Below is a list
of general facts of Australia |
Population:
Capital:
Major language:
Major religion:
LIfe expectancy:
Monetary unit:
Main exports:
Average annual income:
Int. dialing code: |
19
million
Canberra
English
Christianity
75 years (men), 81 years (women)
1 Australian dollar = 100 cents
Ores and metals; wool, food and live animals;
fuels, transport machinery and equipment
US $20,530
+61 |
| Most
people harbour a particular image of Australia,
such as the Opera House or blood-red Uluru
(Ayers Rock). Yet these famous icons do
scant justice to the richness of Australia's
natural treasures and its cultural diversity.
Australia offers a wealth of travel experiences,
from the vastness and drama of the outback,
to the spectacle of the Great Barrier Reef
and its islands, the cosmopolitanism of
Sydney and arguably some of the best beaches
in the world. Visitors expecting to see
an opera in Sydney one night and meet Crocodile
Dundee the next will have to re-think their
grasp of geography in this huge country.
It is this sheer vastness, and the friction
between the ancient land steeped in Aboriginal
lore and the New World cultures being heaped
upon it, which gives Australia much of its
character.
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Events
Christmas is part of the
long summer school vacation and during December
and January you can be forgiven for thinking
that half of Australia is on holiday. This
is when accommodation is almost always booked
out.
Australia's arts festivals
attract culture vultures from all over Australia
to see mainstream and fringe drama, dance,
music and visual arts. The huge Festival
of Sydney, which takes up most of January,
is the umbrella for a number of events from
open air concerts, to street theatre and
fireworks. The Adelaide Arts Festival takes
place at the beginning of March in even-numbered
years. In odd-numbered years, Womadelaide,
Adelaide's outdoor festival of world music
and dance, takes care of February. Melbourne
has a Comedy Festival in April, the world's
biggest Writers' Festival in September and
the fabulous Melbourne International Festival
in October. A couple of festivals to celebrate
Aboriginal arts and culture include the
Stompen Ground Festival, which is held in
Broome in October and the Barunga Wugularr
Sports & Cultural Festival, held near
Katherine in June.
Sporty fun includes Darwin's
Beer Can Regatta in August, when a series
of boat races are held for craft constructed
entirely of beer cans; Alice Springs holds
the Henley-on-Todd, a boat race 'run' on
a dry river bed. More mainstream events
include the Sydney to Hobart yacht race
(from Boxing Day); the Australian Open tennis
championship (Melbourne in January); the
Australian Grand Prix (Melbourne in March);
Australian Rules Football (around the country
from March to September); and the country-stopping
Melbourne Cup on the first Tuesday in November.
Gay festivals include
Sydney's massive, outlandish Gay & Lesbian
Mardi Gras, in February/March, and Melbourne's
January/February Midsumma Festival.
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