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Australia - Fun Facts
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Feb 3, 2022 15:49:12   #
dancers Loc: melbourne.victoria, australia
 
anotherview wrote:
Interesting set of facts. Note: If you find yourself in the presence of Australians, then soon enough one of their number will start this chant in unison: "Aussie, Aussie Aussie."
They say it with gusto.


I have heard it only at sports..................and I avoid sports. Australia IS a wonderful place to live..I'n never gonna move!

Reply
Feb 3, 2022 16:20:43   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
robertjerl wrote:
Aw, but 1000+ years ago when sailors from Iceland first saw Greenland the climate was warmer than today and the coast an coastal valleys were Green. Plus a few of those sailors were their day's "real estate developers" and Greenland was a good name to attract settlers. But the over the next few centuries the "Little Ice Age" started and almost all of the settlements eventually failed with many of the people adapting the life style of the indigenous peoples. (Eskimos to most those there are many different tribes.)
Aw, but 1000+ years ago when sailors from Iceland ... (show quote)

And here I thought that they named Iceland so they wouldn't get a bunch of tourists....
Go to Greenland.

Reply
Feb 3, 2022 18:34:52   #
robertjerl Loc: Corona, California
 
RiJoRi wrote:
You need a warning at the top for Texans! 😉

Does anyone know when 'Stralia graduated from sub-continent to continent?

--Rich


I am 76 and it was listed and taught as one of the 7 continents my whole life.
Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, South America

Now today many amend that to 6 continents with Europe and Asia becoming Eurasia. since the divide of those two is cultural and historic, not geographic. The old divide was at the Ural mountains which even as a kid didn't make sense to me when I looked at a map as those mountains don't really divide that huge landmass.

Reply
 
 
Feb 3, 2022 19:01:55   #
robertjerl Loc: Corona, California
 
Longshadow wrote:
And here I thought that they named Iceland so they wouldn't get a bunch of tourists....
Go to Greenland.


Iceland has had several names in the past:
A Viking named Naddodur was the first Noreseman to reach Iceland, arriving in the ninth century. He was blown off course westwards from the Faroes. In the autumn, he was surprised that it began to snow heavily on the mountains and he returned to the Faroes, naming the island ‘Snowland Snaeland’.

A Swedish Viking named Gardar arrived in A.D 860 and settled briefly in the north at Husavik. Not only did he name the bay where he built a house, but also named the island after himself, ‘Gardarsholmur’.

Not long after, a Norwegian Viking called Floki set sail for Gardarsholmur with his family and livestock and settled in the west of the island. He spent the summer fishing and hunting but forgot to harvest hay for his animals and his attempt at a settlement failed. The sagas say that a despondent Floki climbed a high mountain and saw a fjord full of drift ice from Greenland. It was this ice and not the island’s icecaps that prompted the disgruntled settler to name it ‘Iceland‘ and talk badly of it back home in Norway.
Floki's name stuck.
However European scholars and mapmakers being fond of Latin in those days labeled it several things, among them:
Islandia—directly from Icelandic language "Ísland"
Snelandia—a Latinization of the more poetic name Snæland
Insula Gardari—literally meaning "Island of Garðar", compare Garðarshólmi

In spite of having a land area nearly the same as the US State of Kentucky the nation of Iceland has under 370,000 people giving it a population density of just 3 people per kilometer (8/square mile)/the same as Australia.

Reply
Feb 3, 2022 19:09:51   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
robertjerl wrote:
Iceland has had several names in the past:
A Viking named Naddodur was the first Noreseman to reach Iceland, arriving in the ninth century. He was blown off course westwards from the Faroes. In the autumn, he was surprised that it began to snow heavily on the mountains and he returned to the Faroes, naming the island ‘Snowland Snaeland’.

A Swedish Viking named Gardar arrived in A.D 860 and settled briefly in the north at Husavik. Not only did he name the bay where he built a house, but also named the island after himself, ‘Gardarsholmur’.

