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AUSTRALIA
Australia is a continent and it is also a country of its own. Australia
is located between the South Pacific and Indian Oceans. Australia is
often called, “the land down under,” because it lies entirely within the
southern hemisphere. In Latin, Australia means “southern.” The
official name of the country is “the Commonwealth of Australia.”
Australia is surrounded by water like an island, but geographers
classify it as a continent rather than an island because of its great
size. Australia covers about 5% of earth’s land area. Most of
Australia is low and flat, the highest and most mountainous land lies
along the east coast. Nearly all the land west of this region consists
of level plains and plateaus.
At one time, all the continents were part of one huge land mass.
Australia became separated from this landmass about 200 million years
ago. As a result, its animals developed differently from those on other
continents. Australia’s most famous native animals include kangaroos,
koalas, wallabies, wombats, and other marsupials.
Australia’s first settlers were ancestors of today’s Aborigines. They
may have reached the continent as early as 50 thousand years ago and
came from Asia by way of New Guinea. When the first whites arrived in
1788, about 750 thousand Aborigines lived in Australia. The European
discovery of Australia began with the discovery of New Guinea by
Portuguese and Spanish explorers during the 1500s. These explorers and
others after them were searching for a mysterious continent that they
believed lay south of Asia. Between 1616 and 1636 other Dutch
navigators explored Australia’s west, southwest, and northwest coasts.
Explorers then began to believe they had found the mysterious southern
continent. In 1642 and 1643, Abel Janszoon Tasman, a Dutch sea captain,
sailed the continent without sighting it. During his voyage, he
visited a landmass that he named Van Diemen’s Land.
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