The explorations of Mr.
John McDouall Stuart may truly be said, without disparaging his brother
explorers, to be amongst the most important in the history of Australian
discovery. In 1844 he gained his first experiences under the guidance of
that distinguished explorer, Captain Sturt, whose expedition he
accompanied in the capacity of draughtsman. Leaving Lake Torrens on the
left, Captain Sturt and his party passed up the Murray and the Darling,
until finding that the latter would carry him too far from the northern
course, which was the one he had marked out for himself, he turned up a
small tributary known to the natives as the Williorara. The water of
this stream failing him, he pushed on over a barren tract, until he
suddenly came upon a fruitful and well-watered spot, which he named the
Rocky Glen. In this picturesque glen they were detained for six months,
during which time no rain fell. The heat of the sun was so intense that
every screw in their boxes was drawn, and all horn handles and combs
split into fine laminae. The lead dropped from their pencils, their
finger-nails became as brittle as glass, and their hair, and the wool on
their sheep, ceased to grow. Scurvy attacked them all, and Mr. Poole,
the second in command, died. In order to avoid the scorching rays of the
sun, they had excavated an underground chamber, to which they retired
during the heat of the day.
When the long-expected
rain fell, they pushed on for fifty miles to another suitable
halting-place, which was called Park Depot. From this depot Captain
Sturt made two attempts to reach the Centre of the continent. He
started, accompanied by four of his party, advancing over a country
which resembled an ocean whose mighty billows, fifty or sixty feet high,
had become suddenly hardened into long parallel ridges of solid sand.
The abrupt termination of this was succeeded at two hundred miles by
what is now so well known as Sturt's Stony Desert, to which frequent
allusion is made by Mr. Stuart in his journals. After thirty miles more,
this stony desert ceased with equal abruptness, and was followed by a
vast plain of dried mud, which Captain Sturt describes as "a boundless
ploughed field, on which floods had settled and subsided." After
advancing two hundred miles beyond the Stony Desert, and to within one
hundred and fifty miles of the Centre of the continent, they were
compelled to return to Park Depot, where they arrived in a most
exhausted condition.
A short rest at the Depot
was followed by another expedition, Captain Sturt being on this occasion
accompanied by Mr. Stuart and two men. The seventh day of their journey
brought them to the banks of a fine creek, now so well known as Cooper
Creek in connection with the fate of those unfortunate explorers, Burke
and Wills. At two hundred miles from Cooper Creek Captain Sturt and his
party were again met by the Stony Desert, but slightly varied in its
aspect. Before abandoning his attempt to proceed, the leader of the
expedition laid the matter before his companions, and he writes as
follows: "I should be doing an injustice to Mr. Stuart and my men, if I
did not here mention that I told them the position we were placed in,
and the chance on which our safety would depend if we went on. They
might well have been excused if they expressed an opinion contrary to
such a course; but the only reply they made me was to assure me that
they were ready and willing to follow me to the last."
With much reluctance,
however, Captain Sturt determined to return to Cooper Creek without
delay. They travelled night and day without interruption, and on the
morning of their arrival at the creek, one of those terrible hot north
winds, so much dreaded by the colonists, began to blow with unusual
violence. Lucky was it for them that it had not overtaken them in the
Desert, for they could scarcely have survived it. The heat was awful; a
thermometer, graduated to 127 degrees, burst, though sheltered in the
fork of a large tree, and their skin was blistered by a torrent of fine
sand, which was driven along by the fury of the hurricane. They still
had fearful difficulties to encounter, but after an absence of nineteen
months they returned safely to Adelaide.
The discouraging account
of the interior which was brought by Captain Sturt did not prevent other
explorers from making further attempts; but the terrible fate of Kennedy
and his party on York Peninsula, and the utter disappearance of
Leichardt's expedition, both in the same year (1848), had a very decided
influence in checking the progress of Australian exploration. Seven
years later, in 1855, Mr. Gregory landed on the north-west coast for the
purpose of exploring the Victoria River, and after penetrating as far
south as latitude 20 degrees 16 minutes, longitude 131 degrees 44
minutes, he was compelled to proceed to the head of the Gulf of
Carpentaria, and thence to Sydney along the route taken by Dr. Leichardt
in 1844. Shortly after his return Mr. Gregory was despatched by the
Government of New South Wales in 1857, to find, if possible, some trace
of the lost expedition of the lamented Leichardt; his efforts, however,
did nothing to clear up the mystery that enshrouds the fate of that
celebrated explorer.* (* It is possible that Mr. McKinlay has been hasty
in the opinion he formed from the graves and remains of white men shown
to him by Keri Keri, and the story related of their massacre. May they
not belong to Leichardt's party?)
