There are many more than three deserts in Australia, but the main ones and their location are:
Great Victoria Desert (Western Australia): 424,400 km2 (163,900 square miles)
Great Sandy Desert (Western Australia): 284,993 km2 (110,036 square miles)
Tanami Desert (Western Australia and Northern Territory): 184,500 km2 (71,235 square miles)
Each of these deserts is either in or primarily in Western Australia, in the western third of the continent.
The Nullarbor Plain is an arid, limestone region extending for some 270,000 square km above the Great Australian Bight. Nothing is cultivated there, and in many respects its aridness places it within the category of desert, but there is little (if any) sand there.
Other deserts and their locations are -
Simpson Desert (Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia): 176,500 km2 (68,145 square miles)
Gibson Desert (Western Australia): 156,000 km2 (60,230 square miles)
Little Sandy Desert (Western Australia): 111,500 km2 (43,050 square miles)
Strzelecki Desert (New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia): 80,250 km2 (30,985 square miles)
Sturt Stony Desert (South Australia): 29,750 km2 (11,485 square miles)
Tirari Desert (South Australia): 15,250 km2 (5,890 square miles)
Pedirka Desert (South Australia): 1,250 km2 (480 square miles)
There are more than three deserts in Western Australia.
Great Victoria Desert (Western Australia): 424,400 km2 (163,900 square miles)
Great Sandy Desert (Western Australia): 284,993 km2 (110,036 square miles)
Tanami Desert (spans Western Australia and Northern Territory): 184,500 km2 (71,235 square miles)
Gibson Desert (Western Australia): 156,000 km2 (60,230 square miles)
Little Sandy Desert (Western Australia): 111,500 km2 (43,050 square miles)
Australia has numerous deserts, and several of them are very large. The three largest deserts in Australia are: Great Victoria Desert (Western Australia): 424,400 km2 (163,900 square miles) Great Sandy Desert (Western Australia): 284,993 km2 (110,036 square miles) Tanami Desert (Western Australia and Northern Territory): 184,500 km2 (71,235 square miles) Each of these deserts is either in or primarily in Western Australia, in the western third of the continent.
The western third of the continent of Australia is the state of Western Australia.
Australia's Western Desert is not the name of an actual desert; it is the common short form for Australia's Western Desert cultural bloc. It covers about 600,000 square kilometers, and includes parts of these 4 deserts:Great Victoria Desert;Great Sandy Desert;Gibson Desert;Little Sandy DesertThe Western Desert is a cultural grouping by anthropologists of about 40 or so Aboriginal tribes who live in central Australia.
The three largest deserts in Australia are: Great Victoria Desert (Western Australia): 424,400 km2 (163,900 square miles) Great Sandy Desert (Western Australia): 284,993 km2 (110,036 square miles) Tanami Desert (Western Australia and Northern Territory): 184,500 km2 (71,235 square miles) Each of these deserts is either in or primarily in Western Australia, in the western third of the continent.
The Prime Minister's name in Western Australia is the same as it is everywhere else in Australia: Julia Gillard.However, the government leader of Western Australia, the Premier, in 2010 is Colin Barnett.
Hume Highway, Western Ring Road, New England Highway.
Archipelago of the Recherché (Western Australia)Whitsundays (Queensland)Dampier Archipelago (Western Australia)Buccaneer Archipelago (Western Australia)
When the Commonwealth of Australia was founded after Australia began to gain it's independence in 1901, the colony was already called Western Australia. When it was adopted by the federation in 1901, the name was kept and it was made a state. It was most likely called Western Australia because it is on the western side of Australia.
The name of the famous diamond mine is Western Australia is Argyle Diamond Mine. It is famous for its pink diamonds.
Australia has a number of deserts, but many of them have undefined boundaries. Therefore, three of the deserts, the Great Sandy Desert, the Gibson Desert and the Great Victorian Desert, are sometimes grouped together under the name of the Great Western Desert but not the Australian desert. Whilst they are distinct, different deserts, with different topological and geological makeup, there is no clear definition to their boundaries.The so-called Australian Desert is actually made up of the following separate deserts:Great Victoria DesertGreat Sandy DesertTanami DesertSimpson DesertGibson DesertLittle Sandy DesertStrzelecki DesertSturt Stony DesertTirari DesertPedirka Desert
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