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This would depend on your interests, how much time you have, and how much money to travel. If you want to experience the uniqueness of the outback, something you will simply not find anywhere else, you should include Ayers Rock/Uluru and the Olgas/Kata-tjuta in central Australia and the Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame at Longreach in western Queensland. The Pinnacles Desert National Park near Cervantes in Western Australia is remote, but an eerily extraordinary place. If you plan to spend any time in Western Australia, Perth and Fremantle are beautiful cities, with the latter particularly having many historical buildings. Rottnest Island is also well worth a visit, as you will not see Quokkas anywhere else. If travelling from Western Australia to the eastern states, it is well worth the time to take the Indian Pacific train, which travels across the Nullarbor Plain, a journey that takes three nights. In the middle of the night, the train stops at Kalgoorlie with its huge open-cut gold mine, floodlit at night. It is worth taking the bus tour of Kalgoorlie at this time. You could stop off in Adelaide, visit Kangaroo Island for close encounters with Australian wildlife, or tour the Barossa Valley with its beautiful German heritage and many wineries. You could then continue your journey on the Indian Pacific, or instead, take the Ghan train through central Australia to Alice Springs and/or Darwin. On this journey, you could stop off at Alice Springs and then visit Uluru/Ayers Rock and Kata-tjuta and the many other incredible experiences central Australia has to offer. If you then go on to Darwin, you may be interested in visiting Kakadu National Park, although numbers of visitors are being limited here now. Tasmania, on the other end of Australia, is a beautiful, scenic island with plenty to interest those who like history, wilderness walks and adventures, gorgeous scenery, and Australian fauna. However, if your interest is in seeing what cities in other countries are like, stay on the eastern coast. Many people like Sydney, and the Opera House and Harbour Bridge are also worth seeing. Melbourne is a very cultural place, as is Adelaide. Or, you might be looking for a sun and surf holiday, in which case you'd probably be interested in the Gold Coast in southeastern Queensland, where you can experience the many theme parks, or travelling up to Cairns and going snorkelling on the Great Barrier Reef. A train travels between Cairns and Kuranda, winding its way through the hills and rainforest, and you can catch the skyrail back down to Cairns when you have finished. There is so much that's worth seeing, but it depends entirely on your own personal interests.

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15y ago
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12y ago

In the outback:

  • Uluru - Ayers Rock and Kata-Tjuta, along with Alice Springs and surroundings, e.g. Macdonnel Ranges, Standley Chasm, Old Telegraph Station
  • Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame at Longreach (western Queensland)
  • Coober Pedy, an opal mining town of South Australia, famous for its underground homes

Country Australia:

  • the goldfields and historic gold-mining towns of NSW (Sofala, Hill End) and Victoria (the 'Golden Triangle' which covers Bendigo, Castlemaine, Ballarat)
  • Barossa Valley, South Australia

For Spelunkers:

  • There are many, many caves scattered throughout Australia, some for just tourists and others for serious spelunkers - Narracoorte, Buchan, Abercrombie, Jenolan, Wellington

Tropical and sub-tropical Queensland:

  • Fraser Island
  • Cairns and surrounds - see the Great Barrier Reef, visit Paronella Park, see the rainforests of north Queensland

The Top End:

  • Kakadu National Park
  • Darwin

For spectacular scenery:

  • Tasmania
  • Great ocean Road, southern Victoria
  • Australian Alps / Snowy Mountains and the high country - land of the Man from Snowy River - Corryong, Omeo, etc
  • Fraser Island
  • Western Australia's northwest coast

Cities and night-life:

  • Sydney NSW
  • Melbourne, Victoria
  • Adelaide, SA
  • Perth, WA
  • Gold Coast Qld
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13y ago
  • The Super Pit (huge, open-cut goldmine at Kalgoorlie)
  • The Sydney Opera House
  • The National Gallery of Australia
  • Australian Alps (Snowy Mountains)
  • Lake Eyre
  • Great Barrier Reef
  • Uluru/Ayers Rock
  • Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame at Longreach (western Queensland)
  • Fraser Island
  • Daintree Rainforest
  • Kakadu National Park
  • Sydney Harbour Bridge
  • Taronga Zoo
  • MCG
  • Melbourne Botanical Gardens
  • The Queensland Gold Coast
  • Swan River - Perth
  • Royal Exhibition Buildings
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9y ago

People seem to visit a broad range of places in Australia. But the most talked and visited places are (not in any order):

Sydney and/or Melbourne

Gold Coast

Great Barrier Reef and Cairns

Uluru / Ayers Rock

Tasmania

Northern Territory and the Top End

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11y ago

it depends on what your after if you like:

Cities:

Brisbane

Perth

Cairns

Canberra

Sydney

Melbourne

Gold Coast

Desert towns

Alice Springs and anywhere around Uluru

Other:

12 apostles

Fraiser island

Harvey Bay

Great Barrier Reef

Some Rainforests

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12y ago

In a continent of almost 8 000 000 km^2, there are numerous paces of interest to suit all tastes. Tasmania has beaut mountain and coast scenery, the deserts of the inland have their admirers, the giant karri trees of WA, and so on.

Then there are the cosmopolitan cities such as Sydney, Adelaide, and Melbourne.

If I were visiting, I'd like to see the stromatolites at Shark Bay in WA.

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15y ago

New South Wales is a huge state, with a great deal to offer. It depends on where your interests lie. The following are popular: * The huge radio-telescope at Parkes in central NSW * During Autumn, the city of Orange - the trees give a great display of Autumn colours, seen in few other Australian places, and if you are there in late winter, you stand a good chance of seeing snow * The Blue Mountains - ride the train along the old Zig Zag railway * Western Plains Zoo at Dubbo - you can drive your car through the zoo, or walk or cycle * The Ettamogah Pub outside Albury * The Siding Springs Observatory at Coonabarabran, and the Warrumbungle Mountains * Jindabyne, Thredbo, Blue Cow and the Snowy Mountains area

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10y ago

The things tourists should visit depend on where one's interests lie, and how much time (and money) one has during a visit to Austalia. Below are some suggestions based on particular areas of interest.

In the outback:

  • Uluru - Ayers Rock and Kata-Tjuta, along with Alice Springs and surroundings, e.g. Macdonnel Ranges, Standley Chasm, Old Telegraph Station
  • Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame at Longreach (western Queensland)
  • Coober Pedy, an opal mining town of South Australia, famous for its underground homes
Country Australia:
  • the goldfields and historic gold-mining towns of NSW (Sofala, Hill End) and Victoria (the 'Golden Triangle' which covers Bendigo, Castlemaine, Ballarat)
  • Barossa Valley, South Australia
For Spelunkers:
  • There are many, many caves scattered throughout Australia, some for just tourists and others for serious spelunkers - Narracoorte, Buchan, Abercrombie, Jenolan, Wellington
Tropical and sub-tropical Queensland:
  • Fraser Island
  • Cairns and surrounds - see the Great Barrier Reef, visit Paronella Park, see the rainforests of north Queensland
The Top End:
  • Kakadu National Park
  • Darwin
For spectacular scenery:
  • Tasmania
  • Great ocean Road, southern Victoria
  • Australian Alps / Snowy Mountains and the high country - land of the Man from Snowy River - Corryong, Omeo, etc
  • Fraser Island
  • Western Australia's northwest coast
Cities and night-life:
  • Sydney NSW
  • Melbourne, Victoria
  • Adelaide, SA
  • Perth, WA
  • Gold Coast Qld
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12y ago

there are a lot of tourist destinations in Australia there are that many that i wouldn't be able to count all of them

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