Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Laurisilva of Madeira' has mentioned 'Australia' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Contents 1 Ecology 2 Characteristics 3 Origin 4 Laurel forest ecoregions 4.1 East Asia 4.1.1 Laurel forest ecoregions in East Asia 4.2 Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines 4.2.1 Laurel forest ecoregions of Sundaland, Wallacea, and the Philippines 4.3 Macaronesia and the Mediterranean Basin 4.3.1 Laurel forest ecoregions of Macaronesia 4.4 Nepal 4.5 Southern India 4.6 Sri Lanka 4.7 Africa 4.8 USA Southeast States 4.9 USA ancient California 4.10 Central America 4.10.1 Laurel forest ecoregions in Mexico and Central America 4.11 Tropical Andes 4.12 Southeastern South America 4.13 Central Chile 4.14 Australia, New Caledonia and New Zealand 4.14.1 New Guinea 4.14.1.1 Laurel forest ecoregions of New Guinea 5 References 6 External links | WIKI |
Some lauroid species that are found outside laurel forests are relicts of vegetation that covered much of the mainland of Australia, Europe, South America, Antarctica, Africa, and North America when their climate was warmer and more humid. | WIKI |
Inner laurel forest ecoregions, a related and distinct community of vascular plants, evolved millions of years ago on the supercontinent of Gondwana, and species of this community are now found in several separate areas of the Southern Hemisphere, including southern South America, southernmost Africa, New Zealand, Australia and New Caledonia. | WIKI |
Australia, New Caledonia and New Zealand[edit] | WIKI |
Distribution of Nothofagus, a plant genus that typifies Gondwanan distribution, having descended from the supercontinent and persisting in Australia, New Zealand, New Caledonia and Chile; fossils have also been found in Antarctica | WIKI |
Laurel forest appears on mountains of the coastal strip of New South Wales in Australia, New Guinea, New Caledonia, Tasmania, and New Zealand. | WIKI |
The laurel forests of Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand are home to species related to those in the Valdivian laurel forests, including Southern Beech (Nothofagus, fossils of which have recently been found in Antarctica[23]) through the connection of the Antarctic flora. | WIKI |
Unlike many of the Pacific Islands, which are of relatively recent volcanic origin, New Caledonia is part of Zealandia, a fragment of the ancient Gondwana that separated from Australia 60xe2x80x9385xc2xa0million years ago,[25] and the ridge linking New Caledonia to New Zealand has been deeply submerged for millions of years. | WIKI |
New Caledonia and New Zealand are separated by continental drift of Australia 85 million years ago. | WIKI |
The laurel forest of Australia, New Caledonia (Adenodaphne), and New Zealand have a number of species related to those of the Valdivian laurel forest, through the connection of the Antarctic flora of gymnosperms like the podocarpus and deciduous Nothofagus. | WIKI |
Genus Beilschmiedia are trees and shrubs widespread in tropical Asia, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Central America, the Caribbean, and South America as far south as Chile. | WIKI |
The tree niaouli grows in Australia, New Caledonia, and Papua. | WIKI |
Over time Australia drifted north and became drier; the humid Antarctic flora from Gondwana retreated to the east coast and Tasmania, while the rest of Australia became dominated by sclerophyll forest and xeric shrubs and grasses. | WIKI |
Humans arrived in Australia 50xe2x80x9360,000 years ago, and used fire to reshape the vegetation of the continent; as a result,[citation needed] the Antarctic flora, also known as the Rainforest flora in Australia, retreated to a few isolated areas composing less than 2% of Australia's land area. | WIKI |
The eastern end of Malesia, including New Guinea and the Aru Islands of eastern Indonesia, is linked to Australia by a shallow continental shelf, and shares many marsupial mammal and bird taxa with Australia. | WIKI |
[9][28] New Guinea and Northern Australia are closely related. | WIKI |