On the morning of the 14th Mr. Browne
and I mounted our horses, and left the camp at 9 a.m.,
followed by the men I had selected, and crossing the
grassy plain in a N.W. direction, soon found ourselves
amidst sand hills and scrub.
As I have stated I had determined
to preserve a course of 45 degrees to the west of
north, or in other words a north-west course, but the
reader will readily believe that in such a country
I had no distant object on which to rely. We
were therefore obliged to take fresh bearings with
great precision from almost every sand-hill, for on
the correctness of these bearings, together with our
latitude, we had to depend for our true position.
We were indeed like a ship at sea, without the advantage
of a steady compass.
Throughout the whole day of our departure
from the camp we traversed a better country than that
between it and Lake Torrens, insomuch that there was
more grass. Sand ridges and flats succeeded each
other, but the former were not so broken and precipitous
or the latter so barren, as on our line to the westward,
and about four miles from the camp we passed a pool
of water to our right. At five miles we observed
a new melaleuca, similar to the one I had remarked
when to the north with Joseph, growing on the skirts
of the flats, but the shrubs for the most part consisted
of hakea and mimosae with geum and many other minor
plants. For a time the ridges were smooth on
their sides, and a quantity of young green grass was
springing up on them. At nine miles we crossed
some stony plains, and halted after a ride of 26 miles
without water.
On the 15th a strong and bitterly
cold wind blew from the westward as we passed through
a country differing in no material respect from that
of the day before. Spinifex generally covered
the sand ridges, which looked like ocean swells rising
before us, and many were of considerable height.
At six miles we came to a small pool of water, where
we breakfasted. On leaving this we dug a hole
and let the remainder of the water into it, in the
hope of its longer continuance, and halted after a
long journey in a valley in which there was a kind
of watercourse with plenty of water, our latitude
being 28 degrees 21 minutes 39 seconds. Before
we left this place we cut a deep square hole, into
which as before we drained the water, that by diminishing
its surface we might prevent the too speedy evaporation
of it, in case of our being forced back from the want
of water in the interior, since that element was becoming
more scarce every day. We saw but little change
in the character of the country generally as we rode
through it, but observed that it was more open to the
right, in which direction we passed several extensive
plains. There were heaps of small pebbles also
of ironstone and quartz on some of the flats we crossed.
We halted at the foot of a sand hill, where there was
a good deal of grass, after a vain search for water,
of which we did not see a drop during the day.
The night of the 17th, like the preceding one, was
bitterly cold, with the wind at S.W. During the
early part of this day we passed over high ridges
of sand, thickly covered with spinifex, and a new
polygonum, but subsequently crossed some flats of much
greater extent than usual, and of much better soil,
but the country again fell off in quality and appearance,
although on the whole the tract we had crossed on
our present journey was certainly better than that
we traversed in going to Lake Torrens. We halted
rather earlier than usual, at a creek containing a
long pond of water between two and three feet deep.
The ground near it was barren, if I except the polygonum
that was growing near it. The horses however
found a sufficiency to eat, and we were prevented
the necessity of digging at this point, in consequence
of the depth of the water. We observed some fossil
limestone cropping out of the ground in several places
as we rode along, and the flats were on many parts
covered with small rounded nodules of lime, similar
to those I have noticed as being strewed over the
fossil cliffs of the Murray. It appeared to me
as I rode over some of the flats that the drainage
was to the south, but it was exceedingly difficult
in so level and monotonous a region to form a satisfactory
opinion. We saw several émus in the course
of the day, and a solitary crow, but scarcely any other
of the feathered tribe. There was an universal
sameness in the vegetation, if I except the angophora,
growing on the sand hills and superseding the acacia.
