tourism
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This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.
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This ~3 minute movie is about the two 1:100 000 scale maps of the West MacDonnell Ranges near Alice Springs in the Northern Territory. The maps are a collaboration with Parks Australia, NT Tourism and NT Governmentland management authorities. The movie includes a flythrough; and images and footage from NT Tourism. The flythrough is created using World Wind software and satellite imagery.
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Uluru (Ayers Rock) and Kata Tjuta (Mount Olga) are two of Australia's best-known landmarks, and thousands of people visit them each year. Geoscience Australia is preparing a new edition of 'Uluru & Kata Tjuta: a geological history' (Sweet et al in prep), which will include a new solid-geology map and cross-sections based on outcrop information, the results of drilling of more than 200 water bores in the 1970s by the Northern Territory Government, and interpretation of aeromagnetic data collected in 1988 by the Northern Territory Geological Survey.
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This larger than normal detailed topographic map (1:100,000 scale) incorporates some tourist-related features. It depicts the spectacular Uluru Katajuta (Ayers Rock-Mt Olga) National Park and the Yulara tourist village area and surrounding Aboriginal lands. Contours (interval 20m) dramatically show the contrast between the large, rocky outcrops of Uluru and The Olgas and the almost featureless plains which surround them. This map includes access roads and their surface condition, sunset viewing areas, travelling restrictions applying within and outside the national park boundary, and the broad expanses of sandridges. Available as flat and folded copies.
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<p>This map depicts the complete National Park at 1:250 000 scale (200 kilometres east to west and 93 kilometres north to south) and an enlargement of the Mount Moffatt and Carnarvon Gorge Section at 1:100 000 scale (55 kilometres east to west and 26 kilometres north to south). <p>Both maps contain natural and constructed features, including road infrastructure, foot tracks, vegetation, hydrography, contours (1:250 000 interval 50m and 1:100 000 interval 20m), localities and administrative boundaries. <p>The reverse side of the map depicts the 1:250 000 map using a satellite image with an overlay of major roads, foot tracks, tourism features and facilities as well as 3 enlargements featuring Salvator Rosa Section, Ka Ka Mundi Section and Carnarvon Gorge Section.
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This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.
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This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.
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This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.
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This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.
-
This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.