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EUROPEAN EXPLORATION OF AUSTRALIA

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The 'European exploration of Australia' encompasses several waves of seafarers and land explorers. Although Australia is often said to have been discovered by Royal Navy Lt. (later Captain) James Cook in 1770, he was merely one of a number of European explorers to have sighted and landed on the continent prior to English settlement, and he did so 164 years after the first such documented encounter. Nor did the exploration of Australia end with Cook; explorers by land and sea continued to survey the continent for many years after settlement.

Contents
Early European sightings
Dutch exploration in the 17th century
1700-1769
1770: Cook's Expedition
Later exploration by sea
Land exploration 1788-1900
20th century explorers
Indigenous Australians participating in European Exploration
Naturalists and other scientists
Uncategorised explorers
Notes
External links

Early European sightings


Although it is possible that the Portuguese Luis Vaez de Torres and Pedro Fernandes de Queirós could have sighted Australia in 1605, the first documented and undisputed European sighting (and landing) of Australia was in 1606, by the Dutch navigator Willem Janszoon aboard the ''Duyfken''.
Occasional claims have been made in support of earlier encounters, particularly for various Portuguese explorations. Evidence put forward in favour of this theory, particularly by Kenneth McIntyre,[1] include rock paintings of what appear to be the type of ships used by the Portuguese, the Mahogany Ship, the Geelong Keys, coins found on the Victorian coast, and evidence based on the Dieppe maps. However, this issue is very hotly debated, and any early Portuguese discovery is by no means a historical certainty, and denied by many if not most historians.
In the 13th century, Marco Polo referred to reports of a large land mass to the south of Asia, but did not see it himself.

Dutch exploration in the 17th century


Voyages of Tasman

''Hollandia Nova'', 1659 map prepared by Joan Blaeu

The most significant exploration of Australia in the 1600s was by the Dutch. The Dutch East India Company traded extensively with the islands which now form parts of Indonesia, and hence were very close to Australia already. Some Dutch explorers include Dirk Hartog who landed on the Western Australian coast, leaving behind a pewter plate engraved with the date of his landing, and Abel Tasman for whom Tasmania was eventually named -- he originally called it Van Diemen's Land after a senior member of the Dutch East India Company. Maps from this period and the early 18th century often have Australia marked as "New Holland" on account of the voyages of these Dutch explorers.
When Who Ship(s) Where
1606Willem Janszoon''Duyfken''Gulf of Carpentaria, Cape York Peninsula (Queensland)
1615Willem Schouten ?
1616Dirk Hartog''Eendracht''Shark Bay area, Western Australia
1619Frederick de HoutmanSighted land near Perth, Western Australia
1623Jan Carstensz''Pera'' and ''Arnhem''Gulf of Carpentaria, Carpentier River
1627François Thijssen''het Gulden Zeepaerdt''1800 km of the South coast (from Cape Leeuwin to Ceduna)
1642-1643Abel Tasman''Heemskerck'' and ''Zeehaen''Van Diemen's Land, later called Tasmania
1696-1697Willem de Vlamingh''Geelvink'', ''Nyptangh'' and the ''Wezeltje''Rottnest Island, Swan River, Dirk Hartog Island (Western Australia)

One Dutch captain of this period who was not really an explorer but who nevertheless bears mentioning was Francisco Pelsaert, captain of the ''Batavia'' which was wrecked off the coast of Western Australia in 1629.
Joan Blaeu's 1659 map on the right shows the clearly recognizable outline of Australia based on the many Dutch explorations of the first half of the 17th century.

1700-1769


Map of William Dampier's voyage.

Throughout the 17th century, knowledge of Australia's coastline increased gradually. Explorers such as William Dampier contributed to this understanding, and maps began to take on an outline clearly identifiable as Australia.
Explorers of this period:

William Dampier

1770: Cook's Expedition


Cook's 1770 voyage shown in red

In 1768 British Lieutenant James Cook was sent from England on an expedition to the Pacific Ocean to observe the transit of Venus from Tahiti, sailing westwards in HM Bark ''Endeavour'' via Cape Horn and arriving there in 1769. On the return voyage he continued his explorations of the South Pacific, in search of the postulated continent of "Terra Australis". He first reached New Zealand, and then sailed further westwards to sight the south-eastern corner of the Australian continent on April 20, 1770. In doing so, he was to be the first documented European expedition to reach the eastern coastline. He continued sailing northwards along the east coast, charting and naming many features along the way. He identified Botany Bay as a good harbour and one potentially suitable for a settlement, and where he made his first landfall on April 29. Continuing up the coastline, the ''Endeavour'' was to later run aground on shoals of the Great Barrier Reef (near the present-day site of Cooktown), where she had to be laid up for repairs. Once corrected the voyage recommenced, eventually reaching the Torres Strait and thence on to Batavia, Dutch East Indies. The expedition returned to England via the Indian Ocean and Cape of Good Hope.
Cook's expedition carried botanist Joseph Banks, for whom a great many Australian geographical features and at least one native plant are named.
His report on his discoveries along the Australian coast, in conjunction with the loss of England's penal colonies in America after they gained independence and growing concern over French activity in the Pacific led to the later foundation of a colony at Port Jackson in 1788.