On the 18th the morning was very cold,
with the wind at cast, and a cloudy sky. We started
at eight; and after crossing three very high sand
ridges, descended into a plain of about three miles
in breadth, extending on either hand to the north
and south for many miles. At the further extremity
of this plain we observed a line of box-trees, lying,
or rather stretching, right across our course; but
as they were thicker to the S.W. than at the point
towards which we were riding, I sent Flood to examine
the plain in that direction. In the mean time
Mr. Browne and I rode quietly on; and on arriving
at the trees, found that they were growing in the
broad bed of a creek, and were overhanging a beautiful
sheet of water, such as we had not seen for many a
day. It was altogether too important a feature
to pass without further examination; I therefore crossed,
and halted on its west bank, and as soon as Flood returned,
(who had not seen any water,) but had ascertained
that just below the trees, the creek spreads over
the plain, I sent him with Mr. Browne to trace it
up northward, the fall of the country apparently being
from that point. In the meantime we unloaded
the horses, and put them out on better grass than
they had had for some time. On the opposite side
of the creek, and somewhat above us, there were two
huts, and the claws of crayfish were scattered about
near them. There were also a few wild fowl and
Haemantopus sitting on the water, either unconscious
of or indifferent to our presence. This fine
sheet of water was more than 60 yards broad by about
120 long, but, as far as we could judge, it was shallow.
Mr. Browne returned to me in about
three hours, having traced the creek upwards until
he lost its channel, as Flood had done on a large plain,
that extended northwards to the horizon. He observed
the country was very open in that direction, and had
passed another pond of water, deeper but not so large
as that at which we had stopped, and surprised an old
native in his hut with two of his wives, from whom
he learnt that there were both hills and fish to the
north.
Whilst Mr. Browne was away, I debated
within myself whether or not to turn from the course
on which I had been running to trace this creek up.
The surface water was so very scarce, that I doubted
the possibility of our getting on; but was reluctant
to deviate from the line on which I had determined
to penetrate, and I think that, generally, one seldom
gains anything in so doing. From Mr. Browne’s
account of the creek, its character appeared to be
doubtful, so that I no longer hesitated on my onward
course; but we remained stationary for the remainder
of the day.
The evening of this day was beautifully
fine, and during it many flights of parrots and pigeons
came to the water. Of the latter we shot several,
but they were very wild and wary. There was on
the opposite side of the creek a long grassy flat,
with box-trees growing on it, together with a new
Bauhinia, which we saw here for the first time.
On this grassy flat there were a number of the water-hens
we had noticed on the little fresh-water creek near
Lake Torrens. These birds were running about like
fowls all over the grass, but although they had been
so tame as to occupy the gardens and to run about
the streets of Adelaide, they were now wild enough.
Mr. Browne remarked that the females
he had seen were, contrary to general custom as regards
that sex, deficient in the two front teeth of the
upper jaw, but that the teeth of the man were entire,
and that he was not otherwise disfigured. I was
anxious to have seen these natives, and, as their
hut was not very far from us, we walked to it in the
cool of the afternoon, but they had left, and apparently
gone to the N.E.; we found some mussel shells amongst
the embers of some old fire near it. Our latitude
at this point was 28 degrees 3 minutes S., at a distance
of 86 miles from the Park.
We left on the morning of the 20th
at an early hour, and after crossing that portion
of the plain lying to the westward, ascended a small
conical sand hill, that rose above the otherwise level
summit of the ridge. From this little sand hill
we had our anticipations confirmed as to the low nature
of the country to the north as a medium point, but
observing another and a much higher point to the westward,
we went to, and found that the view extended to a
much greater distance from it. The country was
very depressed, both to the north and northwest.
The plains had almost the character of lagoons, since
it was evident they were sometimes inundated, from
the water mark on the sand hills, by which they were
partly separated from one another. Below us, on
our course, there was a large plain of about eight
miles in breadth; but immediately at the foot of the
hill, which was very abrupt (being the terminating
point of a sandy ridge of which it was the northern
extremity), there was a polygonum flat. We there
saw a beautiful parrot, but could not procure it.
The plain we next rode across was evidently subject
to floods in many parts; the soil was a mixture of
sand and clay. There was a good deal of grass
here and there upon it, and box-trees stunted in their
growth were scattered very sparingly round about;
but the country was otherwise denuded of timber.
There were large bare patches on the plains, that had
been full of water not long before, but too shallow
to have lasted long, and were now dry. We found
several small pools, however, and halted at one, after
a journey of 17 miles, near some gum-trees.
