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Australia Travel Guide - Overview
Vast, diverse and enticing, multicultural
Australia revels in a Pacific Rim location that drenches it in sunshine
and an affable charisma.
Sydney boasts the finest natural
harbour in the world, comprising sandstone headlands, white sandy
beaches and endless surf. Melbourne's
Victorian grace and easygoing charm belies a dynamic city that
hosts the nation's premier sporting and cultural events.
Brisbane, the river city, is gateway to
the tropical northeast, Adelaide is an
impossibly well laid-out city oozing grandeur, while
Perth is young, brash and alluring.
Australia may be an island, but it is also the world's largest one,
encompassing a range of stunning landscapes, from immense, barren
deserts to tropical
rainforests and rugged
mountains. Isolated from other
continents, Australia has an abundance of unique plant and animal life
recognisable by cuddly koalas, bounding
kangaroos and ungainly
emus.
One of the country's greatest lures is its sense of space. A beach,
patch of tropical forest or piece of sandy desert all to yourself is an
easy reality. Watersports are
ferociously popular, especially surfing.
The hulking form of Uluru (Ayers Rock),
an impossibly large rock plonked in the middle of Australia that soaks
up the reds and oranges of the outback's fiery sun, is Australia's most
iconic image.
Captain Cook stumbled onto Australian shores in 1770 to find an
Aboriginal way of life that went back some 40,000 years. By 1868,
Britain had sent more than 160,000 convicts to Australia.
Experiencing the culture of Australia's
indigenous population is one of the great highlights of a visit.
Many tensions still exist between mainstream Australia and its
indigenous people. The first European settlers treated the Aboriginal
population with appalling brutality, which gave way to racist and cruel
policies from subsequent administrations. However, the slow march
towards reconciliation was given a
boost in 2007 with the new government's promise of a formal apology

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