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Queensland

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Queensland

State in northeast Australia, including the adjacent islands in the Pacific Ocean and in the Gulf of Carpentaria; bordered on the west by Northern Territory, on the southwest by South Australia, on the south by New South Wales, on the east by the Pacific Ocean, and on the extreme northwest by the Gulf of Carpentaria

Area:

1,727,200 sq km/666,699 sq mi

Capital:

Brisbane

Towns and Cities:

Toowoomba, Townsville, Cairns, Rockhampton, Bundaberg, Mackay, Ipswich, Maryborough

Features:

Second-largest of the Australian states; Great Dividing Range, including Mount Bartle Frere 1,622 m/5,321 ft; Great Barrier Reef (collection of coral reefs and islands about 2,000 km/1,250 mi long, off the east coast); Mount Isa mining area; Gold Coast, south of Brisbane; Sunshine Coast, north of Brisbane.

Products:

Sugar, wheat, pineapples, beef, cotton, wool, tobacco, copper, gold, silver, lead, zinc, coal, nickel, bauxite, uranium, natural gas, oil, fish

Population:

(1996) 3,368,850, concentrated in the southeast

History:

Visited by Captain Cook in 1770; first settlement a penal colony at Moreton Bay in 1824; opened to free settlers in 1842; part of New South Wales from 1788 to 1859, when it became self-governing.

Physical

Queensland's coastline is about 3,621 km/2,250 mi long, and is bordered by the Great Barrier Reef. The Great Dividing Range, stretching from Cape Melville on the northeast coast to New South Wales in the south, bisects the state vertically. A coastal range of old rocks, it is a continuation of the Australian Alps of Victoria and the Blue Mountains of New South Wales. The highest peaks are Bartle Frere (1,622 m/ 5,321 ft) and Bellenden Ker (1,591 m/5,220 ft) near Cairns, Mount Dalrymple (1,277 m/4,190 ft), and Mount Lindsay (1,233 m/4,045 ft), whilst the average height of the range is 600 m/1,968 ft. To the north of Cape Melville a flat ridge capped with sandstone runs through Cape York peninsula, gradually declining in height until it reaches Cape York. To the west of the Great Dividing Range the country is fairly flat, the great western plain extending west to the borders with Northern Territory and South Australia, and south to the New South Wales border. The principal rivers are the Brisbane, Burdekin, Mackenzie, Dawson, Isaac, and Burnett; the Norman, Flinders, Mitchell, Leichhardt, Diamantina, Barcoo (Cooper Creek ), and Warrego rivers flow intermittently, drying up in the dry season. Channel Country is an area of southwest Queensland in which channels such as Cooper Creek are cut by intermittent rivers.

Climate

The Tropic of Capricorn passes through the centre of Queensland, and the climate is tropical and subtropical. The wet season extends from about December to March. The rainfall on the east coast is as much as 3,425 mm/135 in a year at Innisfail, but is no more than 1,015 mm/40 in south of Port Curtis. The average rainfall of the Darling Downs is about 889 mm/35 in and on the western border about 220 mm/81/2 in. Much of this is ineffective because of high evaporation. The western plains have been tapped by artesian wells.

Agriculture

Queensland is still predominantly a primary agricultural producer, although, because of the arid conditions in much of the state only 2 million ha/5 million acres of the total area is cultivated. The major cultivated areas are on the coastal plains and valleys of the east coast where there are high temperatures and rainfall. Most of the total Australian sugar cane crop is grown in small fragmented areas of these coastal plains. A large part of the cultivated area of Queensland is planted with grains (550,000 ha/ 1,350,000 acres), the most important of which are wheat and grain sorghum (tropical cereal grasses, including millet). The major grain area is the Darling Downs, in the southeast of the state. Other crops include oats, peanuts, sunflowers, soya beans, maize, hay crops, sugar cane, ginger grapes, and other fruit (especially bananas and pineapples). The coastal plains and valleys are grazed by dairy cattle, while beef cattle are raised in the drier inland areas and fattened on the rich coastal pastures. Sheep are mainly concentrated in the dry central regions of the state.

 
     
 


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