Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • Okay it’s Pop quiz time! Which country has the longest fence in the world? How about

  • the 2nd largest Greek population? Um, Three times more sheep than people? Ok, one word

  • will give it away: kangaroos. Yes, I’m talking about the Land Down Under. So, what do you

  • know about Australia?

  • Let’s start with the name. “Australiacomes from the Latin wordaustralis,”

  • meaningsouthern.” Way back in the 2nd century, there were legends of a mysterious

  • terra australis incognitaorunknown southern land.” Well, now it’s very known,

  • so let’s get to know more about it!

  • Despite the stereotypes of hot sunny weather year-round, the Australian Alps, which are

  • the highest mountain range in the country, get more snow than the Swiss Alps do! Better

  • grab your skis!

  • The world’s longest national highway is in Australia. It stretches for over 9,000

  • miles! (for comparison, the earth’s diameter is about 7,900.) It's actually a network of

  • highways that connect all capitals of the mainland states.

  • I’m sure youve heard of the Great Wall of China, but what about the Great Fence of

  • Australia? Ok, that’s not what it’s called, but still! The Dingo Fence in southeast Australia

  • stretches for nearly 3,500 miles. For comparison, it would easily cover the entire span of the

  • US, from Los Angeles to Houlton, Maine!

  • Now it might not be so surprising to know that Australia is huge! It’s about the same

  • size as the continental US. At about 2,500 miles wide, the distance from the west to

  • east coast is further than Barcelona to Moscow.

  • In all, Australia is the world's 6th largest country and the only one that’s also a whole

  • continent.

  • But with all that territory, over 80% of Australians live within 60 miles of the coast. This makes

  • the country one of the most coastal-dwelling populations in the world.

  • And that means a whole lotta beaches! In fact, they have so many that if you decided to visit

  • a new beach every day, it’d take you almost 30 years to see them all!

  • The biggest property in Australia is about 40,000 square miles in area. South Korea could

  • fit into it with room to spare.

  • The country’s termites are busy building huge properties as well. Their mounds are

  • the tallest animal-made structures on this planet.

  • Before humans arrived, the continent was home to mega-fauna. If you’d lived there about

  • 46,000 years ago, you’d be dead today. But you wouldve seen 10-foot-tall kangaroos,

  • 23-foot-long goanna lizards, and ducks the size of an adult horse. Quack!

  • The largest living structure on the planet is the Australian Great Barrier Reef. By the

  • way, it has its own mailbox! There’s a rumor that the fish there useeel-mail”…

  • Neither kangaroos nor emus can walk backward. That's why they're painted on the Australian

  • coat of arms. Keep moving forward!

  • The platypus, an egg-laying mammal that lives only in Australia, is one of the rare venomous

  • mammals on this planet. Luckily, while the venom has an excruciatingly painful effect

  • on people, it's not lethal. The takeaway -- Don’t fuss with a platypus.

  • By the way, when the first platypus was brought to England, people there were sure that it

  • was a joke. The English believed that Australians had sewn a duck's bill onto a rat's body to

  • play a trick on them! Yeah, right up until he bit them! Not laughing now are ya?

  • Swimming in the surf during the day had been illegal in Australia up until 1902. But after

  • one guy calmly entered the waves of Manly Beach one afternoon that year, surf bathing

  • became increasingly popular.

  • The largest Greek population outside of Greece itself is in Australia. Actually, to be more

  • precise, in Melbourne. More than 160,000 people who live there say they come from Greek descent.

  • Melbourne was the richest city in the world in 1880. These days, Tokyo, Japan holds this

  • title.

  • And until 2018, Melbourne had been ranked as the most livable city in the world for

  • 7 years in a row. But then it was bumped down to 2nd place after Vienna, Austria. Come on,

  • Melbourne, get back in the game!

  • One of Melbourne's founders was John Batman. (Yep, that was his real name.) And get this:

  • the city was temporarily called Batmania! Too bad they decided to change itto Robinville?

  • Nah.

  • In 2018, Australia ranked third after Norway and Switzerland on the Human Development Index.

  • This index is based on education, life expectancy, and citizen's income. Basically, they got

  • a good thing going down under there!

  • In 2005, security guards at the Parliament House in Canberra were prohibited from calling

  • people "mate." But the ban only lasted for a day, mate! G’day!

  • If youre ever in Western Australia, you can visit one of their many super salty pink

  • lakes. They get the bubble-gum hue from a certain type of algae and bacteria, and theyre

  • totally safe to swim in! Just be careful what you chew!