The morning of the 20th was exceedingly
calm, with the wind from the west, but it had been
previously from the opposite point. The channel
of the creek was broad, and we traced it to some distance
on either hand, but it contained no water, excepting
that at which we stopped; but at about two miles before
we halted, Mr. Browne found a supply under some gum-trees,
a little to the right of our course, where we halted
on our return.
The Bauhinia here grew to the height
of 16 to 20 feet, and was a very pretty tree; the
ends of its branches were covered with seed-pods, both
of this and the year before: it was a flat vessel,
containing four or six flat hard beans. I regretted,
at this early stage of our journey, that the horses
were not up to much work, although we were very considerate
with them, but the truth is, that they had for about
two or three months before leaving the Depot, been
living on pulpy vegetables, in which there was no
strength, they nevertheless looked in good condition.
They had become exceedingly tractable, and never wandered
far from our fires; Flood, however, watched them so
narrowly that they could not have gone far. Since
the three days’ rain in July, the sky was but
little clouded, but we now observed, that from whatever
quarter the wind blew, a bank of clouds would rise
in the opposite direction if from the east,
in the west, and vice versa but these clouds
invariably came against the wind, and must consequently
have been moving in an upper current.
On the 20th we commenced our journey
early, that is to say, at 6 a.m.; the sky was clear,
the temperature mild, and the wind in the S.E. quarter.
We crossed plains of still greater extent than any
we had hitherto seen; their soil was similar to that
on the flats of the Darling, and vegetation seemed
to suffer from their liability to inundation.
The only trees now to be seen were a few box-trees
along their skirts, and on the line of the creeks,
which last were a perfectly new feature in the country,
and surprised me greatly. The tract we passed
over on this day was certainly more subject to overflow
than usual. Large flats of polygonum, and plains
having rents and fissures in them, succeeded those
I have already described. At ten miles we intersected
a creek of considerable size, but without any water;
just below where we crossed its channel it spreads
over a large flat and is lost. Proceeding onwards,
at a mile and a half, we ascended a line of sand hills,
and from them descended to firmer ground than that
on which we had previously travelled. At six
miles we struck another creek with a broad and grassy
bed, on the banks of which we halted, at a small and
muddy pool of water. The trees on this creek
were larger than usual and beautifully umbrageous.
It appeared as if coming from the N.E., and falling
to the N.W. There were many huts both above and
below our bivouac, and well-trodden paths from one
angle of the creek to the other. All around us,
indeed, there were traces of natives, nor can there
be any doubt, but that at one season of the year or
other, it is frequented by them in great numbers.
From a small contiguous elevation our view extended
over an apparently interminable plain in the line
of our course. That of the creek was marked by
gum-trees, and I was not without hopes that we should
again have halted on it on the 21st, but we did not,
for shortly after we started it turned suddenly to
the west, and we were obliged to leave it, and crossed
successive plains of a description similar to those
we had left behind, but with little or no vegetation
upon them. At about five miles we intersected
a branch creek coming from the E.N.E., in which there
was a large but shallow pool of water. About a
mile to the westward of this channel we ascended some
hills, in the composition of which there was more
clay than sand, and descended from them to a firm and
grassy plain of about three and a half miles in breadth.
At the farther extremity we crossed a line of sand
hills, and at a mile and a half again descended to
lower ground, and made for some gum-trees at the western
extremity of the succeeding plain, on our old bearing
of 55 degrees to the west of north. There we
intersected another creek with two pools of water
in it, and as there was also a sufficiency of grass
we halted on its banks.
The singular and rapid succession
of these watercourses exceedingly perplexed me, for
we were in a country remote from any high lands, and
consequently in one not likely to give birth to such
features, yet their existence was a most fortunate
circumstance for us. There can be no doubt but
that the rain, which enabled us to break up the old
Depot and resume our operations, had extended thus
far, but all the surface water had dried up, and if
we had not found these creeks our progress into the
interior would have been checked. In considering
their probable origin, it struck me that they might
have been formed by the rush of floods from the extensive
plains we had lately crossed. The whole country
indeed over which we had passed from the first creek,
was without doubt very low, and must sometimes be
almost entirely under water, but what, it may be asked,
causes such inundation? Such indeed was the question
I asked myself, but I must say I could arrive at no
satisfactory conclusion.
