List of Mountains - By Continent or Area - Oceania - Australia

Australia

Further information: List of mountains in Australia
  • Mawson Peak (2,745 m) — Highest peak in any state or territory of Australia, located in the southern Indian Ocean
  • Mount Kosciuszko (2,228 m) — located in the Snowy Mountains; New South Wales. Mount Kosciuszko is the highest mountain in mainland Australia
  • Australian Alps — the parent range of the Snowy Mountains (the highest mountain range in Australia) and the Brindabella Ranges
  • Great Dividing Range — the parent range of the Australian Alps and the third longest mountain range in the world
  • Blue Mountains — New South Wales
  • Mount Bogong (1,986 m) — highest mountain in Victoria
  • Mount Feathertop (1,922 m) — Victoria
  • Mount Hotham (1,861 m) — Victoria
  • Falls Creek (1,842 m) — Victoria
  • Mount Buller (1,804 m) — Victoria
  • Mount Buffalo (1,695 m) — Victoria
  • Mount Ossa (1,614 m) — highest mountain in Tasmania
  • Cradle Mountain (1,545 m) — Tasmania
  • Mount Dandenong — near Melbourne
  • Mount Keira — in the Illawarra escarpment near Keiraville, Wollongong, New South Wales
  • Mount Kembla — in the Illawarra escarpment near Unanderra, Wollongong, New South Wales
  • Mount Wellington (1,271 m)— Tasmania
  • Bluff Knoll (1,095 m) — Western Australia
  • Ayers Rock (863m) — picturesque sandstone rock formation in the Northern Territory

Read more about this topic:  List Of Mountains, By Continent or Area, Oceania

Famous quotes containing the word australia:

    It is very considerably smaller than Australia and British Somaliland put together. As things stand at present there is nothing much the Texans can do about this, and ... they are inclined to shy away from the subject in ordinary conversation, muttering defensively about the size of oranges.
    Alex Atkinson, British humor writer. repr. In Present Laughter, ed. Alan Coren (1982)

    I like Australia less and less. The hateful newness, the democratic conceit, every man a little pope of perfection.
    —D.H. (David Herbert)