Australia is the smallest , flattest , driest inhabited continent in the world ! Is the only country that is also a whole continent !!The wombat deposits SQUARE POOS lol on logs ,rocks even upright sticks to mark its territory !!!Emus and Kangaroos cannot walk backwards and are on our coat of arms for that reason !!Australia's name comes from a Latin word Terra Australis Incognito which means Unknown southern land !Australia was founded by Convicts and has a homicide rate of 1.8 percent for 100,000 population , America which was founded by religion zealots has 6.3 percent / 100,000 which is 400% greater then Australia :)... It is estimated that 50% of Australians aged between 14- 19 are active cannabis users !!! The box Jelly fish is known as the worlds most venomous marine creature and has killed more Australians then sharks , crocodiles , and stone fish combined ( scary ) lol monotremes lay eggs and suckles its young , Australia has the only two that exist in the world :P platypus and the echidna!! the Australian Lyre bird can mimic the sounds of other birds calls and string the calls together to make a melody have been known to mimic cell phones too !!! there are my 10 lol hope it helps !!!
2007-04-04 00:07:06
·
answer #1
·
answered by yoursandmine05 2
·
1⤊
1⤋
1. The states of Queensland, New South Wales and Western Australia are all considerably larger than Texas and most western European countries. The Bauhinia Shire in Queensland is a local government area like a US county, but is bigger then Belgium.
2. Queensland has the largest and most profitable narrow-gauge railway system in the world.
3. Alice Springs, a town near the centre of the continent is named for Mrs. Alice Todd, the wife of Mr. Charles Todd, the head of the South Australian postal and telegraph system in the late 19th century who pushed the idea of an overland telegraph line right across the continent. It was completed in 1872. Their daughter married a physics professor from the Adelaide University, William Henry Bragg. W.H Bragg made one of the first wireless telegraph messages in Austalia and when his son William Lawrence fell from his tricycle and broke his arm, his father used the X-rays to find the break. That was in 1895 and was probably the first medical use of X-rays anywhere in the world.
In 1915 William Henry and William Lawrence were awarded the Nobel Prize for their work in X-ray crystallography. William Lawrence is still the youngest ever Nobel Prize winner. In the 1950s he headed the laboratory in Cambridge, England where the structure of DNA was worked out, mainly using X-ray crystallography.
4. A few days after the "First Fleet" arrived in January 1788, a French expedition arrived at what is now Sydney.
5. It has been said that the Maori of New Zealand knew there was land to the west because they had seen smoke from Australian bushfires blowing eastwards.
6. There are no active volcanoes in Australia.
7. Male bower birds of Australia and New Guinea constructs a flat patch of bare ground between high grass. They decorate the area with white and blue objects, often snail shells, but they will also take blue clothes pegs off washing lines. This is part of the mating process. Anyone who collects a lot of clutter may be called a "bower bird".
8. Though Australia is usually said by the ignorant to have been colonised by convicts, by the time convict transportation ceased in 1860 far more free settlers had come to the country.
9. Australia has an answer to the sasquatch or bigfoot and the yeti. Here they are called "yowies" and are thought to inhabit heavily forested hilly regions. According to some accounts they smell like burning rubber. Though most of those who have claimed to have seen them are considered to be reliable people, some doctors have noted that a smell of burning rubber is a characteristic of some mild forms of a brain condition related to epilepsy.
10. The "bionic ear" was invented in Australia.
11. The theory of clonal selection was originated by Australian immunologists and is central to a modern understanding of immunology.
12. In 1890 Professor (later Sir) Richard Threlfall, professor of physics and chemical engineering at Sydney University, predicted that the researches of Heinrich Hertz into electromagnetic waves would lead to a system of long distance signalling. This was one or two years before anyone else in the world thought of it.
2007-04-04 03:14:16
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
" They didn't allow aborogines to vote until 1971!! "
Total bollocks! Aborigines were granted the vote at Federation in 1901 but it was declared later that only those who had the vote in 1901 could vote. This disenfranchised later generations. In South Australia and New South Wales they always had the vote and gradually other States granted the vote. Federally, Aborigines were given the vote by Menzies in 1963 and the last State to grant the vote was Queensland in 1965. Australia has been a democracy with full adult suffrage everywhere for 42 years.