Later exploration by sea


Voyages of Bass, who the Bass Strait is named after.

Voyages of Matthew Flinders

King's voyages around Australia.

The charting of Australia's coast continued well into the 19th century. Matthew Flinders was one of the most important explorers of this period, and was the first to circumnavigate the continent.
When Who Ship(s) Where
1773Tobias Furneaux''Adventure''South and east coasts of Tasmania
1776James Cook''Resolution''Southern Tasmania
1788 La Perouse ''Astrolabe'' and ''Boussole'' Sydney area; encountered First Fleet in Botany Bay
1796Matthew Flinders''Tom Thumb''Coastline around Sydney
1798Matthew Flinders and George Bass''Norfolk''Circumnavigated Tasmania
1801-1802Nicolas Baudin, accompanied by Thomas Vasse and numerous naturalists (see below) ''Le Géographe'' and ''Le Naturaliste'' Eastern coast; met Flinders at Encounter Bay
1801 John Murray ''Lady Nelson'' Bass Strait; discovery of Port Phillip
1802 Matthew Flinders ''Investigator'' Circumnavigation of Australia
1817King expedition of 1817 - Philip Parker King accompanied by Frederick Bedwell''HMS Mermaid''Circumnavigation of Australia; charting of the north-western coasts

Land exploration 1788-1900


Blaxland's expedition to cross the Blue Mountains

John Oxley's expeditions

Route of the Sturt, Hume and Hovell expeditions

The opening up of the interior to European settlement occurred gradually throughout the colonial period, and a number of these explorers are very well known. Burke and Wills are the best known for their failed attempt to cross the interior of Australia, but such men as Hamilton Hume and Charles Sturt are also notable -- if only because major geographical features, landmarks, and institutions have been named after them.
For many years, plans of westward expansion from Sydney were thwarted by the Great Dividing Range, a large range of mountains which shadows the east coast from the Queensland-New South Wales border to the south coast. The part of the range near Sydney is called the Blue Mountains. Governor Philip Gidley King declared that they were impassable, but despite this, Gregory Blaxland successfully led an expedition to cross them in 1813. He was accompanied by William Lawson, William Wentworth and four servants. This trip paved the way for numerous small expeditions which were undertaken in the following few years.
In 1824, Governor Thomas Brisbane asked Hamilton Hume and William Hovell to travel from Hume's station near modern-day Canberra, to Spencer Gulf (west of modern-day Adelaide). However, they were required to pay their own costs. Hume and Hovell decided that Western Port was a more realistic goal, and they left with a party of six men. After discovering and crossing the Murrumbidgee and Murray rivers, they eventually reached a site near modern-day Geelong, somewhat west of their intended destination.
In 1829-30, Charles Sturt performed an expedition similar to the one which Hume and Hovell had refused: a trip to the mouth of the Murray River. They followed the Murrumbidgee until it met the Murray, and then found the junction of the Murray and the Darling before continuing on to the mouth of the Murray. The discovery that the Darling, Macquarie, Murray and Murrumbidgee rivers all flowed west had led many to believe that the interior of Australia contained an inland sea. The search for an inland sea was an inspiration for many early expeditions west of the Great Dividing Ranges. This quest drove many explorers to extremes of endurance and hardship. Charles Sturt's expedition explained the mystery. It also led to the opening of South Australia to settlement.
Thomas Mitchell, the Surveyor-General of New South Wales, made a significant discovery in 1836. He led an expedition along the Lachlan River, down to the Murray River. He then set off for the southern coast, mapping what is now western Victoria. There he discovered the richest grazing land ever seen in Australia. He was knighted for this discovery in 1837. When he reached the coast at Portland Bay, he was surprised to find a small settlement. It had been established by the Henty family, who had sailed across Bass Strait from Van Diemen's Land in 1834, without the authorities being informed.
Eyre's expeditions on the Nullabor Plain and to the Flinders Ranges

Kennedy's expeditions in the interior of Queensland

Leichardt's exploration

The ill fated expedition of Burke and Wills

Stuart was the first to cross the country from south to north successfully.