That these regions are subject to
heavy rains I had not the slightest doubt, but could
the effect of heavy rains have produced these creeks,
short and uncertain in their course, rising apparently
in one plain, to spread over and terminate in another,
for had we gone more to the westward in our course
than we did, it is probable we should never have known
of the existence of any of them. I was truly thankful
that we had thus fallen upon them, and considering
how much our further success depended on their continuance,
I began to hope that we should find them a permanent
feature in the country.
About this period and two or three
days previously, we observed a white bank of clouds
hanging upon the northern horizon, and extending from
N.E. to N.W. No wind affected it, but without
in the least altering its shape, which was arched
like a bow, it gradually faded away about 3 p.m.
Could this bank have been over any inland waters?
At the point to which I have now brought
the reader, we were in la degrees 38 minutes
S., and in lon degrees 10 minutes by account,
and here, as I have observed, as in our journey to
Lake Torrens, the N.E. winds were invariably cold.
On the 22nd we crossed the creek, and traversed a
large plain on the opposite side that was bounded in
the distance by a line of sand hills. On this
plain were portions of ground perfectly flat, raised
some 12 or 18 inches above its general level; on these,
rhagodia bushes were growing, which in the distance
looked like large trees, in consequence of the strong
refraction. The lower ground of these plains
had little or no vegetation upon it, but bore the appearance
of land on which water has lodged and subsided; being
hard and baked in some places, but cracked and blistered
in others, and against the sides of the higher portions
of the plain, a line of sticks and rubbish had been
lodged, such as is left by a retiring tide, and from
this it seemed that the floods must have been about
a foot deep on the plain when it was last inundated.
At 4 1/2 miles we reached its western extremity, and
ascending the line of sand hills by which it is bounded
on that side, dropped down to another plain, and at
six miles intersected a creek with a deep broad and
grassy bed, but no water. A high row of gum trees
marked its course from a point rather from the southward
of east to the north-north-west. Crossing to
the opposite side we ascended another sand hill by
a gradual rise, and again descended to another plain,
at the farther extremity of which we could indistinctly
see a dark line of trees. Arriving at these after
a ride of six miles, we were stopped by another creek.
Its banks were too steep for the cart, and we consequently
turned northward and traced it downwards for four miles
before we found a convenient spot at which to halt.
The ground along the creek side was of the most distressing
nature; rent to pieces by solar heat, and entangled
with polygonum twisted together. We passed several
muddy water-holes, and at length stopped at a small
clear deep pond. The colour of the water, a light
green, at once betrayed its quality; but fortunately
for us, though brackish it was still tolerable, much
better than the gritty water we had passed. There
was however but little vegetation in its neighbourhood,
the grass being coarse and wiry. Both on this
creek and some others we had passed, we observed that
the graves of the natives were made longitudinally
from north to south, and not as they usually are from
east to west.
The evening we stopped at this place
was very fine. We had descended into the bed
of the creek, and Mr. Browne and I were reclining on
the ground, looking at the little pond, in which the
bank above was clearly reflected. On a sudden
my companion asked me if I had brought a small hook
with me, as he had taken it into his head that there
were fish in the pond. Being unable to supply
his wants, he got a pin, and soon had a rough kind
of apparatus prepared, with which he went to the water;
and, having cast in his bait, almost immediately pulled
out a white and glittering fish, and held it up to
me in triumph. I must confess that I was exceedingly
astonished, for the first idea that occurred to my
mind was How could fish get into so isolated
a spot? In the water-holes above us no animals
of the kind could have lived. How then were we
to account for their being where we found them, and
for the no less singular phenomenon of brackish waters
in the bed of a fresh water creek? These were
exceedingly puzzling questions to me at the time, but,
as the reader will find, were afterwards explained.
Mr. Browne succeeded in taking no less than thirteen
fish, and seemed to think that they were identical
with the silver perch of the Murray, but they appeared
to me to be a deeper and a thinner fish. Although
none of them exceeded six inches in length, they were
very acceptable to men who were living on five pounds
of flour only a-week.
The night we stayed here was very
dark, and about 11 p.m. the horses which had been
turned down the creek by Flood, rushed violently past
our fire, as if they had been suddenly alarmed.
