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Tasmania

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Tasmania

formerly (1642-1856) Van Diemen's Land

Island in the Indian Ocean, southeast of Australia, separated from the mainland by Bass Strait; state of Australia

Area:

About 68,000 sq km/26,248 sq mi

Capital:

Hobart

Towns and Cities:

Launceston (chief port), Devonport, Burnie, Queenstown

Features:

The smallest of the Australian states; territory includes numerous smaller islands; World Heritage Area in the southwest; unique flora and fauna, including the Huon pine and the Tasmanian devil (a marsupial found only in Tasmania)

Products:

Wool, dairy products, apples and other fruit, processed foods, timber, paper, iron, tungsten, copper, silver, coal, cement

Population:

(1996) 459,700

History:

The first European to visit was Abel Tasman in 1642; British penal colony established at Risdon Cove in 1803; part of New South Wales until 1825; name changed to Tasmania in 1856; became a state of the Australian Commonwealth in 1901.

Territory

Over 50 islands are administered by Tasmania. The main ones are the Furneaux group, at the eastern end of Bass Strait, including Flinders Island, Cape Barren Island, and Clarke Island; Chappell Islands and the Kent group, at the eastern end of Bass Strait; the Hunter Islands, including King Island, at the western end of Bass Strait; Bruny Island and Maria Island, off the south and southeast coasts; the uninhabited, subarctic, volcanic Macquarie Island.

Physical

Tasmania was once joined to mainland Australia, but is now separated by Bass Strait, which is about 230 km/143 mi wide. The island's interior is mountainous, its two mountain chains being continuations of the Dividing Range of the mainland. The central plateau averages 915 m/3,000 ft in height, and contains Tasmania's highest peak, Mount Ossa (1,617 m/5,305 ft). Other peaks are Barn Bluff (1,560 m/5,118 ft), Mount Field West (1,430 m/4,692 ft), and Cradle Mountain (1,540 m/5,052 ft). The eastern range runs parallel with the east coast, and has an average height of 1,150m/3,773 ft. The highest peaks are Mount Barrow (1,400 m/ 4,593 ft) and Ben Lomond (1,573 m/ 5,161 ft).

In the south is Mount Wellington (1260 m/4,134 ft), at the foot of which stands Hobart. The central plateau is dotted with numerous freshwater lakes, the largest being the Great Lake (104 sq km/40 sq mi), which is 1,160 m/3,806 ft above sea level; other lakes include Lake Sorell (about 52 sq km/20 sq mi); Lake St Clair; Arthur Lake; and Lake Echo. These lakes form the headwaters of the rivers flowing south, west, and north. Among the main rivers is the Derwent, which issues from Lake St Clair and flows for about 210 km/ 130 mi to its estuary at Hobart, where there is a deep and sheltered harbour. Other rivers flowing into the Southern Ocean are the Huon (about 160 km/99 mi in length) on the south coast and the Arthur on the northwest coast. On the north of the island, flowing into Bass Strait, are the Mersey and the Tamar; the Tamar is navigable up to Launceston, 64 km/40 mi from its mouth. The rivers Gordon and King enter the sea on the west coast. The west coast of Tasmania is wild and rocky, but there are several accessible ports, including Port Davey (formerly used by whaling vessels), Pieman River, and Macquarie Harbour.

Climate

Tasmania has a temperate climate. The average temperature of Hobart in the hottest month is 17ºC/62ºF. The winter is cold enough to produce thin ice in the lowlands and snow in the mountains and plateaux. The average temperature in the coldest month is 8ºC/46ºF. The mean temperature for the year is 12ºC/54º F. The average rainfall is about 575 mm/23 in, but there is much variation in different districts, rainfall in the west sometimes reaching 4,318 mm/ 170 in a year.

Economy

Tasmania has a diverse economy, based on agriculture, mining, forestry, manufacturing, and tourism. Pasture land is used for grazing dairy cattle and sheep, and beef and cattle are major exports. The mild, moist climate is suitable for growing fruit and vegetables. Apples are the most important fruit crop, followed by pears, raspberries, and blackcurrants. The chief vegetable crops are peas, beans, and potatoes, and 80% of Australia's hops are grown in Tasmania. The climate is not suitable for large-scale cereal growing. Barley and oats are grown, but the amount of land sown with wheat is negligible.

Tasmania's forests have been exploited for the production of pulp, paper, and newsprint. Newsprint and paper are produced at Burnie, on the northwest coast, and Boyer; pulp and paper at Wesley Vale and Port Huon, 59 km/37 mi southwest of Hobart; and woodchips at Long Reach. Industrial gases (liquid oxygen and nitrogen) are manufactured at Hobart, Launceston, and Burnie.

The high rainfall and mountainous terrain of much of the island is ideal for the generation of hydroelectric power. This supplies all of the island's electricity requirements.

Tourism

Tourism makes a major contribution to the economy of Tasmania (it was estimated that 450,000 people visited the island in 1994). Many visitors are attracted to the national parks which cover more than 20% of the island. The largest of these is South West National Park, which is part of a vast World Heritage Area in the southwest of the island, recognized by UNESCO. This region includes the Franklin Lower Gordon Wild Rivers National Park and the Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park. Franklin River is a wilderness area saved from a hydroelectric scheme in 1983, and also has a prehistoric site. Port Arthur, a former penal settlement on the Tasman Peninsula on the south coast, 100 km /62 mi southeast of Hobart, also attracts many visitors. The area referred to as the `Land of a Thousand Lakes´ in central Tasmania is also a popular tourist destination, and the lakes are popular for angling and fishing.

 
     
 


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