Map of John Forrest's expeditions

Perhaps the most famous Australian explorers were Robert O'Hara Burke and William John Wills who in 1860-61 led a well equipped expedition from Melbourne to the Gulf of Carpentaria. Due to an unfortunate run of bad luck, oversight and poor leadership, Burke and Wills both died on the return trip. See Burke and Wills expedition for a full account.
Expeditions (in chronological order):
When Who Where
1804William PatersonPort Dalrymple, Tamar River, North Esk River (Tasmania)
1813 Blaxland, Wentworth, and Lawson From Sydney across the Great Dividing Range via the Blue Mountains; first penetration into inland New South Wales
1817-1818John OxleyInterior of New South Wales; discovered Lachlan River and Macquarie River
1824Hume and Hovell expeditionSydney to Geelong; discovered Murray River
1828 Charles Sturt and Hamilton Hume Macquarie River area; discovered Darling River
1829Charles SturtAlong the Murrumbidgee River; found and named Murray River, and determined that western-flowing rivers flowed into the Murray-Darling basin
1830John MolloyBlackwood River, Western Australia
1830-1834Alfred and John BussellBlackwood River and the Vasse, Western Australia
1831Robert Dale and George Fletcher MooreAvon River area in Western Australia
1834Frederick LudlowAugusta to Perth; discovered Capel River
1834-1836George Fletcher MooreAvon River and Swan River; discovered that they are the same river; discovered rich pastoral land near the Moore River
1839-1841Edward John EyreThe Flinders Ranges and Nullarbor Plain
1840Paweł Edmund StrzeleckiAscended and named Mount Kosciuszko, New South Wales
1840Patrick LeslieCondamine River, New South Wales
1840-1842Clement HodgkinsonNorth-eastern New South Wales, from Port Macquarie to Moreton Bay
1844Charles SturtNorth-western New South Wales and north-eastern South Australia; discovered and named Simpson Desert
1847Anthony O'Grady Lefroy and Alfred DurlacherGingin, Western Australia
1854Austin expedition of 1854 - Robert Austin, Kenneth BrownGeraldton, Mount Magnet, Murchison River (Western Australia
1858-1860John McDouall StuartNorth-western South Australia; discovered water sources used as staging points for later expeditions; found and named Finke River, MacDonnell Ranges, Tennant Creek
1860 Burke and Wills expedition including Robert O'Hara Burke, William John Wills Melbourne to Gulf of Carpentaria (traversing Australia south to north); determined non-existence of inland sea
1897Frank HannPilbara region of Western Australia; named Lake Disappointment

Other explorers by land (in alphabetical order):


Collet Barker

John Baxter

Francis Cadell

David Carnegie

Robert Dale

George Evans

Edward John Eyre

Alexander Forrest

John Forrest


Alfred Gibson

Ernest Giles

William Gosse

George Goyder

Augustus Gregory

George Edward Grey

John Ainsworth Horrocks

Frank Hann

William Hovell

Edmund Kennedy

William Landsborough

William Lawson

Ludwig Leichhardt


Patrick Leslie

Thomas Livingstone Mitchell

William Paterson

Charles Sturt

Watkin Tench

William Tietkins

Frederick Walker

Peter Warburton


20th century explorers


By the turn of the 20th century, most of the major geographical features of Australia had been discovered by European explorers. However, there are some 20th century people who are considered explorers. They include:

Ted Colson (first to cross the Simpson Desert in 1936)

Cecil Madigan (major scientific expedition to the Simpson Desert in 1939)

Len Beadell

Robyn Davidson

Indigenous Australians participating in European Exploration


A number of Indigenous Australians participated in the European exploration of Australia. They include:

Tommy Windich, who joined John Forrest in his search for Ludwig Leichhardt

Wylie, who accompanied Eyre's expedition across the Nullarbor

Naturalists and other scientists


There are a number of naturalists and other scientists closely associated with European exploration of Australia. They include:

Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander (accompanied Cook's 1770 expedition)

Allan Cunningham (accompanied Oxley's 1817 expedition)

John Gilbert accompanied Leichhardt's expedition

Clement Hodgkinson (also an explorer in his own right)

Ferdinand von Mueller (accompanied Augustus Gregory's expedition

Jean Baptiste Leschenault de la Tour, François Péron and Charles Alexander Lesueur (accompanied Baudin's 1801 expedition)

Uncategorised explorers



William Patrick Auld

Francis Barrallier

James Calvert

Emily Caroline Creaghe

Louis de Rougemont

Hedley Herbert Finlayson

George Frankland

John Graham

Frank Gregory

Alfred Howitt

Robert Logan Jack

Jackey Jackey

Alexander William Jardine

Frank Jardine

Gerard Krefft

John Lhotsky

Edmund Lockyer

Carl Sofus Lumholtz

John MacGillivray

W. J. Peasley

Nicholas Pateshall

Olive Pink

John Price

Arthur Bowes Smyth

Michael Terry

Frederick Walker

Warrup

Lawrence Wells

William Charles Wentworth

Tommy Windiitj

Charles Winnecke

Notes


1. Secret Discovery of Australia: Portuguese Ventures 200 Years Before Captain Cook, , Kenneth, McIntyre, Pan Books Australia, , ISBN 0330270338

External links



Explorers page at Project Gutenburg Australia

original documentation from 17th Century Dutch exploration at Project Gutenburg Australia

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