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Eden South coast splendour

Eden, a former whaling town in New South Wales, has become one of the best places to view humpbacks as they travel to Antarctica from September to November, often stopping to feed with their young.
Eye to Eye with Dwarf Minke Whales Eye to Eye with Dwarf Minke Whales

The Ribbon Reefs of the Great Barrier Reef are the perfect place during June and July to spot dwarf minke whales. Unlike other whale species these inquisitive creatures actively seek encounters with divers and snorkellers.
Ningaloo Reef Western whales

In the plunging waters off Ningaloo Reef near Exmouth in Western Australia, migrating humpbacks are common during August and September. Whale sharks, the world's largest fish, can be found between mid-March and June.
Whales of Warrnambool Whales of Warrnambool

Between June and October, southern right whale females winter with their calves at Logan's Beach in Warrnambool, Victoria, often swimming close to shore from where they can be viewed from beach platforms.
Marvellous Melbourne Marvellous Melbourne

Melbourne Central is one of Australia’s largest retail complexes, with 200 shops occupying a whole block in the heart of the city centre. It’s a vast complex incorporating boutiques, jewellery, giftware, homewares and beauty products.
Queen Victoria Building A great Victorian

A Sydney landmark, the Queen Victoria Building is an architectural wonder in its own right, with some of the best of the mainstream labels and designer clothes, jewellery and antiques on the upper levels.
Brisbane's fashion Brisbane's fashion HQ

The Queen Street Mall is where Brisbane's fashionable heart beats loudest, crammed with department stores as well as small clothing and shoe stores dedicated to designer one-offs.
Rundle Mall Adelaide's best

Adelaide's main shopping precinct, Rundle Mall is a pedestrian zone at the city centre lined with boutiques and department stores, within easy reach of cafes and the refreshing Botanic Gardens.
Perth's treasures Perth's treasures

Shopping in central Perth reflects the state's astonishing and exotic natural bounty, with stores brimming with pearls and diamonds that come from the state's far north.
Blue Mountains Blue Mountains

Less than two hours by car or train west of Sydney, the Blue Mountains National Park is a World Heritage-listed site - a spectacular area of dramatic canyons and caves, sheer-cliffed valleys, pretty stone and timber towns, and world-class guesthouses.
Unique Fraser Island Unique Fraser Island

Off the south Queensland coast, the world's largest sand island features majestic stands of tall rainforest, half the world's perched freshwater dune lakes and towering, shifting sand dunes.
The Kakadu experience The Kakadu experience

The wealth and age of Kakadu's Aboriginal rock art, its astonishing wildlife and outstanding natural beauty ensured early world recognition for this giant region of tropical wetlands and forests.
Tropical resource Tropical resource

The presence of rare and endangered species of plants and animals and the biological importance of some of the world's most ancient forests make the Queensland wet tropics a precious resource for humankind.
Discovery at Willandra Discovery at Willandra

In the wild, lunar landscape of south-western New South Wales, this network of dry lakes contains remarkable fossil remains and evidence of human habitation dating back some 40,000 years.
Riversleigh Fascinating fossils

Located in Riversleigh in Queensland and Naracoorte in South Australia, these are among the world's 10 greatest fossil sites, with superb illustrations of the evolution of Australia's unique fauna.
Bungle Nature's creation

The Bungle Bungle's beehive-shaped towers come from sandstone and other material cemented together about 350 million years ago and eroded into unusual shapes over the past 20 million years. Rock layers, algal growth and minerals formed the stripes.
Ayers Rock Unique wonders of the desert

Uluru (Ayers Rock) has bewitched travellers from all over the world. Sitting in the heart of Australia it rises 348 metres from the ground. Incredibly, that's only a third of it, the remainder lurking underneath the earth's surface. Just half an hour away is Kata Tjuta (The Olgas), meaning many heads. These are a collection of 36 stunning red, stone-shaped monoliths, covering an area of 3,500 hectares. Some are 250 metres higher than Uluru, with the tallest, Mt Olga, rising 546 metres tall. Both Uluru and Kata Tjuta respond wonderfully to shifting light and times of day. Their unearthly beauty brings out the poet in the most jaded traveller. Together they form the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park, sacred site of the Anangu people.
Great Ocean Road Great Ocean Road

It is easy to take a day tour and be guided along this beautiful but perilous coastline where so many ships met their end. Or self-drive along the shipwreck coast trail and stop at as many delightful towns as you wish – there’s Princetown, Port Campbell, Peterborough, Warrnambool and Port Fairy, to name a few.