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标题: 【叹世界!】在澳大利亚见苍凉极致之美 [打印本页]

作者: evaxiaofan    时间: 2010-12-3 15:20     标题: 【叹世界!】在澳大利亚见苍凉极致之美

本帖最后由 evaxiaofan 于 2010-12-3 15:51 编辑

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Explore The Australian Outback ... and Beyond
The arid and remote inland region of Australia, the Outback is home to the country's indigenous population and unique flora and fauna -- and much, much more than a backdrop for the adventures of Australian stereotypes like Crocodile Dundee. Serious European exploration of the Outback began in 1813 and culminated in the establishment of a network of roads in the 1950s. But you can take a tour of the surreal beauty yourself

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Uluru Presides Over the Outback
Uluru (or Ayers Rock) rises over 1,100 feet above central Australian, and is the second largest monolith on Earth after Mt. Augustus in Western Australia. It has profound cultural significance for the local Pitjantjatjara and Yankuntjatjara Aborigines. Between 1931 and 1946 only 22 people were known to have climbed Uluru but now around 500,000 tourists from around the world visit the Rock every year.

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The Longest Fence in the World
The Dog Fence stretches through the outback near Marree Australia. The fence was built to keep dingos away from sheep, and stretches for more than 3,360 miles. It is the longest fence in the world.

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Peering at the Pinnacles
Limestone pillars, known as The Pinnacles, stand in the desert in Nambung National Park near Cervantes, Western Australia.

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Droving Cattle Under the Sun
Cattle are led across the Outback during the Great Australian Cattle Drive preview.

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The Outback From the Air
An inland river system is seen from the air in central Australia.

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The Domes of Kata Tjuta
The 36 granite and basalt conglomerate domes of Kata Tjuta (meaning '"many heads" in the local Anangu Aboriginal language), also known as the Olgas, rise nearly 1,800 feet above the surrounding desert. These unique monoliths contain the sacred initiation ceremony sites for the Pitjantjatjara and Yankuntjatjara Aborigines.

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Bejeweled Landscape
Several hundred thousand abandoned opal mines create a moon-like landscape around the opal mining town of Coober Pedy.
作者: evaxiaofan    时间: 2010-12-3 15:54

本帖最后由 evaxiaofan 于 2010-12-3 16:00 编辑

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The View From the Blue Mountains
The Blue Mountains -- once the unofficial boundary of "wild" Australia -- gets its name from the blue haze formed by sunlight shining through vapor released by eucalyptus trees. It is home to 132 different species found nowhere else on the planet including the Wollomi pine, a tree thought to be extinct for 2 million years until recently.

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Satan's Velodrome
Riders ride and walk up a sand dune during the first stage on day one of the Simpson Desert Bike Challenge in the Simpson Desert.

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Outback Sunset

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Bracing for the Breakaways
The ochre-hued formation known as The Breakaways rises above the desert plain near the opal mining town of Coober Pedy.

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Sand Hills in the Simpson Desert

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Following the Red Trail of the Darling River Road
A vehicle travels Darling River Road, between Bourke and the mining town of Broken Hill, western New South Wales. "Back o' Bourke" (pronounced "burk") is generally considered to be the beginning of true Outback Australia, at least going west

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Mounted in Oodnadatta
Drovers keep an eye on their cattle during the Great Australian Cattle Drive preview in 2009.

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Eye on Lake Eyre
作者: eraledit    时间: 2010-12-3 15:55

beautifull~!
作者: evaxiaofan    时间: 2010-12-3 16:05

本帖最后由 evaxiaofan 于 2010-12-3 16:13 编辑

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Kata Tjuta Triumphant
Sand blown onto the western face of the domes appears to glow orange and red because of the dominant red spectrum of the setting sun.

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Waters of the Outback
An inland river system is seen from the air in central Australia.

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Bringing Dust to the Breakaways

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Hopping Through the Outback
Because what would an Australia gallery be without kangaroos?

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Tortured Tree in the Simpson Desert
Andrew Koop from Alice Springs, Northern Territory rides through the petrified forest during the Simpson Desert Bike Challenge in 2007. The cyclists had to battle strong head winds and high temperatures during the five-day race. Of the 17 riders who took on the challenge, only two were able to finish 100 percent of the course.

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Moonscape in Mungo
Eroded sand formations bake in the sun in Mungo National Park, New South Wales, part of the Willandra Lakes World Heritage Area. Human remains found here reveal some of the oldest ritual burial practices in the world.
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Where the Wind Blows in the Outback
Pineview Station owner Mark Lacey repairs one of his broken windmills in Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia.
作者: evaxiaofan    时间: 2010-12-3 16:15

回复 3# eraledit


    刚才没发全,现在ok了~~再去看看啊~~
作者: davy10    时间: 2010-12-3 19:35

回复 5# evaxiaofan


    perfect job!you are the most popular people in here
作者: evaxiaofan    时间: 2010-12-3 20:44

回复 6# davy10


    Really?I am over the moon about your praise,thanks very much~~
作者: kobe    时间: 2010-12-5 19:25

yeah! very beautiful!
I got it
I will be there sometime
作者: evaxiaofan    时间: 2010-12-5 19:47

本帖最后由 evaxiaofan 于 2010-12-5 20:57 编辑

回复 8# kobe


    Just before the trip, don't forget to make adequate preparation ,there is no person ,hehe~~




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