The colonists of South
Australia have always been distinguished for promoting by private aid
and public grant the cause of exploration. They usually kept somebody in
the field, whose discoveries were intended to throw light on the
caprices of Lake Torrens, at one time a vast inland sea, at another a
dry desert of stones and baked mud. Hack, Warburton, Freeling, Babbage,
and other well-known names, are associated with this particular
district, and, in 1858, Stuart started to the north-west of the same
country, accompanied by one white man (Forster) and a native. In this,
the first expedition which he had the honour to command, he was aided
solely by his friend Mr. William Finke, but in his later journeys Mr.
James Chambers also bore a share of the expense.* (* It is greatly to be
regretted that both these gentlemen are since dead. Mr. Chambers did not
survive to witness the success of his friend's later expeditions, and
the news of Mr. Finke's death reached us while these sheets were going
through the press.) This journey was commenced in May, 1858, from Mount
Eyre in the north to Denial and Streaky Bays on the west coast of the
Port Lincoln country. On this journey Mr. Stuart accomplished one of the
most arduous feats in all his travels, having, with one man only (the
black having basely deserted them), pushed through a long tract of dense
scrub and sand with unusual rapidity, thus saving his own life and that
of his companion. During this part of the journey they were without food
or water, and his companion was thoroughly dispirited and despairing of
success. This expedition occupied him till September, 1858, and was
undertaken with the object of examining the country for runs. On his
return the South Australian Government presented him with a large grant
of land in the district which he had explored.
Mr. Stuart now turned his
attention to crossing the interior, and, with the assistance of his
friends Messrs. Chambers and Finke, he was enabled to make two
preparatory expeditions in the vicinity of Lake Torrens—from April 2nd
to July 3rd, 1859, and from November 4th, 1859, to January 21st, 1860.
The fourth expedition started from Chambers Creek (discovered by Mr.
Stuart in 1858, and since treated as his head-quarters for exploring
purposes), on March 2nd, 1860, and consisted of Mr. Stuart and two men,
with thirteen horses. Proceeding steadily northwards, until the country
which his previous explorations had rendered familiar was left far
behind, on April 23rd the great explorer calmly records in his Journal
the following important announcement: "To-day I find from my
observations of the sun that I am now camped in the CENTRE OF
AUSTRALIA." One of the greatest problems of Australian discovery was
solved! The Centre of the continent was reached, and, instead of being
an inhospitable desert or an inland sea, it was a splendid grass country
through which ran numerous watercourses.
Leaving the Centre, a
north-westerly course was followed, but, after various repulses, a
north-easterly course eventually carried the party as far as latitude 18
degrees 47 minutes south, longitude 134 degrees, when they were driven
back by the hostility of the natives. As has already been stated, Mr.
Gregory in 1855, starting from the north-west coast, had penetrated to
the south as low as latitude 20 degrees 16 minutes, longitude 127
degrees 35 minutes. Mr. Stuart had now reached a position about half-way
between Gregory's lowest southward point and the head of the Gulf of
Carpentaria. Without actually reaching the country explored by Gregory,
he had overlapped his brother explorer's position by one degree and a
half, or more than one hundred miles, and was about two hundred and
fifty miles in actual distance from the nearest part of the shores of
the Gulf. It is important to remark that the attack of the savages which
forced Mr. Stuart to return occurred on June 26th, 1860, so that he had
virtually crossed the continent two months before Messrs. Burke and
Wills had left Melbourne.* (* They did not leave Cooper Creek until
December 14th, rather more than a fortnight before Mr. Stuart started on
his fifth expedition.)
On New Year's day 1861,
Mr. Stuart again left Adelaide, aided this time by a grant from the
Colonial Government of 2500 pounds, in addition to the assistance of his
well-tried friends Messrs. Chambers and Finke. He made his former
position with ease, and advanced about one hundred miles beyond it, to
latitude 17 degrees, longitude 133 degrees; but an impenetrable scrub
barred all further progress, and failing provisions, etc., compelled
him, after such prolonged and strenuous efforts that his horses on one
occasion were one hundred and six hours without water, most reluctantly
to return. The expedition arrived safely in the settled districts in
September, and the determined explorer, after a delay of less than a
month, was again despatched by the South Australian Government along
what had now become to him a familiar road. This time success crowned
his efforts; a passage was found northwards through the opposing scrub,
and leaving the Gulf of Carpentaria far to the right, the Indian Ocean
itself was reached. Other explorers had merely seen the rise and fall of
the tide in rivers, boggy ground and swamps intervening and cutting off
all chance of ever seeing the sea. But Stuart actually stood on its
shore and washed his hands in its waters! What a pleasure it must have
been to the leader when, knowing well from his reckoning that the sea
must be close at hand, but keeping it a secret from all except Thring
and Auld, he witnessed the joyful surprise of the rest of the party!
