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QUEENSLAND


'Queensland' is a state of Australia, occupying the north-eastern corner of the mainland continent.
It is neighboured by the Northern Territory to the west, South Australia to the south-west and New South Wales to the south. To the east, Queensland is bordered by the Coral Sea and Pacific Ocean. The state is Australia's second largest by area, following Western Australia, and the country's third most populous after New South Wales and Victoria.
The area was first colonised by Indigenous Australians and Torres Strait Islanders, who arrived between 40 000 and 65 000 years ago, according to various dating methods[1]. Later, Queensland was made a British Crown Colony that was separated from New South Wales on 6 June 1859, a date now celebrated annually as Queensland Day. The area that currently forms Brisbane was originally the Moreton Bay penal colony, intended as a place for recidivist convicts who had offended while serving out their sentences in New South Wales. The state later encouraged free settlement, and today Queensland's economy is dominated by the agricultural, tourist and natural resource sectors.
The population is concentrated in the south-east corner, which includes the capital Brisbane, Logan City, Ipswich, Toowoomba, and the Gold and Sunshine Coasts. Other major regional centres include Cairns, Townsville, Mackay, Rockhampton, Bundaberg, and Mount Isa. Queensland is often nicknamed the 'Sunshine State,' since it enjoys warm weather and a sizable portion of the state is in the tropics.

Contents
Etymology
Geography
Demographics
Economy
Tourism
Theme parks
Weather
Statistics
Landmarks
Transport
Government
History
Sister states
Universities
See also
References
External Links

Etymology


The state was named in honour of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom,[2] who, in 1859, signed the proclamation separating the state from New South Wales. At the time, Victoria was a generally popular monarch, and the successful name was preferred over ''Cooksland'', which was suggested by the influential local Presbyterian minister John Dunmore Lang.[3]

Geography



★ The state's borders are defined as:


★ 'North' The northernmost part of the state is the triangular Cape York Peninsula, which points toward New Guinea. The western side of the peninsula is washed by the Gulf of Carpentaria, while its eastern side borders the Coral Sea, an arm of the Pacific Ocean.


★ 'East' The eastern border is the Pacific Ocean


★ 'West' To the west, Queensland is bordered by the Northern Territory, at the 138° E. longitude, and to the south-west by the north-eastern corner of South Australia.


★ 'South' by New South Wales. This border has three sections:



★ The watershed from Point Danger to the Dumaresq River



★ The river section involving the Dumaresq, the MacIntyre and the Barwon



★ The 29° S. latitude, over to the South Australian border.
Queensland cities, towns, settlements and road network


★ State capital Brisbane, is located on the coast 100 kilometres (60 mi) by road north of the New South Wales border.

★ The fifth-largest city by area in the world, Mount Isa, is located in Queensland. The city area is in excess of 40,000 square kilometres (15,400 sq mi).

★ The state is divided into several officially recognised regions (''see Regions of Queensland''). Other smaller geographical regions of note include:


★ the Atherton Tablelands


★ the Granite Belt


★ the Channel Country in the far south-west.

★ Queensland has many places of natural beauty, including:


★ the Sunshine Coast and the Gold Coast having some of the state's most popular beaches


★ the Bunya Mountains and the Great Dividing Range with numerous lookouts, waterfalls and picnic areas.


Carnarvon Gorge


Whitsunday Islands and Hinchinbrook Island

★ The state contains five World Heritage listed preservation areas.


★ Australian Fossil Mammal Sites at Riversleigh in the Gulf Country


Central Eastern Rainforest Reserves


Fraser Island


Great Barrier Reef


Wet Tropics of Queensland
'Highest maximum temperature:' 49.5 °C (121.1 °F), Birdsville, 24 December 1972 (The temperature of 53.1 °C (127.5 °F) at Cloncurry on 16 January 1889 is not considered official, the figure quoted from Birdsville is the next highest, so that record is considered as being official).
'Lowest minimum temperature:' -11.0 °C (12.2 °F), Stanthorpe, 4 July 1895 [1]

Demographics


Queensland has a less centralised population than other states, with significant populations in regional cities such as Cairns

