with rolling hills. The island of Tasmania
has some small mountains. The main range lies west of
the Great Lake and has a number of peaks. The highest
peak, Legges Tor (1,573m), is an outlier far to the
east. Despite their low elevation, these mountains are
considered to be of great interest owing to their luxuriant
native flora. Thus, the small island has four national
parks centred around the highlands.
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