The expedition reached
Adelaide safely, although for a long time the leader's life was
despaired of, the constant hardships of so many journeys with scarcely
any intermission having brought on a terrible attack of scurvy. The
South Australian Government in 1859 liberally rewarded Mr. Stuart and
his party for their successful enterprise.* (* Mr. Stuart's qualities as
a practised Bushman are unrivalled, and he has always succeeded in
bringing his party back without loss of life.) On the 10th of March a
resolution was passed to the effect that a sum of 3500 pounds should be
paid as a reward to John McDouall Stuart, Esquire, and the members of
his party, in the following proportions: Mr. Stuart 2000 pounds; Mr.
Keckwick 500 pounds; Messrs. Thring and Auld 200 pounds each; and
Messrs. King, Billiatt, Frew, Nash, McGorrerey, and Waterhouse, 100
pounds each. Perhaps this is the most fitting place to express Mr.
Stuart's appreciation of the honour done him by the Royal Geographical
Society of London, in awarding him their gold medal and presenting him
with a gold watch. He wishes particularly to express his hearty thanks
to Sir Roderick Murchison, and the other distinguished members of the
society, for the lively interest they have evinced in his welfare.
Mr. Stuart's experiences
have led him to form a very decided opinion as to the cause of the
well-known hot winds of Australia, so long the subject of scientific
speculation. North and north-west of Flinders Range are large plains
covered with stones, extending as far as latitude 25 degrees. To the
north of that, although the sun was intensely hot, there were no hot
winds; in fact from that parallel of latitude to the Indian Ocean,
either going or returning, they were not met with. "On reaching latitude
27 degrees on my return," writes Mr. Stuart, "I found the hot winds
prevailing again as on my outward journey. I saw no sandy desert to
which these hot winds have been attributed, but, on lifting some of the
stones that were lying on the surface,* I found them so hot that I was
obliged to drop them immediately. (* On the surface, as I suppose, of
the large plains North of Flinders Range. ED.) It is my opinion that
when a north wind blows across those stone-covered plains, it collects
the heat from them, and the air, becoming rarified, is driven on
southwards with increased vehemence. To the north of latitude 25
degrees, although exposure to the sun in the middle of the day was very
oppressive, yet the moment we got under the shade of a tree we felt
quite alive again; there was none of that languid feeling which is
experienced in the south during a hot wind, as for example that which
blew on the morning after reaching the Hamilton,* in latitude 26 degrees
40 minutes. (* Journal 1861 to 1862.) That was one of the hottest winds
I ever experienced. I had the horses brought up at 7 o'clock, intending
to proceed, but seeing there was a very hot wind coming on, I had them
turned out again. It was well I did so, for before 10 o'clock all the
horses were in small groups under the trees, and the men lying under the
shade of blankets unable to do anything, so overpowering was the heat."
Unfortunately, Mr. Stuart had no thermometer.
Mr. Stuart is anxious to
direct attention to the establishment of a Telegraph line along his
route. On this subject he writes as follows:—
"On my arrival in
Adelaide from my last journey I found a great deal of anxiety felt as to
whether a line could be carried across to the mouth of the Adelaide
river. There would be a few difficulties in the way, but none which
could not be overcome and made to repay the cost of such an undertaking.
The first would be in crossing from Mr. Glen's station to Chambers
Creek, in finding timber sufficiently long for poles, supposing that no
more favourable line than I travelled over could be adopted, but I have
good reason for supposing that there is plenty of suitable timber in the
range and creek, not more than ten miles off my track: the distance
between the two places is one hundred miles. From Chambers Creek through
the spring country to the Gap in Hanson Range the cartage would be a
little farther, in consequence of the timber being scarce in some
places. There are many creeks in which it would be found, but I had not
time to examine them in detail. Another difficulty would be in crossing
the McDonnell Range, which is rough and ragged, but there is a great
quantity of timber in the Hugh; the distance to this in a straight line
is not more than seven miles; from thence to the Roper River there are a
few places where the cartage might be from ten to twenty miles, that is
in crossing the plains where only stunted gum-trees grow, but tall
timber can be obtained from the rising ground around them. From latitude
16 degrees 30 minutes south to the north coast, there would be no
difficulty whatever, as there is an abundance of timber everywhere. I am
promised information, through the kindness of Mr. Todd, of the Telegraph
department, as to the average cost of establishing the lines through the
outer districts of this colony, and it is my intention to make a
calculation of the cost of a line on my route, by which the comparative
merits and expense will be tested, and I am of opinion I shall be able
to show most favourable results. I should have been glad for this
information to have accompanied my works, but I find I cannot postpone
them longer for that purpose, as parties have already taken advantage of
the delay occasioned by my illness at the time of, and since, my arrival
home to collect what scraps of information they could obtain, with the
intention of publishing them as my travels. I leave the reward of such
conduct to a discriminating public; I shall not fail to carry out my
intention with regard to a Telegraph line; and should I have no
opportunity of submitting it to the public, I shall take care to advance
the matter in such channels as may be most likely to lead to a
successful issue. I beg reference to my map accompanying this work,
which will at once show the favourable geographical situation of the
Adelaide River for a settlement, and the short and safe route it opens
up for communication and trading with India: indeed when I look upon the
present system of shipping to that important empire, I cannot
over-estimate the advantages that such an extended intercourse would
create."