Not long after, a Norwegian Viking called Floki set sail for Gardarsholmur with his family and livestock and settled in the west of the island. He spent the summer fishing and hunting but forgot to harvest hay for his animals and his attempt at a settlement failed. The sagas say that a despondent Floki climbed a high mountain and saw a fjord full of drift ice from Greenland. It was this ice and not the island’s icecaps that prompted the disgruntled settler to name it ‘Iceland‘ and talk badly of it back home in Norway.
Floki's name stuck.
However European scholars and mapmakers being fond of Latin in those days labeled it several things, among them:
Islandia—directly from Icelandic language "Ísland"
Snelandia—a Latinization of the more poetic name Snæland
Insula Gardari—literally meaning "Island of Garðar", compare Garðarshólmi

In spite of having a land area nearly the same as the US State of Kentucky the nation of Iceland has under 370,000 people giving it a population density of just 3 people per kilometer (8/square mile)/the same as Australia.
Iceland has had several names in the past: br A Vi... (show quote)

And Iceland is a wondrous magical place!
I REALLY want to go back to it.

Reply
Feb 3, 2022 19:55:12   #
robertjerl Loc: Corona, California
 
Longshadow wrote:
And Iceland is a wondrous magical place!
I REALLY want to go back to it.


I have heard and in pictures seen it is beautiful.
Hope you get your wish and make it back.

Reply
Feb 3, 2022 20:02:39   #
SX2002 Loc: Adelaide, South Australia
 
Not so sure about No.31...New Zealand has that honour but I've never heard of Australia having that ratio...
Australia has always been a continent...it might be the smallest but still officially a continent.
As for our dangerous "things", spiders jelly fish, etc, etc, most of these things I've never seen in my life (outside a museum or zoo)..people won't visit here because they are afraid of them but I can assure you, there is absolutely no need to be scared. And I've spent a lot of time in the bush doing photography.

Reply
 
 
Feb 3, 2022 20:06:09   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
robertjerl wrote:
I have heard and in pictures seen it is beautiful.
Hope you get your wish and make it back.

Thanks.
Yea, we did December, now I want to do June(ish).

Reply
Feb 4, 2022 00:26:25   #
Starman441 Loc: Iguana Land, Fl.
 
jerryc41 wrote:
I knew some of these, but not all.

Check out these fun and interesting facts about Australia. How many did you know?

1. The Australian Alps get more snow than the Swiss Alps.

2. 90% of Australians live on the coast.

3. Tasmania has the cleanest air in the world.

4. The Great Barrier Reef is the largest ecosystem in the world. It is made up of nearly 3,000 individual reefs and can be seen from space.

5. Australia has over 60 separate wine regions.

6. Fraser Island is the largest sand island in the world.

7. The Indian Pacific train has the longest straight section of train track in the world.

8. The Great Ocean Road is the world’s largest war memorial.

9. 80% of Australian animals are unique to Australia.

10. 5 km of Uluru is underground.

11. Australia has the world’s longest golf course measuring more than 1,350kms long.

12. Australia is home to 21 of the world’s 25 most venomous snakes.

13. Perth is the only city in the world which can have aircraft land in its CBD.

14. Australia is bigger than we realise, it’s almost the same size as mainland USA.

15. The largest cattle station in the world is located in Australia, Anna Creek Ranch in South Australia, and it’s bigger than Israel.

16. The first Police Force in Australia was made up of the most well-behaved convicts.

17. It would take around 29 years to visit one new Aussie beach every day – there are 10,685 of them!

18. AFL invented to keep cricketers fit in the off season, there are claims that the game may have been influenced by Indigenous Australians.

19. The world’s largest rock is not actually Uluru, but Mount Augustus in Western Australia, and is actually twice the size of Uluru.

20. Australia is the 6th largest country in the world

21. There are 1 million camels that roam wild in Australia’s deserts, the largest number of purebred camels in the world, they are exported to the Middle East.

22. You can fly from Perth to Melbourne faster than you can fly from one end of Western Australia to the other.

23. There are over 60 different types of kangaroos, and a baby kangaroo when born is only about 2 centimetres long.

24. Aboriginal culture is the oldest on Earth – it is estimated that the continent’s original inhabitants, the aboriginal people, have been in Australia for between 40,000-60,000 years.

