World Travel Guide
 
 
Travel Information
Contact Addresses
General Information
Public Holidays
Travel - International
Accommodation
Sport & Activities
Social Profile
Business Profile
Climate
Passport/Visa
Money
Duty Free
Public Holidays
Health
Maps
 
Regions and Cities
Introduction - Overview
National Parks
 
Tools
Printable Miniguide
 
 
 
Home  >  World  > Australia and South Pacific  > Australia  > Tasmania

General Information

Area: 68,400 sq km (26,409 sq miles).

Population: 470,100 (official estimate 2000).

Population Density: 6.9 per sq km.

Capital: Hobart. Population: 194,200 (official estimate 1999).

GEOGRAPHY: A separate island located 240km (149 miles) south of Melbourne across Bass Strait. Roughly heart-shaped, Tasmania is 296km (184 miles) long, ranging from 315km (196 miles) wide in the north to 70km (44 miles) in the south. The island has a diverse landscape comprising rugged mountains (snowcapped in winter), dense bushland (including the Horizontal Forest, so-called because the tree trunks are bent over parallel to the ground), tranquil countryside and farmland. Approximately 40 per cent of Tasmania is taken up by national parks, half of this being the UNESCO-listed temperate wilderness in the west of the island. Located midway between Victoria and the northwest of Tasmania in Bass Strait lies King Island. This rich and fertile island, famous for its beef and dairy products, is regularly serviced by air carriers and is a popular tourist destination. To the northeast of Tasmania, also in Bass Strait, can be found Flinders Island, part of the Furneaux group of islands. Flinders Island is also popular with visitors and is particularly noted for its excellent coastal fishing and pristine beaches. Bruny Island, south of Hobart across the D’Entrecasteaux Channel, has superb beaches. The two parts of the island are joined by a narrow isthmus of sand-dunes, the home of Fairy Penguins from August to April.

Time: GMT + 10 (GMT + 11 from first Sunday in October to last Saturday in March).


Copyright © 2003 Columbus Publishing Ltd. Terms and Conditions apply.