Mr. Stuart is also very
anxious for the formation of a new colony on the scene of his
discoveries on the River Adelaide, and would fain have been one of the
first pioneers of such an enterprise, but his health has been so much
shattered by his last journey that he can only now hope to see younger
men follow in the path which he had made his own. He writes as follows:—
"Judging from the
experience I have had in travelling through the Continent of Australia
for the last twenty-two years, and also from the description that other
explorers have given of the different portions they have examined in
their journeys, I have no hesitation in saying, that the country that I
have discovered on and around the banks of the Adelaide River is more
favourable than any other part of the continent for the formation of a
new colony. The soil is generally of the richest nature ever formed for
the benefit of mankind: black and alluvial, and capable of producing
anything that could be desired, and watered by one of the finest rivers
in Australia. This river was found by Lieutenant Helpman to be about
four to seven fathoms deep at the mouth, and at one hundred and twenty
miles up (the furthest point he reached) it was found to be about seven
fathoms deep and nearly one hundred yards broad, with a clear passage
all the way up. I struck it about this point, and followed it down,
encamping fifteen miles from its mouth, and found the water perfectly
fresh, and the river broader and apparently very deep; the country
around most excellent, abundantly supplied with fresh water, running in
many flowing streams into the Adelaide River, the grass in many places
growing six feet high, and the herbage very close—a thing seldom seen in
a new country. The timber is chiefly composed of stringy-bark, gum,
myall, casurina, pine, and many other descriptions of large timber, all
of which will be most useful to new colonists. There is also a plentiful
supply of stone in the low rises suitable for building purposes, and any
quantity of bamboo can be obtained from the river from two to fifty feet
long. I measured one fifteen inches in circumference, and saw many
larger. The river abounds in fish and waterfowl of all descriptions. On
my arrival from the coast I kept more to the eastward of my north
course, with the intention of seeing further into the country. I crossed
the sources of the running streams before alluded to, and had great
difficulty in getting more to the west. They take their rise from large
bodies of springs coming from extensive grassy plains, which proves
there must be a very considerable underground drainage, as there are no
hills of sufficient elevation to cause the supply of water in these
streams. I feel confident that, if a new settlement is formed in this
splendid country, in a few years it will become one of the brightest
gems in the British Crown. To South Australia and some of the more
remote Australian colonies the benefits to be derived from the formation
of such a colony would be equally advantageous, creating an outlet for
their surplus beef and mutton, which would be eagerly consumed by the
races in the Indian Islands, and payment made by the shipment of their
useful ponies, and the other valuable products of those islands; indeed
I see one of the finest openings I am aware of for trading between these
islands and a colony formed where proposed."
Mr. Stuart was
accompanied on his last journey by Mr. Waterhouse, a clever naturalist,
whose report to the Commissioner of Crown Lands of South Australia,
although too long for insertion here, is full of most interesting
information. Unfortunately, the interests of geographical science were
apparently lost sight of in the hurry to effect the grand object of the
expedition, namely, to cross from sea to sea. Thermometers were
forgotten; two mounted maps of the country from Chambers Creek to
Newcastle Water, in a tin case, never came to hand, and the expedition
was provided with no means of estimating even the approximate height of
the elevated land or of the mountains in the interior. As Mr. Waterhouse
remarks: "The thermometers were much needed, as it would have been very
desirable to have kept a register of the temperature, and to have tested
occasionally the degree of heat at which water boiled on the high table
lands. The loss of the maps prevented my marking down at the time on the
maps the physical features of the country, and the distribution of its
fauna and flora."
