How long is queensland coastline




















To provide an authorative single point of truth for a digital line depicting the boundary of the State of Queensland. It is suitable for use in land administration, emergency and water management, monitoring of climate change, hydrological modelling, topographic and vegetation mapping and in the production of navigational and web based mapping applications.

The state border coincides with the position as shown in the Queensland Digital Cadastral Database, while the coastline is the boundary between the mainland, marine islands and the sea, and is generally defined as mean high water, except in the area of mangroves, where the coastline is depicted as the seaward edge of the mangroves. The coastline generally extends up estuaries to agree with the boundaries as depicted by the Queensland Drainage Basins dataset. The coastline has been captured or updated from the best available imagery with an attribute within the data describing the source and reliability.

If no name is present then the attribute source will be the imagery, map or data used to define the feature type e. In relation to the border between the states, the data depicts the names of the adjoining states This dataset is stored in an ESRI Geodatabase.

Some columns names may be shortened if downloaded in the ESRI shape format. Progress status: onGoing Maintenance and update frequency: asNeeded.

This material is licensed under a Creative Commons - Attribution 4. Bounding box: West bounding longitude: Data quality scope: Level: dataset. Capture is complete and agrees with Topographic Data Product Description requirements. The coastline of mainland Queensland is 6, km in length. The state is famous for tropical islands and white sandy beaches. The state capital of Brisbane is known as the River City for the serpentine Brisbane River that winds its way through the city and suburbs.

North and south of the capital, stunning beaches and rainforests are breathtaking in their relatively untouched beauty. Queensland is essentially a state of great plains which merge into high country of sharper relief to the east and north-west. To the north, the country falls gradually to meet the coastal plain which reaches the Gulf of Carpentaria as a broad tract of salt flats.

The far north-west is occupied by a rugged uplands region, rich in minerals.



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