long island sound
The body of water which separates the island state of Tasmania from mainland Australia is Bass Strait.
The body of water which separates the island state of Tasmania from mainland Australia is Bass Strait.
The state is Tasmania and the body of water separating Tasmania from mainland Australia is Bass Strait.
Water that separates a mainland and an island is typically referred to as a "channel" or "strait." These terms describe the body of water that flows between the landmasses. Channels can vary in size and depth, and they often serve as important navigation routes for vessels.
The body of water that separates Britain from mainland Europe is the English Channel. It is a narrow stretch of water that connects the Atlantic Ocean to the North Sea. The channel is approximately 21 miles wide at its narrowest point.
Here are two examples: The state of Tasmania is an Island and is separated from the mainland by the Bass strait. Also Hawaii is a state and is separated from the mainland by part of the Pacific Ocean.
That depends on what mainland you're referring to. Vancouver Island is separated from the US by the Straight of Juan de Fuca, Vancouver by the Straight of Georgia, and Asia by the Pacific Ocean.
Bass Strait is the body of water which separates the island state of Tasmania from the mainland state of Victoria in Australia. It is named after explorer George Bass who determined conclusively that Tasmania (then Van Diemen's Land) was an island.
"The Reach" refers to Eggemoggin Reach which is the section of water that separates the island of Deer Isle from the Maine mainland. There is a narrow suspension bridge, built in the 1930's I believe, that crosses this section of water. This bridge is the only way to get to the island by car. - brian http://www.earlyMaine.org
No. Bass Strait separates Tasmania, the island state of Australia, from the mainland. The body of water that separates Australia and New Zealand is not a strait, but a sea - the Tasman Sea.
The Aegean Sea
pacific ocean