Geography of Indonesia


The nation of Indonesia is the biggest island country when the aggregate range of its property mass is summed up. With more than 17,500 islands, the nation ranges over a few oceans and between the Indian and Pacific Oceans, beginning in the West with the island of Sumatra the distance to Irian Jaya toward the East.

A vast segment of Borneo Island is administered by Indonesia and bigger islands of Java, Bali, and Sulawesi add to its territory. Given the broadness of its region, the sort of scenes it includes is likewise unfathomable.


Indonesia's biological communities range from tropical wilderness to rice paddies and terraced slopes, to savannah prairies and volcanic mountain ranges and dark sand shorelines. The earth makes natural surroundings for a plenitude of verdure, including the uncommon Sumatran tiger and elephant, the Javan rhino, and the Komodo Dragon.

Indonesia is most remarkably mainstream for its immaculate shorelines and very much safeguarded marine life. The coral species here are endless and the perceivability of numerous islands and their shallow coral frameworks is regularly clear year-round.