The Great Australian Bight.
The Nullarbor Plain.
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South Africa
Most modern maps of the Australian coastline were conducted by the world geodetic survey of 1984. These were not conducted by one person, but were the compiled efforts of a multinational organization. However, William Dampier (explored in the 1600s) deserves credit for first charting areas of the Western Australian coastline, while Captain James Cook initially charted the eastern coast in 1770, with remarkable accuracy for his time. George Bass, together with Matthew Flinders explored and charted much of the coastline south of Sydney in the early days of the New South Wales colony. Bass also proved for once and for all that van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) was an island. Between December 1801 and June 1803, Flinders circumnavigated the continent, charting the entire coastline of Australia.
Maine has a longer coastline with the Atlantic ocean.
The body of water south of the Nullarbor Plain is the Great Australian Bight. It is part of the Southern Ocean.
South of the Nullarbor Plain is the Great Australian Bight, which abuts the Southern Ocean.
The Nullarbor Plain is a vast, almost treeless semi-arid plain in Australia's south, just north of the Great Australian Bight.The word "Nullarbor" is from two Latin words (nullus arbor) literally meaning "no tree" (Null, from nullus = nothing, arbor = tree).
The Nullarbor Plain
The Nullarbor Plain in Australia does not separate any states. It spans across the southern part of western South Australia and eastern Western Australia.
The Nullarbor Plain is an arid, limestone region extending for some 270,000 square km above the Great Australian Bight, primarily in South Australia and also reaching into Western Australia.
The Nullarbor Plain.
it means no tree
The Nullarbor Plain is in Australia. It is a large, flat, treeless desert in the south of the continent, which parallels the Great Australia Bight.
The Nullarbor Plain lies south of the Australian desert areas and north of the Great Australia Bight, where the Southern Ocean meets Australia's coast.
John Eyre was famous for his exploration of Australia, particularly for leading an expedition in 1840-1841 to explore the interior of South Australia. He was the first European to traverse the coastline from Streaky Bay to Fowlers Bay on the Nullarbor Plain. Eyre's expeditions provided valuable insights into the geography and indigenous peoples of the Australian continent.
This is the Nullarbor Plain. The name comes from two Latin terms null and arbor, meaning "no tree".