They were found at a distance of five miles above
us the next morning, but we could never discover why
they had taken fright. Their recovery detained
us longer than our usual hour, but at nine we mounted,
and, crossing the creek at three-quarters of a mile,
ascended a hill, connected with several others by sandy
valleys, and saw that the creek, a little below where
we crossed it, turned to the west. We could trace
its course, by the trees on its bank, for several
miles. From the hills we descended to a country
of a very different character from that which I have
been describing. As we overlooked it from the
higher ground it was dark, with a snow-white patch
of sand in the centre; on traversing it we found that
its productions were almost entirely samphire-bushes
growing on a salty soil.
The white patch we had seen from a
distance was the dry bed of a shallow salt lagoon
also fringed round with samphire bushes, and being
in our course we crossed it. There was a fine
coating of salt on its surface, together with gypsum
and clay, as at Lake Torrens. The country for
several miles round it was barren beyond description,
and small nodules of limestone were scattered over
the ground in many places. After leaving the
lagoon, which though moist had been sufficiently hard
to bear our weight, we passed amidst tortuous and
stunted box-trees for about three miles; then crossed
the small dry and bare bed of a water-course, that
was shaded by trees of better appearance, and almost
immediately afterwards found ourselves on the outskirts
of extensive and beautifully grassed plains, similar
to that on which I had fixed the Depot, and most probably
owing, like them, their formation to the overflow of
the last, or some other creek we had traced.
The character of the country we had previously travelled
over being so very bad, the change to the park-like
scene now before us was very remarkable. Like
the plains at the Depot, they had gum-trees all round
them, and a line of the same trees running through
their centre.
Entering upon them on a north-west
course, we proceeded over the open ground, and saw
three dark figures in the distance, who proved to be
women gathering seeds. They did not perceive us
until we were so near to them that they could not
escape, but stood for some time transfixed with amazement.
On riding up we dismounted, and asked them by signs
where there was any water, to which question they
signified most energetically that there was none in
the direction we were going, that it was to the west.
One of these women had a jet black skin, and long curling
glossy ringlets. She seemed indeed almost of
a different race, and was, without doubt, a secondary
object of consideration with her companions; who, to
secure themselves I fancy, intimated to us that we
might take her away; this, however, we declined doing.
One of the women went on with her occupation of cleaning
the grass seeds she had collected, all the time we
remained, humming a melancholy dirge. On leaving
them, and turning to the point where they said no
water was to be found, they exhibited great alarm,
and followed us at a distance. Soon after we passed
close to some gum-trees and found a small dry channel
under a sand hill on the other side, running this
down we came suddenly on two bough huts, before which
two or three little urchins were playing, who, the
moment they saw us, popped into the huts like rabbits.
Directly opposite there was a shallow puddle rather
than a pool of water, and as Joseph had just met with
an accident I was obliged to stop at it. I was
really sorry to do so, however, for I knew our horses
would exhaust it all during the night, and I was reluctant
to rob these poor creatures of so valuable a store,
I therefore sent Flood to try if he could find any
lower down; but, as he failed, we unsaddled our horses
and sat down.
The women who had kept us in sight
were then at the huts, to which Mr. Browne and I walked.
In addition to the women and children, there was an
old man with hair as white as snow. As I have
observed, there was a sand hill at the back of the
huts, and as we were trying to make ourselves understood
by the women a native made his appearance over it;
he was painted in all the colours of the rainbow,
and armed to the teeth with spear and shield.
Great was the surprise and indignation of this warrior
on seeing that we had taken possession of his camp
and water. He came fearlessly down the hill,
and by signs ordered us to depart, threatening to
go for his tribe to kill us all, but seeing that his
anger only made us smile, he sat down and sulked.
I really respected the native’s bravery, and
question much if I should have shewn equal spirit in
a similar situation. Mr. Browne’s feelings
I am sure corresponded with my own, so we got up and
left him, with an intention on my part to return when
I thought he had cooled down to make him some presents,
but when we did so he had departed with all his family,
and returned not to the neighbourhood again.
We had preserved two or three of the fish, and in
the hope of making the women understand us better,
produced them, on which they eagerly tried to snatch
them from us, but did not succeed. They were
evidently anxious to get them to eat, and I mention
the fact, though perhaps telling against my generosity
on the occasion, to prove how rare such a feast must
be to them.