25. Australia has 19 World Heritage Listed sites.

26. 91% of the country is covered by native vegetation.

27. 33% of Australians were born in another country.

28. Over 300 different languages and dialects are spoken in Australia including 45 Indigenous languages. In fact, 21% of Australians don’t speak English at home!

29. WA is home to what is believed to be the oldest evidence of life on Earth – the Stromatolites.

30. Australia is the only continent in the world without an active volcano.

31. In Australia, sheep out number people 2.5 to 1 (in 2020).

32. Australia was the second country in the world to give women the right to vote in 1902.

33. Per capita, Australians spend more money on gambling than any other nation, with over 80 percent of Australian adults engaging in gambling of some kind.

34. Canberra was selected as the capital because Sydney and Melbourne could not stop arguing which city should be the capital.

35. Australia is home to the longest fence in the world, the Dingo Fence. Originally built to keep dingos away from fertile land, the fence is now 5,614 km long.

36. The Australian dollar is considered to be the most advanced currency in the world – it’s waterproof, made of polymer and notoriously hard to counterfeit.

37. Australia is the only continent covered by a single country.

38. The world’s oldest fossil was discovered in Australia – 3.4 billion years old.

39. Australia has around 600 varieties of eucalypt trees.

40. Australia was one of the founding members of the United Nations.

41. Stonemasons in Australia instituted the 8-hour working day back in 1856.

42. In Aboriginal culture women are not allowed to play to the didgeridoo.

43. The venom of the elusive platypus can kill a small dog.

44. Australia’s most deadly marine animal is the Box Jellyfish, and is responsible for more deaths per year than snakes, sharks and saltwater crocodiles.

45. The only two mammals in the world that lay eggs are found in Australia – the echidna and platypus.

46. Before the arrival of humans, Australia was home to megafauna, three-metre tall kangaroos, seven-metre long goanna’s, horse-sized ducks, and a marsupial lion the size of a leopard.

47. Both kangaroos and emus lack the ability to walk backwards. This was the reason they were chosen for Australia’s coat of arms – to symbolize a country always moving forward.

48. The termite mounds that can be found in Australia are the tallest animal-made structures on earth.

49. Australia is home to more than 1,500 species of spiders.

50. The Great Victoria Desert is bigger than the whole of the United Kingdom.
I knew some of these, but not all. br br Check ou... (show quote)


Thanks for posting. A great read.

Reply
Feb 4, 2022 05:43:24   #
Manglesphoto Loc: 70 miles south of St.Louis
 
Longshadow wrote:
Re: number 6 - Did Greenland shrink?


Is Greenland a SAND island?

Reply
Feb 4, 2022 05:45:03   #
Manglesphoto Loc: 70 miles south of St.Louis
 
Longshadow wrote:
Sorry, Iceland is the largest island.

I had a brain fart, what else can I say.
(Iceland is green and Greenland is ice.)


That happens when you have to get out of bed before breakfast

Reply
 
 
Feb 4, 2022 07:11:30   #
nimbushopper Loc: Tampa, FL
 
Wow, interesting indeed!

Reply
Feb 4, 2022 08:35:42   #
markngolf Loc: Bridgewater, NJ
 
newvy wrote:
They will respond with ouy ouy ouy!!! (WITH GUSTO)


My Jewish grandmothers said that frequently!!
Mark

Reply
Feb 4, 2022 08:39:24   #
SteveR Loc: Michigan
 
jerryc41 wrote:
I knew some of these, but not all.

Check out these fun and interesting facts about Australia. How many did you know?

1. The Australian Alps get more snow than the Swiss Alps.

2. 90% of Australians live on the coast.

3. Tasmania has the cleanest air in the world.

4. The Great Barrier Reef is the largest ecosystem in the world. It is made up of nearly 3,000 individual reefs and can be seen from space.

5. Australia has over 60 separate wine regions.

6. Fraser Island is the largest sand island in the world.

7. The Indian Pacific train has the longest straight section of train track in the world.

8. The Great Ocean Road is the world’s largest war memorial.

9. 80% of Australian animals are unique to Australia.

