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Chapter 14: Australia and Oceania

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Aboriginal settlement of Australia, NG 40,000 yrs ago ... high standards of living in Australia, New Zealand (tourism, minerals, livestock) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 14: Australia and Oceania


1
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2
Australia
  • continental landmass, separated from rest of S
    continent 50 Ma
  • W plateau, interior lowlands, eastern highlands,
    great barrier reef
  • interior deserts, monsoon/savanna in far N,
    midlatitude to E and SE, Mediterranean in SW
  • native fauna includes diverse marsupials
    (kangaroos, koalas), birds (emus, parrots,
    lorikeets)

3
Australia and Oceania Physical
4
New Zealand
  • part of Pacific ring of fire
  • N island subtropical, active volcanoes reaching
    9000 ft.
  • S Island cold, higher and more rugged mtns., S
    Alps reach 12,000 ft
  • unique forests w massive native trees (kauris),
    ferns
  • once home to moa but now extinct

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Pacific Islands
  • continental islands situated along ring of fire
  • steep explosive volcanos, largest island is New
    Guinea, peaks exceeding 15000 ft.
  • oceanic islands formed by midplate hot spot
    activity
  • less explosive volcanism, shorter life span (lt10
    mil. yrs from high island to atoll)
  • low islands (atolls) formed when midplate high
    islands sink

7
Atoll Formation
8
Bora Bora
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10
Indigenous Settlement
  • Aboriginal settlement of Australia, NG 40,000 yrs
    ago
  • by 3500 years ago deep sea navigation allowed
    settlement of more distant islands
  • within the past 2000 years settlement extended to
    remote corners of Pacific (HI, NZ, Easter Is.)

11
Australia and Oceania Settlement
12
Indigenous Cultures
  • Australia
  • comprehensive knowledge of landscape
  • "dreamtime" (spirit world)
  • Pacific Islands
  • 3 cultural realms
  • Melanesia (great cultural diversity)
  • Micronesia
  • Polynesia (homogenous culture across great
    geographic expanse)

13
Australia and Oceania Languages
14
Political History
  • significant European settlement did not occur
    until after voyages of Cook (1780)
  • settlement waves consisted of prisoners, gold
    rushers, farmers
  • settlement extensive in Australia, NZ, Hawaii
  • most of Oceania colonized by Europe by late 1800s

15
Politics Today
  • independence came later to most parts of Oceania
    than elsewhere in the world (1960s, 70s)
  • Tonga only state to retain traditional govt.
  • Europe and the U.S. remain in control of some
    island groups (French Polynesia, NC, Niue,
    Tokelau, Hawaii, Guam)
  • civil war exists in parts of Melanesia

16
Australia and Oceania Geopolitical Issues
17
Population Today
  • Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii, Guam, highly
    urban low natural growth rates, concerns over
    immigration
  • other parts of Pacific Islands mostly rural, high
    natural growth rates, concern over emigration
  • atolls face concerns over crowding, lack of
    resources, and sea level rise

18
Australia and Oceania Population
19
Economy
  • high standards of living in Australia, New
    Zealand (tourism, minerals, livestock) though
    indigenous populations lag
  • tourism also supports high standards of living in
    Hawaii, Guam
  • minerals provide base of economy in New
    Caledonia, Nauru
  • elsewhere islanders depend on combination of
    subsistence agriculture, fisheries, aid, and
    remitances

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21
Mining in New Guinea
22
Australia and Oceania Environment
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