Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Darwin é a capital do Território do Norte, no litoral norte da Austrália, e conta com uma população de 145 916 pessoas (estimativa de 2016 ), sendo a maior cidade do escassamente povoado território. É a 15.ª maior cidade da Austrália e a menor das capitais provinciais.

  2. Darwin ( Larrakia: Garramilla) [8] [better source needed] is the capital city of the Northern Territory, Australia. The city has nearly 53% of the Northern Territory's population, with 139,902 at the 2021 census. [1] It is the smallest, wettest, and most northerly of the Australian capital cities and serves as the Top End 's regional ...

  3. The history of Darwin details the city's growth from a fledgling settlement into a thriving colonial capital and finally a modern city. Early history. One of the earliest European maps of Australia. The Aboriginal people of the Larrakia language group lived in the greater Darwin Region before European settlement. [1] .

  4. Darwin (Laragia: Garramilla) is the territorial capital of the Northern Territory in Australia. The city has about 147,000 people living there. The city is named after Charles Darwin. A member of the crew of the ship that started a port there in 1839 named it Port Darwin in honour of Darwin, who had sailed on that same ship earlier.

  5. The City of Darwin is a local government area of the Northern Territory, Australia. It includes the central business district of the capital, Darwin City, and represents two-thirds of its metropolitan population.

  6. Darwin é a capital do Território do Norte, no litoral norte da Austrália, e conta com uma população de 145 916 pessoas , sendo a maior cidade do escassamente povoado território. É a 15.ª maior cidade da Austrália e a menor das capitais provinciais.

  7. Há 6 dias · Darwin, capital and chief port of Northern Territory, Australia. It is situated on a low peninsula northeast of the entrance to its harbor, Port Darwin, a deep inlet of Beagle Gulf of the Timor Sea. The harbor was found in 1839 by John Stokes, surveyor aboard the HMS Beagle, and was named for Charles Darwin.