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The guide includes all the hotels, restaurants, places to see and activities, from beachgoing to backpacking, kayaking to exploring the Outback and the ethnical attractions. Australia's most significant state takes up nearly another of the continent, filling some 2,525,250 square kilometers with a diverse mixture of extreme and wonderful panoramas. The balmy seaside capital of Perth and its own flourishing southern suburb of Fremantle, where 1.4 of the state's 1.8 million residents live, are multiply along Australia's southwest advantage, just north of the Cape Naturaliste hook. South of here, lush river valleys and seaside parks stretch east for more than 1,620 kilometres, while north of Perth, across the rough advantage of the Indian Ocean, towns are considerably and few, with vast natural parklands coloring in the unfilled spaces between them. The country's westernmost town, Coral Bay, lies halfway up the coast, from where the land cuts back east and north toward Slot Hedland and Broome. But still the state of hawaii sprawls on, further northeast through the fantastic, dried up plains of the Kimberley, and south through unlimited expanses of gold and red desert. Within these great, barren stretches and across the coastlines, however, are hidden treasures that for the past hundred years have fueled a lot of Australia's market. The famous goldfields, where fortune-seekers thronged in the overdue 1800s, encircle the southern Outback city of Kalgoorlie-Boulder. Nutrient sands and deposits of bauxite, the foundation for the country's considerable lightweight aluminum industry, are tucked across the state's southwest advantage. Surrounding the Kimberley, or the very good northwest, natural gas is the considerable tool, tapped in extensive volumes from the Northwest Shelf. The Pilbara, across the north-central coast, has the world's most intensive iron-ore deposits. Which is all not to mention the world-famous pearls found offshore of Broome.