Queensland's population is less centralised in the capital city than the rest of the country. At 30 June 2004 the capital city represented 45.7% of the population; for the whole country, capital cities represented 63.8% of the total population.
Christian: 70.9% (Roman Catholic: 24.9%, Anglican: 22.3%, Uniting Church: 8.4%, Lutheran: 2.1%, Other: 13.2%), Non-Christian: 2.3% (Buddhism: 1.1%, Islam: 0.4%, Hinduism: 0.3%, Judaism: 0.1%, Other: 0.4%), No Religion: 14.8%, Not Stated: 12.0%
On Friday, 9 December 2005 the population of Queensland officially reached 4 million. Queensland is the fastest growing state in Australia, with over fifteen hundred people moving to the state per week. 1000 in the southern part of the state alone.
Once you calculate immigration and migration, (People Arriving in QLD-Minus-Queenslanders Leaving,) Queensland is left with a healthy number of people staying in Queensland. Predictions have been made to show that Queensland will become Australia's 2nd most populous state by the late 2020s. [4]

Economy


Glitz and palm trees.

Queensland's economy has enjoyed a boom in the tourism and mining industries over the last twenty years. A sizeable influx of and overseas migrants, large amounts of federal government investment, increased mining of vast mineral deposits and an ever expanding aerospace sector ensure that the state will remain Australia's fastest growing economy in the foreseeable future.
Between 1992 and 2002, the growth in the Gross State Product of Queensland outperformed that of all the other states and territories. In that period Queensland's GSP grew 5.0% each year, while growth in Australia's GDP rose on average 3.9% each year. Queensland's contribution to the Australian GDP also increased (by 10.4%) in that period, one of only three states to do so. [2]
In 2003 Brisbane city had the lowest cost of living of all Australia's capital cities. As of late 2005 Brisbane is the third most expensive capital for housing after Sydney and Canberra and just ahead of Melbourne by $15,000.
Primary industries include: bananas, pineapples, peanuts, a wide variety of other tropical and temperate fruit and vegetables, grain crops, wineries, cattle raising, cotton, sugar cane, wool and a mining industry including bauxite, coal and copper.
Secondary industries are mostly further processing of the above-mentioned primary produce: bauxite from Weipa is converted to alumina at Gladstone. There are also copper refining and the refining of sugar cane to sugar.
Major tertiary industries are the retail trade and tourism.

Tourism



Tourism is Queensland's leading tertiary industry with millions of interstate and overseas visitors flocking to the Sunshine State each year. Queensland is a state of many contrasts that range from sunny tropical coastal areas, lush rainforests to dry inland areas.
The main tourist destinations of Queensland include –

Gold Coast

Sunshine Coast

Fraser Island

Brisbane

Whitsundays (Airlie Beach, Whitehaven Beach, Hamilton Island, Daydream Island)

Far North Queensland (Cairns, Port Douglas,The Daintree)

North Stradbroke Island and South Stradbroke Island

★ The Great Barrier Reef
Theme parks

Crocodile show at the Australia Zoo

The Gold Coast of Queensland is also sometimes referred to as "Australia's Theme Park Capital", with five major amusement parks –

Dreamworld

Movie World

Sea World

Wet 'n' Wild

WhiteWater World
There are also wildlife parks - Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary and Australia Zoo (home of Steve Irwin until his death on September 4, 2006).
Weather

Whitehaven beach on Whitsunday Island

Queensland is drenched in sunshine, has warm seas, cool sea breezes and an enviable warm climate all year round; the weather in Queensland is incomparable to most other Australian states. The Queensland region has two weather seasons: a winter period of rather warm temperatures and minimal rainfall and a summer period of warm balmy temperatures and higher levels of rainfall.
The Average Summer Temperature in the South East of 19 to 29 degrees Celsius and the Average Winter Temperatures in the South East of 9 to 21 degrees Celsius. The averages for Tropical North Queensland do vary somewhat for winter with the Average Summer Temperature of 17-31 degrees Celsius and the Average Winter Temperature of 17-26 degrees Celsius.
Ozone depletion and the seasonal ozone hole has led to dangerously high levels of UV radiation, especially at the most extreme latitutudes of the southern hemisphere.[5]. Incidence of skin cancer in Queensland, has risen to 75 percent among those over 64 years of age by about 1990, due to thinning of the ozone layer.[6]
Statistics

Queensland is the second most popular overnight holiday destination in Australia for domestic travelers ($10.9 billion per year) with NSW taking the honours for 2006. Holidays in Queensland comprised of 18 754 000 combined visitor nights (23% Australian Market) with more than 60% of these room nights by residents from NSW and Victoria. Day visitors also contributed a further $2.5 billion.
The Sunshine Coast ($1.4 billion) and Tropical North Queensland ($1.3 billion) where Australia’s most visited regional areas for overnight and day visitors (excluding major cities and the Gold Coast).
The highest average overnight expenditure is in the Whitsundays ($1 295 per person per night)
Accommodation in Queensland caters for nearly 22% of the total expenditure, followed by Restaurants / Meals 15%, Airline Fares 11%, Fuel 11% and Shopping / Gifts 11% [7]

Landmarks


The view from Q1 over the Gold Coast

The Q1, located on the Gold Coast, is the tallest residential tower in the world, when measured to the top of its spire. It was completed in September, 2005.

