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Burnie overlooks Emu Bay, on the north-west coast This proudly industrial city is Australia’s fifth largest container port and a vibrant place to visit... read more
In 1827 Joseph Fossey saw a dramatic mountain peak at the northern end of what is now the Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park, in the World Heritage Area... read more
Devonport is the major port of entry for visitors to Tasmania from mainland Australia... read more
Explore four pathways through Dismal Swamp and open your eyes and your mind to the mystery of life at the bottom of a giant sinkhole... read more
Part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, this national park protects Tasmanias great western rivers the Franklin, Gordon, Jane and Denison and the remote mountain ranges where they... read more
Part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, this national park protects Tasmanias great western rivers the Franklin, Gordon, Jane and Denison and the remote mountain ranges where they... read more
The dark waters of the Gordon flow through the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area before quietly entering Macquarie Harbour... read more
Lake Burbury is a popular fishing lake on the edge of Tasmania’s World Heritage Wilderness Area... read more
Liffey Falls State Reserve is nestled within cool temperate rainforest on the slopes of the Great Western Tiers... read more
Nelson Falls is set amongst a true rain forest of deep green ferns, moss and ancient trees... read more
Ocean Beach is situated on the West Coast of Tasmania and extends from Strahan in the south to Trial Harbour, west of Zeehan to the north... read more
Historic Queenstown, the largest settlement on Tasmania’s west coast, is best known for its copper mines and smelters... read more
A craggy promontory nudging out into Bass Strait, Rocky Capes tracks, cliffs and beaches attract walkers and rock climbers... read more
Concealed in the foothills of majestic Mount Roland is the enterprising town of Sheffield, where history and art merge to create an entire town of murals... read more
Classified an historic town, Stanley has a busy fishing port at the base of an unusual land formation called The Nut - a flat-topped rock outcrop 150 metres high... read more
Strahan – for many this name evokes a place with the true spirit of independence – of 19th century piners and miners, and 20th century protesters who stopped the damming of the wild Franklin... read more
Tullah is a former mining and ‘Hydro’ town, overlooked by magnificent Mount Farrell and Mount Murchison... read more
Tasmania’s West Coast Wilderness Railway operates between Strahan and Queenstown... read more
Wynyard is a centre of agriculture on the A2 about 60 kilometres (37 miles) west of Devonport... read more
Tasmania's rugged west coast is one of the worlds richest mineral provinces, known for the diversity - gold, silver, copper, tin, lead, zinc, tungsten, iron ore and osmiridium - and quantity of its... read more
Historic Queenstown, the largest settlement on Tasmania’s west coast, is best known for its copper mines and smelters.
The town, with a population of more than 2,300, occupies the Queen River Valley, but it takes imagination to picture how it must have looked before the surrounding hills were deforested by 19th century mining practices.
While you are in town, you can visit Miners Siding and the Galley Museum, or venture underground on a tour that reveals Queenstown’s rich mining history. These tours claim to be the only that take you to the working face of a mine.
In a dramatic contrast to the scarred hills, wilderness walks in nearby areas take you through dense, wildlife-inhabited forest to disused tramlines and mineshafts, lookouts and waterfalls – including Tasmania’s highest, Montezuma Falls.
You can explore the region’s natural beauty on the West Coast Wilderness Railway to the port of Strahan – one of Australia’s great historic train journeys. If you’re a sports enthusiast, you’ll be impressed by the town’s gravel football ground (they breed their footballers tough on the west coast).
Queenstown was first explored in the 1860s by Charles Gould but wasn’t settled until 1881, when Cornelius Lynch discovered gold in a nearby creek. Throughout the town’s 110-year mining history, diminishing gold resources resulted in a shift to copper mining. Large copper smelters, fuelled by surrounding timber, polluted the area and left the landscape sparse.
Queenstown’s spectacular natural waterfalls and its equally impressive man-made quarries and mines are a two-hour drive from Burnie, or three hours along the Lyell Highway (A 10) from Hobart.
Be prepared for wet weather and strong winds anywhere on the west coast. In Queenstown, the average maximum temperature for June is 12 degrees Celsius (53.5 degrees Fahrenheit), for January 21 degrees Celsius (70 degrees Fahrenheit).
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