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Down Under Overview

A quick rundown of the major cities and sights of Australia so you can get a sense of where you'd want to spend time.

 

SYDNEY

is the poster child for Australian cities, with its

opera house

on the water beneath the soaring

Harbour Bridge,

scads of museums and galleries, some of the best dining in the country, scads of genteely semi-decaying 19th century vernacular architecture, and excellent

beaches

right downtown.

Melbourne

is the exciting cultural melting pot of Australia, and with a third of the population either immigrant or first-generation, there are more ethnic restaurants than you could shake a didgeridoo at. It has a vibrant arts and cultural scene, top shopping, the oldest zoo in the world, and a gold museum that hearkens back to the city's boomtown origins.

CAIRNS,

up near the north end of the eastern coast (and pronounced "cans"), is the gateway to the

Great Barrier Reef,

the only living thing on Earth visible from the moon--at nearly 239,000 square miles, this sucker's bigger than California and Utah put together. The reef teems with 4,000 species of clam and sea snail, 1,500 types of fish, and, of course, the more than 400 breeds of coral which support them all. Spend at least a day, possibly two, out here snorkeling and diving the reef.

On the mainland side of Cairns, don't miss the

Kuranda cable car

over a dense rainforest, or the

Tjapukai Aboriginal Cultural Park

just outside town, possibly the best place in Australia to get a quick (albeit theme-park-ified) overview of Aboriginal culture--and it's majority owned-and-operated by the local indigenous people.

ALICE SPRINGS

is the capital of the

the Outback

--though

DARWIN

is the gateway city--at the heart of the Australian bush. This is prototypical, "G'day Mate!," Crocodile Dundee country, packed with parkland (

Kakadu National Park

alone is lager than Switzerland), deeply rooted in

Aboriginal culture,

and home to that symbol of Australia itself, the gargantuan lump of red sandstone called

Uluru

(a.k.a.

Ayers Rock

).

Southerly

ADELAIDE

is, let's be frank, rarely cited as visitors' favorite city Down Under. It's a bit of a drowsy, backwater city, though it sports some fine museums, and at its doorstep you'll find access to some scenic sections of Outback and the

Australian wine country,

with some 50 wineries in the surrounding Barossa, Eden, and Clare Valleys.

The best part of Adelaide is offshore:

Kangaroo Island,

site to the first (European, non-prison) settlement in Australia (est. 1836), and home today to one of the richest wildlife preserves in all of Oz. There's no better place to view wild sea lions and fur seals, kangaroos and koalas (some 5,000, all descended from the 18 brought over from the mainland in 1920), foot-tall fairy penguins, glossy cockatoos, black swans, and even platypus, bandicoot, and pygmy possums.


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This article was last updated in July 2006

. All information was accurate at the time.
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