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This collection comprises authoritative geospatial datasets detailing Australia's maritime jurisdiction, including territorial seas, exclusive economic zones, and continental shelf limits. It features treaty-defined boundaries with neighboring nations and standardized regional maps for specific areas like the Timor Sea and Torres Strait. The data supports the precise delineation of legal maritime zones and the analysis of spatial extents for compliance and policy research.
Australia's maritime jurisdiction is depicted in 28 downloadable PDF maps. The series covers continental shelf areas, treaties, and maritime zones around the Australian mainland, external territories, and Antarctic territory. The maps were published by the Australian Ocean Data Network and last updated on 2026-06-04.
Twenty-seven constituent maps define Australia's maritime jurisdiction, excluding subantarctic territories. The series depicts the continental shelf as proclaimed under the 2012 Seas and Submerged Lands Proclamation. Geoscience Australia updated the data in April 2021 to conform with the Australian Maritime Boundaries 2020 dataset.
Australia's Maritime Zones Edition 5 is a digital map superseding the 2013 edition, derived from Geoscience Australia's Australian Maritime Boundaries 2014 data. It depicts Australia's territorial sea baseline, maritime limits, and continental shelf limits confirmed in 2008, including unresolved areas and agreements with neighboring nations. The map covers Australia's maritime jurisdiction from Heard and McDonald Islands to Norfolk Island and from the Torres Strait to the Australian Antarctic Territory.
Edition 4, published in 2013, supersedes the 2006 Edition 3 map. This geospatial dataset is a digital representation of Australia's territorial sea baseline and maritime limits and boundaries, derived from Geoscience Australia's Australian Maritime Boundaries version 2.0. It includes continental shelf limits confirmed in 2008 and lists boundary arrangements with neighboring countries.
Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction wall map depicts the nation's maritime boundaries, including those of external territories and the Australian Antarctic Territory. The map is part of a 27-map series published by the Australian Ocean Data Network, with the extended continental shelf boundaries approved in April 2008. It is available as an A0-sized PDF for download.
Geoscience Australia delineates Australia's domestic and international maritime limits and boundaries. The Australian Maritime Boundaries (AMB) 2020 data is a digital representation of territorial sea baselines, outer limits of maritime zones, and state/Territory powers limits, replacing the 2014a version. Coverage includes the entire Australian marine jurisdiction, from latitudes 7°S to 70°S and longitudes 40°E to 175°E, with coordinates in the GDA94 datum.
A wall map depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction, including its extended continental shelf approved in 2008 and updated boundaries from the 2018 Australia-Timor-Leste treaty. The map uses a blue Etopo2 seabed background and NASA Blue Marble land imagery. It was updated in March 2020 and is published by the Australian Ocean Data Network.
28 maps depict Australia's maritime jurisdiction, continental shelf, treaties, and various maritime zones. The series includes detailed maps for specific regions like the Torres Strait, Timor Sea, Coral Sea, and the Australian Antarctic Territory. Digital files in PDF format are provided by Geoscience Australia.
A geospatial map depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction in the Timor Sea. It is one of 27 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' and shows the extended continental shelf approved in April 2008, treaties, and maritime zones. The map uses bathymetric data from 2009 and 1997, with land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble, and is published by the Australian Ocean Data Network.
Australia's maritime jurisdiction, including external territories, is represented in this geospatial dataset. Geoscience Australia developed the data, which delineates territorial baselines, maritime zone limits, and offshore petroleum areas under Australian law. The data's geographic extent spans from approximately 7°S to 70°S latitude and 40°E to 175°E longitude, with a currency date of May 2014.
A geospatial map depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction north of approximately 25°S. It is one of 28 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789) and shows areas including the Cocos (Keeling) Islands, west of Christmas Island, and the northern continental region. The map incorporates the extended continental shelf approved in April 2008, treaty boundaries, and various maritime zones over a background of combined bathymetric and topographic imagery.
Edition 5 supersedes the 2013 map, derived from the Australian Maritime Boundaries 2014 dataset. It shows Australia's territorial sea baseline, maritime limits, and the continental shelf limits confirmed in 2008, including unresolved areas. The map was produced by the Australian Ocean Data Network and published in 2014.
Edition 4, published in 2013, supersedes the 2006 Edition 3 map. This map is a digital representation derived from Geoscience Australia's Australian Maritime Boundaries (AMB) version 2.0 data, depicting Australia's territorial sea baseline, maritime limits, and boundaries as established under the Sea and Submerged Lands Act 1973. It includes continental shelf limits confirmed in 2008 and lists boundary arrangements with Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, France, and New Zealand.
Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction map depicts the nation's extended continental shelf as approved by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf in April 2008. It is one of 27 constituent maps in the national Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series, produced by the Australian Ocean Data Network. The background incorporates bathymetric data from a 2009 9 arc-second grid and land imagery from NASA's Blue Marble.
Geoscience Australia's official map depicts Australia's maritime zones and boundaries as established under the Sea and Submerged Lands Act 1973. The fifth edition, published in 2014, incorporates the confirmed continental shelf limits from 2008 and shows unresolved areas. It details maritime boundary arrangements with neighboring countries and territories, covering from Heard and McDonald Islands to Norfolk Island and the Australian Antarctic Territory.
One map in a 27-map series depicting Australia's maritime jurisdiction in the Timor Sea. It shows the extended continental shelf approved in 2008, treaty boundaries, and various maritime zones. The Australian Ocean Data Network provides this A0-sized PDF map, last updated in April 2026.
One of 27 constituent maps in the 'Australia's Maritime Jurisdiction Map Series' (GeoCat 71789). The map depicts Australia's continental shelf as proclaimed in the 2012 proclamation, updated in April 2021 to conform with Geoscience Australia's 'Australian Maritime Boundaries 2020' data. Background imagery combines bathymetric data from Geoscience Australia (2009) and Smith and Sandwell (1997) with NASA's Blue Marble land imagery.
Edition 5 of Australia's Maritime Zones map supersedes the 2013 edition. The map is derived from Geoscience Australia's Australian Maritime Boundaries 2014 data, representing the territorial sea baseline and limits established under the Sea and Submerged Lands Act 1973. It includes continental shelf limits confirmed in 2008 and lists boundary arrangements with Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, France, and New Zealand.
Geoscience Australia's Australia's Maritime Zones Edition 5 map supersedes the 2013 edition. It is a digital representation of Australia's territorial sea baseline and maritime limits, including the continental shelf limits confirmed in 2008. The map covers zones from Heard and McDonald Islands to Norfolk Island and the Australian Antarctic Territory.
May 2025 data from Geoscience Australia details the country's maritime jurisdiction and framework for managing marine resources. The dataset supports marine planning and international boundary certainty. It is published by the Australian Ocean Data Network and was last updated in April 2026.