Jump to content

Regions of Tasmania: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
JarrahTree (talk | contribs)
Line 66: Line 66:


==Tourist regions==
==Tourist regions==
[[Tourism region]]s are a scheme of tourist promotion; some ''Tourist'' regions are in effect sub-regions, or component of separate regions, and others are grabs of separate regions: <ref>http://www.tasmania.visitorsbureau.com.au/regions/ </ref>
[[Tourism region]]s are a scheme of tourist promotion; some tourist regions are in sub-regions, or a component of separate regions, and others are grabs of separate regions. {{asof|2015}} Tourism Tasmania, a Tasmanian Government body, divided the state into five regions on the Tasmanian mainland, and two regions covering the two major Bass Strait islands:<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.discovertasmania.com.au/ |title=Destinations |work=Discover Tasmania |publisher=[[Tasmanian Government]] |date= |accessdate=19 July 2015 }}</ref>


* Hobart
* Southeast
* Huon Valley and D'Entrecasteax Channel
* Derwent Valley and Central Highlands
* Launceston and the Tamar Valley
* Midlands
* East Coast
* East Coast
* Flinders Island
* North East
* Devonport and Cradle Valley
* Hobart and South
* King Island
* Launceston and North
* North West
* North West
* West Coast and Wilderness
* West Coast
* King and Flinders Islands


Other regions previously used for tourism purposes include: Hobart, Southeast, Huon Valley and D'Entrecasteax Channel, Derwent Valley and Central Highlands, Launceston and the Tamar Valley, Midlands, North East, Devonport and Cradle Valley, and West Coast and Wilderness.
Another is in 'Zones' <ref>http://www.travelways.com.au/zones </ref>


Zones have also been historically used for the purposes of [[public transport]]<ref>http://www.travelways.com.au/zones{{dead link=July 2015}}</ref> including: Hobart and surrounds, Launceston, Tamar and the North, North West Coast, East Coast, and Western Wilderness.
* Hobart and surrounds
* Launceston, Tamar and the North
* North West Coast
* East Coast
* Western Wilderness


==Wine regions==
==Wine regions==

Revision as of 14:21, 18 July 2015

Regions of Tasmania are regions of Tasmania in Australia named by government authorities, popular usage and also usage in media.

Historically some regions have been identified in terms of land utilisation [1]

In the 1960s the Atlas of Tasmania was the definitive publication in relation to regional variations in Tasmania in geographical terms [2]

Most media outlets tend to distinguish between North West, West Coast, Southern, and East Coast.

Forecast areas - land

The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) forecast areas map [3] provides possibly the most elaborate breakdown with 11 land based regions:

  • 1. Furneaux Islands
  • 2. North East
  • 3. East Coast
  • 4. Central North (including Launceston)
  • 5. Midlands
  • 6. South East (including Hobart)
  • 7. Upper Derwent Valley
  • 8. Central Plateau - same as Central Highlands (Tasmania)
  • 9. Western (includes South Western and Western Tasmania)
  • 10. North West Coast
  • 11. King Island

Coastal regions

Coastal regions in the BOM scheme are:

  • 1. Far North West Coast (including King Island) -
  • 2. Central West Coast (Sandy Cape to Low Rocky Point)
  • 3. Southwest Coast (Low Rocky Point to South East Cape)
  • 4. Southeast Coast (South East Cape to Tasman Island)
  • 5. Southeast Inshore (Hobart and adjacent waters)
  • 6. Lower East Coast (Tasman Island to Wineglass Bay)
  • 7. Upper East Coast (Wineglass Bay to St Helens Point)
  • 8. East of Flinders Island (St Helens Point, Cape Barren)
  • 9. Banks Strait (Larapuna (Eddystone Point),Cape Barren, Sir John Cape, Cape Portland)
  • 10. Central North Coast (Cape Portland to Stanley)


In some schemas a quadrant of the coast is made into four parts [4]

In general terms, the usage is found in a number of forms:

  • North West - generally starting north of the Pieman River mouth and proceeding round into the Bass Straight coast
  • South West - generally starting at Cape Sorell and finishing at either South Cape or South East Cape
  • South East - usually incorporates the region around Hobart and through to wineglass Bay or further north
  • North East - usually referring to the coast from the Tamar River and proceeding round onto the East Coast

These regional schemas do not relate to the physical realities of the coast, or any of the coastal processes, but are simply organisational categorigisation.

Named regions

Tourist regions

Tourism regions are a scheme of tourist promotion; some tourist regions are in sub-regions, or a component of separate regions, and others are grabs of separate regions. As of 2015 Tourism Tasmania, a Tasmanian Government body, divided the state into five regions on the Tasmanian mainland, and two regions covering the two major Bass Strait islands:[5]

  • East Coast
  • Flinders Island
  • Hobart and South
  • King Island
  • Launceston and North
  • North West
  • West Coast

Other regions previously used for tourism purposes include: Hobart, Southeast, Huon Valley and D'Entrecasteax Channel, Derwent Valley and Central Highlands, Launceston and the Tamar Valley, Midlands, North East, Devonport and Cradle Valley, and West Coast and Wilderness.

Zones have also been historically used for the purposes of public transport[6] including: Hobart and surrounds, Launceston, Tamar and the North, North West Coast, East Coast, and Western Wilderness.

Wine regions

  • North West - south of Devonport
  • Tamar Valley - along the valley north of Launceston
  • Pipers River - on the Georgetown to Bridport road.
  • East Coast - between Bicheno in the north, and east of Sorell
  • Coal River - between Cambridge and north of Colebrook.
  • Derwent Valley - between Hamilton and Hobart
  • Southern - between Kingston and Southport

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Lowndes, Arthur G. (Arthur George); Maze, W. H. (Wilson Harold); University of Sydney (1937), Land utilization regions of Tasmania, University of Sydney, retrieved 19 March 2013
  2. ^ Davies, John Lloyd (1965), Atlas of Tasmania, Lands and Surveys Dept, retrieved 19 March 2013
  3. ^ http://www.bom.gov.au/tas/forecasts/map.shtml?ref=hdr
  4. ^ In the Wikipedia category scheme - the dividing points exist at the following points -
  5. ^ "Destinations". Discover Tasmania. Tasmanian Government. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
  6. ^ http://www.travelways.com.au/zonesTemplate:Dead link=July 2015