  • Oh, and be sure to take a selfie while youre swimming in what looks like a giant pool of

  • Pepto-Bismol. You can thank Australia for coming up with the wordselfiein the

  • first place!

  • There are about 74 million sheep to 25 million people in Australia, which makes an impressive

  • ratio of three to one. Only China and India have more than that!

  • Ok, and the kangaroo thing is totally true. There are twice as many kangaroos as there

  • are people therethat’s 50 to 25 million.

  • Speaking of which, when a baby kangaroo is born, it's only half an inch long. It’s

  • also hairless and totally pink. Kinda looks like a gummy bear

  • What else is there in Australia? Oh that’s right, koalas! And to top that, there are

  • 10 times more camels than koalas. Australia is the source of a lot of the Middle East’s

  • camels! (um, Do you prefer one hump or two?)

  • In Western Australia, it's against the law to be in possession of more than 110 pounds

  • of potatoes. Eh, every country has its obscure bizarre laws!

  • Almost every single day, rangers at Uluru, aka Ayers Rock, get packages with pieces of

  • the sacred monolith. Apparently, tourists take a piece of rock as a souvenir, and then

  • they feel guilty and send it back with a note of apology. But some say they start having

  • bad luck as soon as they return home with the stones! So, they send theirsouvenirs

  • back to undo the curse! No wonder these packages got the nicknamesorry rocks.”

  • The architect of the world-famous Sydney Opera House got the idea of this unique construction

  • while munching on an orange. If you combine all the sails of the building’s roof, you'll

  • get a perfect sphere.

  • The most ancient fossils in the world were found in Australia. They were no less than

  • 3.4 billion years old! Even older than my leftovers in the frig.

  • There are so many different species in this country that only 25% of them have been discovered

  • so far.

  • Of the animals discovered to be native to Australia, none have hooves.

  • Burger King miraculously turns into Hungry Jack's as soon as you land in Australia. It's

  • the Aussie franchise of the famous fast food chain.

  • Australia is a unique continent that doesn't house any active volcanos.

  • It’s also the flattest continent on our planet.

  • But it’s got plenty of mountains, and one of them is called Mount Disappointment. It’s

  • just 2,600 feet tall, and, naturally, explorers William Hovell and Hamilton Hume expected

  • to see a great view from the top. However, after climbing the mountain, they discovered

  • that there were too many trees growing on top and blocking the view completely. Guess

  • how the men felt? Uh huh.

  • Australia has tons of unique flora and fauna species that you won't find anywhere else

  • in the world.

  • Among those are a staggering 1,500 spider species! Spider species, yeah!... On the bright

  • side, while some of them are fatally poisonous, most are completely harmless. But how do I

  • tell them apart? Oh the poisonous ones wear signs. Got it.

  • It’s also where youll find 21 of the world’s top 25 most venomous snakes.

  • More than 90% of Australia is covered with some kind of vegetation.

  • Since 1988, Australia has had a national floral emblem, and it's the golden wattle. When this

  • plant blooms, it gets covered with the country’s national colors: green and gold.

  • Australia is a multinational country with more than 200 different languages and dialects

  • spoken there. The most popular non-English languages are Mandarin, Greek, Arabic, Vietnamese,

  • and Cantonese.

  • There are 19 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Australia, including 12 natural sites, 3 cultural

  • sites, and 4 mixed sites.

  • The difference between Australia's total length and its width is only 200 miles.

  • Do you have an 8-hour working day? You can thank Australian stonemasons for that! In

  • 1865, they demanded to make 8-hour shifts the standard. And it spread throughout the

  • world from there!

  • With 8 people per square mile, Australia has an extremely low population density. For comparison,

  • there are about 93 people per square mile in the US.

  • The national Australian airline Qantas uses recycled cooking oil to power its interstate

  • flights.

  • So, have I missed any cool facts about Australia? Let me know down in the comments! If you learned

  • something new today, then give this video a like and share it with a friend. Buthey!

  • don't go Waltzing Matilda just yet! We have over 2,000 cool videos for you to check

  • out. All you have to do is pick the left or right video, click on it, and enjoy! Stay

  • on the Bright Side of life!

Okay it’s Pop quiz time! Which country has the longest fence in the world? How about

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級

50件只有在澳洲才可能發生的事情 (50 Things That Are Only Possible In Australia)

  • 26 2
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字