2007-04-04 01:27:03
·
answer #3
·
answered by tentofield 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Back in the 1950's a group of university artists decided that they would have an annual festival to promote the Arts. They decided to give it a really cool name for it and decided it should be Aboriginal. The went to an Aboriginal settlement on the outskirts of the city, one of the many that were run down because of government neglect and general apathy of the rest of society. The approached an Aboriginal leader and explained their mission. He replied, 'Moomba', and they retired back to theirt middle class suburbs gratefully and the annual arts festival has ever since been known as the 'Moomba Festival'.
'Moomba', in the elder's local dialect meant : 'Get stuff white man!'
2007-04-03 23:24:12
·
answer #4
·
answered by John M 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
In October 1984 a group of nine Aborigines was discovered in the forbidding Great Sandy Desert who still walked around naked and had never seen a car or shotgun before! They were in fact not lost at all but just living a nomadic lifestyle and surviving just fine. But their "discovery" was considered huge news in an age like 1984 where people considered the world explored and charted.
During the 1950's the British were firing rockets from Woomera direction west and thought it was best to move the local Pintupi tribe Aborigines out of the area so they relocated them up to the Northern Territory and north west Western Australia. They did not fare well there and alcohol did its damage. But during the 1970s when Aborigines were given landrights they started making plans to return to their home lands and in 1981 the Pintupi traveled to Kintore near the Western Australia border to set up a community. Later they crossed the border as their actual homeland lay further west and so it happened that in 1984 when Pinta Pinta and his family were setting up a settlement at Winparrku that they were spotted by Piyiti and Warlimpirrnga, who were scared by their car, intrigued by their clothes, and angry about them invading their land. They met but initially did not know they all originated from the same tribe and there was a tense stand-off where they were frightened of eachother and a gunshot was fired. This caused the settlers to flee and, on a flat tyre, they drove 60 km. back to the others to tell them what they had seen, still thinking they had seen ghosts or scorcerers. Fortunately Freddy West Tjakamarra knew of a family that had never come in to let themselves be transported by the British and they felt sorry for 'the naked ones' as they called them and decided to look for them. It took them some time as the two had gone on the run north, having been vary scared by the shotgun, and they tried to hide their tracks. The trackers even stripped naked as they thought the group might be scared by clothed people. They started finding more tracks of another seven people and eventually they found an exhausted older woman hiding in the spinifex, with a man nearby ready to throw a spear. Finally as tensions settled the group was given the choice of coming in with them or staying there and they opted to come in. Most of them reluctantly climbed in the vehicle but several jogged behind the vehicles. The tiny settlement of Kiwirrkurra where they arrived was not exactly the highlight of civilization but still in comparison to their previous lifestyle there were many modern conveniences to discover, like matches, blankets, sugar, oranges, and within several days they all had colds and were coughing and sneezing. The group was actually under threat from inbreeding at that time as the genepool had run dangerously low being isolated all that time, normally Aborigines have a complicated skin classification system to avoid this. Some of them died in the next few years due to medical problems and some moved on to become well known artists.
2007-04-04 00:58:18
·
answer #5
·
answered by skye 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
there is room to bypass, barbeques take place each weekend, (great for making new acquaintances), and kangaroos do no longer hop down the main highway in cities! different than that attempt Australia residing house on your nearest capital!
2016-10-20 23:49:11
·
answer #6
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Melbourne once was the capital before they made Canberra!
2007-04-04 02:51:00
·
answer #7
·
answered by rach 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
They didn't allow aborogines to vote until 1971!!
2007-04-03 23:32:59
·
answer #8
·
answered by mareeclara 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
It is big hot and full of poisonous snakes and crocks!
2007-04-03 23:21:36
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
1⤋
yoursandmine05 is a wanker is all i can come up with (wombat crap is square)laughing at that too much to help you sorry
2007-04-04 00:14:27
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