Victoria and Tasmania are separated by Bass Strait.
Tasmania is separated from Victoria by Bass Strait.
Tasmania and Victoria.
Tasmania
Victoria and Tasmania are separated by Bass Strait.
The Australian states of Tasmania and Victoria are separated by Bass Strait.
Bass Strait is the body of water between Mainland Australia and Tasmania
Governor Hunter was the one who sponsored Bass to determine whether a navigable strait existed between Van Diemen's Land and the Australian continent. After Bass discovered the strait south of the Australian mainland, it was Governor Hunter who decided it should be named Bass's Strait, later becoming Bass Strait.
Bass Strait is the body of water which separates the island state of Tasmania from the mainland state of Victoria.Bass Strait is named after George Bass, the sea explorer who was certain that Van Diemen's land (as Tasmania was then called) was an island, and who sought permission and sponsorship from the Governor to prove this.Bass departed Sydney on 3 December 1797, to determine whether a navigable strait existed between Van Diemen's Land and the mainland. It was on this journey that Bass discovered the strait that is now named after him.
The stretch of water which separates mainland Australia from Tasmania is Bass Strait. It was named after George Bass,the sea explorer who conclusively determined that Australia and Tasmania (then known as Van Diemen's Land) were separated by a strait.
Tasmania is separated from mainland Australia by Bass Strait.
Tasmania, also known informally as the 'Apple Isle'.
Tasmania is one of the states of Australia. It is Australia's only island state, and is located south of the eastern half of the mainland. It is separated from the Australian mainland by Bass Strait. The capital of Tasmania is Hobart, which is Australia's second oldest capital city.
Bass Strait was named after sea explorer George Bass. In 1797, Bass sought sponsorship from Governor Hunter to determine whether a navigable strait existed between Van Diemen's Land and the Australian continent. It was on this journey that Bass discovered the strait that is now named after him. His journey was made between December 1797 and late February 1798.
Yes. George Bass, together with Matthew Flinders, proved that Tasmania (then Van Diemen's Land) was an island, and not connected to the Australian mainland. Because it was his initiative that led to the expedition being organised, the strait of water Bass and Flinders discovered between the mainland and Tasmania bears the name of Bass Strait.
This is the state of Tasmania. It is separated from the mainland by Bass Strait.