In view of their similar paths of historical development, any modest differences are likely to arise from the differing physical geographies of the 6 States that make up Australia. In the case of Queensland, the major shaping influences have been its large size, spread of resources along the coast and also across a vast interior, northern location and tropicality, and distance from major external influences. -J.Sheai
Queensland has been Australia’s fastest growing State in percentage terms and often in numerical ter...
<p>Map of Australia, showing the two different regions in this study–the Great Barrier Reef on the N...
[Extract] During the late 1850s, pastoralists in New South Wales were pushing the boundaries of sett...
This is the first volume of the fourth series of the Queensland Geographical Journal. Using a system...
The development of the State capital has been influenced by the character of the site on which it st...
As essayist and literary critic Nettie Palmer put it, in 1927, ‘Queensland is notoriously huge: most...
Islands are an integral part of how Queensland is imagined, perceived and portrayed. While islands h...
When Queensland became its own colony in December 1859, John Dunmore Lang (1799-1878), a Scottish Pr...
Australia is comprised of a federation of six states and two territories. While the states and terri...
The structure of the main regions in Queensland, some notable regions include: 1) Southeast Queensla...
The first forty-six years of my life were spent in Ipswich and Brisbane; the territory has imprinted...
Covers information on early Queensland, the Queensland government, schools and education, infrastruc...
Queensland is governed from a state capital located a great distance from the majority of its land a...
Despite different political structures and planning systems, striking physical similarities exist be...
Queensland is governed from a state capital located a great distance from the majority of its land a...
Queensland has been Australia’s fastest growing State in percentage terms and often in numerical ter...
<p>Map of Australia, showing the two different regions in this study–the Great Barrier Reef on the N...
[Extract] During the late 1850s, pastoralists in New South Wales were pushing the boundaries of sett...
This is the first volume of the fourth series of the Queensland Geographical Journal. Using a system...
The development of the State capital has been influenced by the character of the site on which it st...
As essayist and literary critic Nettie Palmer put it, in 1927, ‘Queensland is notoriously huge: most...
Islands are an integral part of how Queensland is imagined, perceived and portrayed. While islands h...
When Queensland became its own colony in December 1859, John Dunmore Lang (1799-1878), a Scottish Pr...
Australia is comprised of a federation of six states and two territories. While the states and terri...
The structure of the main regions in Queensland, some notable regions include: 1) Southeast Queensla...
The first forty-six years of my life were spent in Ipswich and Brisbane; the territory has imprinted...
Covers information on early Queensland, the Queensland government, schools and education, infrastruc...
Queensland is governed from a state capital located a great distance from the majority of its land a...
Despite different political structures and planning systems, striking physical similarities exist be...
Queensland is governed from a state capital located a great distance from the majority of its land a...
Queensland has been Australia’s fastest growing State in percentage terms and often in numerical ter...
<p>Map of Australia, showing the two different regions in this study–the Great Barrier Reef on the N...
[Extract] During the late 1850s, pastoralists in New South Wales were pushing the boundaries of sett...