There is a huge difference between the outback and cities. The cities, like cities around the world, are full of buildings, people, traffic, businesses and shopping centres. Although generally smaller in size compared to international cities and capitals, Australian cities have the same features. The outback is often a hot, dry and dusty place, but in winter it is very pleasant, with clear, unpolluted blue skies and brilliant sunsets. The outback also has its towns and settlements, but the people are much friendlier, more outgoing and take life at a slower pace. Schools and hospitals are smaller and usually less well-equipped, though sufficient for their purpose. Big businesses are unlikely to be found in the outback, but native animals are seen much more easily.
It means far away from the main cities on the coasts of Australia.
To Australians, the outback epitomises the free, open, country life. There seem to be no restrictions to the continuous wide, open spaces, and when you are in the outback there's a good chance that, unless you're on the major highways, you can travel for hours without meeting another car. Australia is a vast country, with huge tracts of unoccupied, dry land, which is the outback. It is its geography which makes it "the outback". However, the cities, towns and beaches also comprise a large proportion of Australia.
Of course. If people did not eat, they would not survive. People in the outback eat the same food as people in the cities and towns, but with far less takeaway options.
There is no capital of the outback. It is a general region encompassing a very large area of inland Australia. There are several large towns and small cities in the outback, each serving a particular function, but none is a capital.
Properties in outback towns are quite cheap, compared to the cities, except for in mining regions, where property is very expensive.Large properties of hundreds or even thousands of acres are not cheap.
yes there are modern cities in Australia it isn't just an outback Note: Even in the outback, there are all modern conveniences, such as electricity, television, telephone and computers. Children from remote properties in the outback often do their schoolwork via the "School of the Air", using two-way radios and computers.
Australia's interior is called the Outback.
The outback is actually located throughout Australia, anywhere west of the Great Dividing Range, or north of Victoria. The outback is the flat, wide plains of Australia's inland.
Yes. In fact, the Roman Catholic churches are found not only in the cities, but throughout regional Australia, in even the tiniest outback townships.
Australia
Australia.
Approximately 70 percent of Australia's land mass is regarded as part of the Outback.