There are thousands of small outback towns, dotted throughout Australia. A small selection is as follows:
There is no specific "outback state". The Northern Territory would arguably be recognised as the territory that epitomises everything about the outback - the countryside, agriculture, tourism, fauna, etc.
However, Queensland and New South Wales also both typify the outback, particularly in both having a large number of cattle and sheep stations, and leisure activities that seem to characterise the outback, whilst South Australia and Western Australia are very unique in what they offer also.
"The outback" is a generic term applied (very loosely) to anywhere which is more than 500 kms from the coast.
There is no "main" city of the outback. Alice Springs in central Australia is probably regarded as the main city of the outback, though it is really a large town. Similarly, Kalgoorlie-Boulder in the heart of Western Australia's gold mining country is a significant city (with more of the feel of a large town) that is certainly located in the outback.
Coober Pedy is an opal mining town in the outback of the state of South Australia.
Coober Pedy is a small town in outback South Australia, famed for its opals. The capital city of the state of South Australia is Adelaide.
Alice Springs is actually a town, but it is a large town, and is located in central Australia.
The middle part of Australia has no particular name. The very centre is commonly called the Red Centre, due to the landscape characterised by red sand and bulldust. Much of the vast interior is called the Outback, a general term that refers to any region remote from major settled areas.
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.
Australia's interior is called the Outback.
Australia.
Australia
There is no specific name for the middle of Australia. The general term of "outback" is applied to areas which are more remote from major settled areas, while the desert centre of the continent is colloquially known as "the red centre".
Approximately 70 percent of Australia's land mass is regarded as part of the Outback.
well the outback is in the middle you could say of australia so people would wanna live on the coast where its nice and not brudaly hot