As I had foreseen, our horses finished
all the water in the puddle during the night, and
we left at seven in the following morning, taking up
our usual N.N.W. course, from which, up to this point
we had not deviated. We passed for about eight
miles through open box-tree forest, with a large grassy
flat, backed by sand hills to the right. The country
indeed had an appearance of improvement. There
was grass under the trees, and the scenery as we rode
along was really cheerful. I began to hope we
were about to leave behind us the dreary region we
had wandered over, and that happier and brighter prospects
would soon open out, to reward us for past disappointment.
Mr. Browne and I even ventured to express such anticipations
to each other as we journeyed onwards. At eight
miles however, all our hopes were annihilated.
A wall of sand suddenly rose before us, such as we
had not before seen; lying as it did directly across
our course we had no choice but to ascend. For
20 miles we toiled over as distressing a country as
can be imagined, each succeeding sand ridge assumed
a steeper and more rugged character, and the horse
with difficulty pulled the cart along. At 13
miles we crossed a salt lagoon similar to the one
I have described to the S.E. of the plains on which
we had last seen the natives, but larger. Near
it there was a temporary cessation of the fearful
country we had just passed, but it was only temporary,
the sand ridges again crossed our path, and at five
or seven miles from the lagoon we pulled up for the
night in a small confined valley in which there was
a little grass, our poor horses sadly jaded and fatigued,
and our cart in a very rickety state. We could
not well have been in a more trying situation, and
as Mr. Browne, and Lewis (one of the men I had with
me), went to examine the neighbourhood from a knoll
not far off, while there was yet light, I could not
but reflect on the singular fatality that had attended
us. I had little hope of finding water, and doubted
in the event of disappointment whether we should get
any of the horses back to the Fish-pond, the nearest
water in our rear. Mr. Browne was late in returning
to me, but the news he had to communicate dispelled
all my fears. He had, he told me, from the summit
of the knoll to which he went, observed something glittering
in a dark looking valley about three miles to the
N.W., and had walked down to ascertain what it was,
when to his infinite delight he found that it was
a pool of water, covering no small space amongst rocks
and stones. It was too late to avail ourselves,
however, of this providential discovery; but we were
on our way to the place at an early hour. There
we broke our fast, and I should have halted for the
day to repair the cart, but there was little or no
grass in the valley for the horses, so that we moved
on after breakfast; but coming at less than a mile
to a little grassy valley in which there was likewise
water, we stopped, not only to give the animals a
day of rest, and to repair the cart, but to examine
the country, and to satisfy ourselves as to the nature
of the sudden and remarkable change it had undergone.
With this view, as soon as the camp was formed, and
the men set to repair the cart, Mr. Browne and I walked
to the extremity of a sandy ridge that bore N.N.W.
from us, and was about two miles distant. On
arriving at this point we saw an immense plain, occupying
more than one half of the horizon, that is to say,
from the south round to the eastward of north.
A number of sandy ridges, similar to that on which
we stood, abutted upon, and terminated in this plain
like so many head lands projecting into the sea.
The plain itself was of a dark purple hue, and from
the elevated point on which we stood appeared to be
perfectly level.
There was a line of low trees far
away upon it to the N.E.; and to the north, at a great
distance, the sun was shining on the bright point of
a sand hill. The plain was otherwise without
vegetation, and its horizon was like that of the ocean.
In the direction I was about to proceed, nothing was
to be seen but the gloomy stone-clad plain, of an extent
such as I could not possibly form any just idea.
Ignorant of the existence of a similar geographical
feature in any other part of the world, I was at a
loss to divine its nature. I could not however
pause as to what was to be done, but on our return
to the party prepared to cross it. I was fully
aware, before leaving the old Depot, that as soon as
we got a few miles distant from the hills, I should
be unable to continue my angles, and should thenceforth
have to rely on bearings. So long as we were chaining
there was no great fear of miscalculating position;
so far then as the second Depot, it would not be difficult
for any other traveller to follow my course.
