- The mainland is the largest island and the world’s smallest, flattest continent.
- Australia is called the land down under because it is below the equator.
- Australia is made up of 6 states and 2 territories.
- 18.3 million people live there.
- Canberra is the capital of Australia.
- The weather in Australia is warm and pleasant.
- Apart from Antarctica, Australia is the driest continent.
- Coastline stretches almost 50,000 kilometres & is linked by over 10,000 beaches
- More than 85% of Australians live within 50 kilometres of the coast
- The middle part of the country is called the outback.
- There are about 10 times more sheep than people in Australia. Sheep are raised for wool and for meat.
- A ranch is known as a station. Stations are very big.
- The first people to live in Australia were aborigines. Aboriginal means first.
- Most famous animals are marsupials, a mammal that has a pouch to carry its young.
Until this time, Australia used Britain's flag.
A competition was held to find the design for Australia's own flag.

The black represents the Aboriginal people, the red the earth and their spiritual relationship to the land, and the yellow the sun, the giver of life.
Advance Australia Fair
Fun Facts
- Tasmania has the cleanest air in the world.
- The Great Barrier Reef has a mailbox. You can ferry out there and send a postcard, stamped with the only Great Barrier Reef stamp.
World’s largest opal, weighing 5.27 kg, was found in 1990
Merinos and cattle calls
Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef is home to
-World’s longest earthworm, stretching up to 4 metres or 13 feet.
Other Inventions
Koala

are only active for around 2 hours a day
get all their fluids from eating eucalyptus leaves.
sometimes stays in the same tree for days.
Possum

hide in a nest in a hollow tree during the day & foraging for food at night.
Aboriginal people used possum-skin to make cloaks

kookaburras have a stout and compact body, short neck, long & pointed bill and short legs.
are best known for their hysterical, human-sounding laughter at dusk and dawn.
They also often sing as a chorus to mark their territory and will eat almost everything.


The lyrebird is named after the male’s spectacular, 16-feathered tail, which was thought to resemble a lyre in the 1800s.
Tasmanian Devil

has a broad head, thick tail and coarse, black fur.
was given name by early European settlers,
world’s largest carnivorous marsupial
is actually a shy creature.
is Australia’s wild dog, though is not native to the continent.
are carnivores, commonly feeding on kangaroos, wallabies, cattle, wombats and possums.
are highly social creatures and form stable packs with clearly defined territories where possible.
communicate through howling and whimpering and bark less than domestic dogs.
Kangaroo

There are 55 kangaroo species spread across Australia.
Some kangaroos can jump 30 feet.

Emus grow up to two metres tall and have three toes and long legs that allow them to run very fast, up to 50km per hour.
The female emu is larger than the male and lays up to 20 large, dark green eggs. Emu feeds on grass, leaves and small insects.