Mr. Waterhouse divides
the country into three divisions. The first, which extends from Goolong
Springs to a little north of the Gap in Hanson Range, latitude 27
degrees 18 minutes 23 seconds, may be called the spring and saltbush
country. The second division commences north of the Gap in Hanson Range,
and extends to the southern side of Newcastle Water, latitude 17 degrees
36 minutes 29 seconds. It is marked by great scarcity of water—in fact,
there are few places where water can be relied on as permanent—and also
by the presence of the porcupine grass (Triodia pungens of Gregory, and
Spinifex of Stuart), which is the prevailing flora. The third division
commences from the north end of Newcastle Water, latitude 17 degrees 16
minutes 20 seconds, and extends to Van Diemen Gulf, latitude 12 degrees
12 minutes 30 seconds; it comprises a large part of Sturt Plains, with
soil formed of a fine lacustrine deposit, the valleys of the Roper
filled with a luxuriant tropical vegetation, and thence to the Adelaide
River and the sea-coast.
On visiting Hergott
Springs, Mr. Waterhouse learnt that Mr. Burtt, whose station* is only a
few miles distant, in opening these springs discovered some fossil
bones, casts of which were forwarded to Professor Owen, who pronounced
them to be the remains of a gigantic extinct marsupial, named Diprotodon
Australis. (* Hergott Springs were only discovered and named by Stuart
three years before, yet we now find a station close by them. The
explorer is not far ahead of his fellow-colonists, as is well remarked
by the Edinburgh Review for July, 1862: "Australian occupation has kept
close on the heels of Australian discovery.") Bones of this animal have
also been found in a newer tertiary formation in New South Wales. Mr.
Waterhouse considers that a great tertiary drift extends over this part
of the country, obscuring and concealing at no great depth below the
surface many springs, which may hereafter be discovered as the country
becomes better known.
The Louden Spa is a hot
spring arising out of a small hillock, and proceeds from the fissures of
volcanic rock. This water is medicinal, but not disagreeable to the
taste: the damper made with it was very light, and tasted like
soda-bread.
In his remarks on the
second division Mr. Waterhouse states much that is valuable. He
estimates the height of Mount Hay at two thousand feet, regarding it as
the highest point of the McDonnell Range, which is the natural centre of
this part of the continent. Mr. Waterhouse only saw Chambers Pillar from
a distance, but he had an opportunity of examining a smaller hill of the
same character, and found it to be composed of a soft loose argillaceous
rock, at the top of which was a thin stratum of a hard siliceous rock,
much broken up. "The isolated hills appear to have been at some remote
period connected, but from the soft and loose nature of the lower rock
meeting with the action of water, had arisen a succession of landslips.
These have been washed away and others have followed in their turn; the
upper rock, from being undermined, has fallen down and broken up,
supplying the peculiar siliceous stones so widely distributed on parts
of the surface of the country."
The vegetation of this
district is poor; the myall is scarce, but the mulga (Acacia aneura)
generally plentiful. Both these shrubs are species of acacia, the myall
being of much larger growth and longer lived than the mulga. Nutritious
grass is seldom found except in the immediate vicinity of the creeks,
and the scrubs are very extensive.
Mr. Waterhouse collected
a great number of specimens of natural history, but, from want of the
convenience for carrying them, many of the more delicate objects were
broken.
In the Appendix will be
found some remarks by Mr. John Gould, F.R.S., etc., on the birds
collected by Mr. Waterhouse during Mr. Stuart's expedition, including a
description of a new and beautiful parrakeet. There are also
descriptions of new species of Freshwater Shells from the same
expedition, by Mr. Arthur Adams, F.L.S., and Mr. G. French Angas, to the
skill of which latter gentleman this work is indebted for its admirable
illustrations.
Dr. Muller, the
Government Botanist, Director of the Botanic Garden at Melbourne, in his
report to both Houses of the Legislature of Victoria, April 15th, 1863,
says, "A series of all the plants collected during Mr. J.M. Stuart's
last expedition was presented by the Hon. H. Strangways, Commissioner of
Crown Lands for South Australia, and those of the former expeditions of
that highly distinguished explorer, by the late J. Chambers, Esquire, of
North Adelaide." Of this collection, Dr. Muller has furnished a
systematic enumeration, which will be found in the Appendix. This
enumeration must not, however, be accepted as final, for Dr. Muller has
forwarded all the specimens to England for the inspection of Mr. Bentham,
the learned President of the Linnaean Society of London, who is now
elaborating his great and exhaustive work on the Flora of Australia, the
second volume of which will shortly be before the public.
WILLIAM HARDMAN.
Explorations
in Australia, The Journals of John McDouall Stuart. (This is an e-text file) |