|
Definition of Eyre Peninsula
1. Noun. A peninsula of southern Australia.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Eyre Peninsula
Literary usage of Eyre Peninsula
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Australia by Peter Hinze (2001)
"FROM ADELAIDE TO PERTH BAROSSA VALLEY YORKE PENINSULA Eyre Peninsula NULLARBOR
PLAIN TO PERTH VIA KALGOORLIE /TO PERTH ALONG THE COAST and Tanunda, ..."
2. Local Economic Development: A Geographical Comparison of Rural Community by Cecily Neil, Markku Tykkyläinen, NetLibrary, Inc (1998)
"The Eyre Peninsula at the start of the 1 980s The Eyre Peninsula communities have
been accustomed to droughts and boom/bust cycles since the beginning of ..."
3. Encyclopaedia Britannica, a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and edited by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"The rest of the southern coast west as far as 124° E., with the exception of the
southern projection of Eyre Peninsula, which receives from ю to 20 in., ..."
4. Winston's Cumulative Loose-leaf Encyclopedia: A Comprehensive Reference Bookedited by Charles Morris edited by Charles Morris (1921)
"E., embracing Spencer's and St. Vincent Gulfs, with Eyre Peninsula and Kangaroo
Island. Several short ranges of mountains are distributed over the state, ..."
5. The Cyclopedia of South Australia ...: An Historical and Commercial Review by Henry Thomas Burgess (1907)
"The foregoing are east of Eyre Peninsula; on the west ... Across the base of Eyre
Peninsula, and south of the great depression in which lie Lake Gairdner ..."
6. Australasia by Alfred Russel Wallace, Augustus Henry Keane (1888)
"In the southern portion of the colony are Mount Gambier and other extinct volcanoes,
while in the unsettled country of the Eyre Peninsula are the rugged ..."
7. Winston's Cumulative ... Encyclopedia: A Comprehensive Reference Bookby Charles Morris by Charles Morris (1918)
"E.. embracing Spencer's and St. Vincent Gulfs, with Eyre Peninsula and ...
The tableland in Eyre Peninsula, west of Spencer Gulf, averages 1300 feet in ..."