Transport


Queensland is served by a number of National Highways and, particularly in South East Queensland, high quality motorways such as the M1. Rail services are provided by Queensland Rail and Pacific National, predominantly along the coastline.
Queensland has a number of major ports including the Port of Brisbane and subsidiary ports at Gladstone and Townsville amongst others. The Brisbane Airport, Gold Coast Airport and Cairns International Airport are the main gateways into the State from overseas, with domestic airports at Maroochydore,Rockhampton south and elsewhere.
South-East Queensland is governed by an integrated public transport system, TransLink, which provides bus, rail and ferry services. Regional bus and long-distance rail services are also provided throughout the State.

Government


Main articles: Government of Queensland

The Parliament of Queensland in Brisbane

Queen Elizabeth II is represented as head of state by the Governor, whom she appoints on the advice of the Premier. The current Governor is Ms Quentin Bryce, AC. The elected head of government is the Labor Premier, the Hon Peter Beattie, who appoints an Executive Council from the members of the 89-seat Legislative Assembly, known as Members of the Legislative Assembly (MPs).
The Queensland State Parliament, known as the Queensland Parliament or the Legislative Assembly is unicameral. It is the only Australian state with a unicameral legislature. A bicameral system existed until 1922, when the Legislative Council was abolished by the Labor members' "suicide squad," so called because they were appointed for the purpose of voting to abolish their own offices. Hanging was abolished in 1922.
In 2001 the state adopted a new codified constitution, repealing most of the assorted acts that had previously made up the constitution. The new constitution took effect on 6 June 2002, the anniversary of the formation of the independent colony of Queensland by the signing of Letters Patent by Queen Victoria in 1859.

History


Kanaka labourers on a plantation in the 1890s

Main articles: History of Queensland

The history of Queensland spans thousands of years, encompassing both a lengthy indigenous presence, as well as the eventful times of post-European settlement. Estimated to have been settled by Indigenous Australians approximately 40,000 years ago, the north-eastern Australian region was explored by Dutch, Portuguese and French navigators before being encountered by Captain James Cook in 1770. The state has witnessed the tragic events of frontier warfare between European settlers and Indigenous inhabitants, as well as the employment of cheap Kanaka labour sourced from the South Pacific. Likewise, it has experienced dynamic growth and progress since its separation from New South Wales in 1859, currently being the fastest-growing state in Australia.

Sister states


Queensland has one sister state:

South Carolina, United States of America[8]

Universities




University of Queensland

Bond University

Central Queensland University

James Cook University

University of Southern Queensland

University of the Sunshine Coast

Griffith University

Queensland University of Technology

Australian Catholic University (Brisbane campus)

See also



Governors of Queensland

Local Government Areas of Queensland

List of Queenslanders

Premiers of Queensland

Protected areas of Queensland (Australia)

Regions of Queensland

List of highways in Queensland

Queensland Council of Unions

List of schools in Queensland

Sport in Queensland

Queensland Expatriate Awards

Queensland Day

References


1. Dreaming Online: Indigenous Australian Timeline
2. Place Names
3. Dictionary of Australian Biography
4. ABS Statistics
5. Influences of ozone depletion on human and animal health. Chapter 4 in UV-B radiation and ozone depletion: Effects on humans, animals, plants, microorganisms, and materials, van der Leun, J. C., and F. R. de Gruijl, , , , 1993,
6. Al Gore, "Earth in the Balance, Ecology and the Human Spirit"', 1992
7. Tourism related information and statistics
8. Memorandums of Understanding between South Carolina and Queensland

External Links



Government of Queensland

Official Tourism site

Governor of Queensland

Parliament of Queensland

Premier of Queensland

Queensland Art Gallery

Translink - Public Transport in Queensland- Bus Train Ferry

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
Queensland Companies
Below is the list of travel companies in Queensland we have in our travel directory