10. 5 km of Uluru is underground.

11. Australia has the world’s longest golf course measuring more than 1,350kms long.

12. Australia is home to 21 of the world’s 25 most venomous snakes.

13. Perth is the only city in the world which can have aircraft land in its CBD.

14. Australia is bigger than we realise, it’s almost the same size as mainland USA.

15. The largest cattle station in the world is located in Australia, Anna Creek Ranch in South Australia, and it’s bigger than Israel.

16. The first Police Force in Australia was made up of the most well-behaved convicts.

17. It would take around 29 years to visit one new Aussie beach every day – there are 10,685 of them!

18. AFL invented to keep cricketers fit in the off season, there are claims that the game may have been influenced by Indigenous Australians.

19. The world’s largest rock is not actually Uluru, but Mount Augustus in Western Australia, and is actually twice the size of Uluru.

20. Australia is the 6th largest country in the world

21. There are 1 million camels that roam wild in Australia’s deserts, the largest number of purebred camels in the world, they are exported to the Middle East.

22. You can fly from Perth to Melbourne faster than you can fly from one end of Western Australia to the other.

23. There are over 60 different types of kangaroos, and a baby kangaroo when born is only about 2 centimetres long.

24. Aboriginal culture is the oldest on Earth – it is estimated that the continent’s original inhabitants, the aboriginal people, have been in Australia for between 40,000-60,000 years.

25. Australia has 19 World Heritage Listed sites.

26. 91% of the country is covered by native vegetation.

27. 33% of Australians were born in another country.

28. Over 300 different languages and dialects are spoken in Australia including 45 Indigenous languages. In fact, 21% of Australians don’t speak English at home!

29. WA is home to what is believed to be the oldest evidence of life on Earth – the Stromatolites.

30. Australia is the only continent in the world without an active volcano.

31. In Australia, sheep out number people 2.5 to 1 (in 2020).

32. Australia was the second country in the world to give women the right to vote in 1902.

33. Per capita, Australians spend more money on gambling than any other nation, with over 80 percent of Australian adults engaging in gambling of some kind.

34. Canberra was selected as the capital because Sydney and Melbourne could not stop arguing which city should be the capital.

35. Australia is home to the longest fence in the world, the Dingo Fence. Originally built to keep dingos away from fertile land, the fence is now 5,614 km long.

36. The Australian dollar is considered to be the most advanced currency in the world – it’s waterproof, made of polymer and notoriously hard to counterfeit.

37. Australia is the only continent covered by a single country.

38. The world’s oldest fossil was discovered in Australia – 3.4 billion years old.

39. Australia has around 600 varieties of eucalypt trees.

40. Australia was one of the founding members of the United Nations.

41. Stonemasons in Australia instituted the 8-hour working day back in 1856.

42. In Aboriginal culture women are not allowed to play to the didgeridoo.

43. The venom of the elusive platypus can kill a small dog.

44. Australia’s most deadly marine animal is the Box Jellyfish, and is responsible for more deaths per year than snakes, sharks and saltwater crocodiles.

45. The only two mammals in the world that lay eggs are found in Australia – the echidna and platypus.

46. Before the arrival of humans, Australia was home to megafauna, three-metre tall kangaroos, seven-metre long goanna’s, horse-sized ducks, and a marsupial lion the size of a leopard.

47. Both kangaroos and emus lack the ability to walk backwards. This was the reason they were chosen for Australia’s coat of arms – to symbolize a country always moving forward.

48. The termite mounds that can be found in Australia are the tallest animal-made structures on earth.

49. Australia is home to more than 1,500 species of spiders.

50. The Great Victoria Desert is bigger than the whole of the United Kingdom.
I knew some of these, but not all. br br Check ou... (show quote)


51. A dingo ate this woman's baaby.

Reply
Feb 4, 2022 08:56:16   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
Manglesphoto wrote:
That happens when you have to get out of bed before breakfast

Every time!

Reply
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