From that point, as I have already stated, I ran on
a compass bearing of 25 degrees to the west of north,
or on a N.N.W. course, and adhered to it up to the
point I have now led the reader, a new bearing having
been taken on some object still farther in advance
from every sand hill we ascended. This appeared
to me to be the most satisfactory way of computing
our distances and position, for the latitude necessarily
correcting both, the amount of error could not be very
great. I now found, on this principle, that I
was in latitude 27 degrees 4 minutes 40 seconds south,
and in longitude, by account, 139 degrees 10 minutes
east.
On reaching the cart I learnt that
Lewis, while wandering about, had stumbled on a fine
sheet of water, in a valley about two miles to the
south of us, and that Joseph and Flood had shot a couple
of ducks, or I should have said widgeon of the common
kind.
On the 26th I directed Flood to keep
close under the sandy ridge, to the termination of
which Mr. Browne and I had been, and to move into the
plain on the original bearing of 25 degrees to the
west of north until I should overtake him; Mr. Browne
and I then mounted and went to see the water Lewis
had discovered, for which we had not had time the previous
evening. It was a pretty little sequestered spot
surrounded by sand hills, excepting to the N.W. forming
a long serpentine canal, apparently deep, and shaded
by many gum-trees; there were a numbers of ducks on
the water, but too wild to allow us within shot.
Both Mr. Browne and I were pleased with the spot,
and could not but congratulate ourselves in having
such a place to fall back upon, if we should be forced
to retreat, as it had all the promise of durability
for some weeks to come. We overtook the drays
far upon the plains, and continued our journey for
twenty miles, when I halted on a bare piece of sandy
ground on which there were a few tussocks of grass,
and a small puddle of water. On travelling over
the plain we found it undulating, with shining hollows
in which it was evident water sometimes collects.
The stones, with which the ground was so thickly covered
as to exclude vegetation, were of different lengths,
from one inch to six, they had been rounded by attrition,
were coated with oxide of iron, and evenly distributed.
In going over this dreary waste the horses left no
track, and that of the cart was only visible here
and there. From the spot on which we stopped no
object of any kind broke the line of the horizon;
we were as lonely as a ship at sea, and as a navigator
seeking for land, only that we had the disadvantage
of an unsteady compass, without any fixed point on
which to steer. The fragments covering this singular
feature were all of the same kind of rock, indurated
or compact quartz, and appeared to me to have had
originally the form of parallelograms, resembling both
in their size and shape the shivered fragments, lying
at the base of the northern ranges, to which I have
already had occasion to call attention.
Although the ground on which we slept
was not many yards square, and there was little or
nothing on it to eat, the poor animals, loose as they
were, did not venture to trespass on the adamantine
plain by which they were on all sides surrounded.
On the 27th we continued onwards,
obliged to keep the course by taking bearings on any
prominent though trifling object in front. At
ten miles there was a sensible fall of some few feet
from the level of the Stony Desert, as I shall henceforth
call it, and we descended into a belt of polygonum
of about two miles in breadth, that separated it from
another feature, apparently of equal extent but of
very different character. This was an earthy
plain, on which likewise there was no vegetation;
resembling in appearance a boundless piece of ploughed
land, on which floods had settled and subsided the
earth seemed to have once been mud and then dried.
It had been impossible to ascertain the fall or dip
of the Stony Desert, but somewhat to the west of our
course on the earthy plain there were numerous channels,
which as we advanced seemed to be making to a common
centre towards the N.E. Here and there a polygonum
bush was growing on the edge of the channels; and some
of them contained the muddy dregs of what had been
pools of water. Over this field of earth we continued
to advance almost all day, without knowing whether
we were getting still farther into it, or working
our way out. About an hour before sunset, this
point was settled beyond doubt, by the sudden appearance
of some hills over the line of the horizon, raised
above their true position by refraction. They
bore somewhat to the westward of north, but were too
distant for speculation upon their character.
It was very clear, however, that there was a termination
to the otherwise apparently boundless level on which
we were, in that direction, if not in any other.
Our view of these hills was but transient, for they
gradually faded from sight, and in less than ten minutes
had entirely disappeared. Shortly afterwards
some trees were seen in front, directly in the line
of our course; but, as they were at a great distance,
it was near sunset before we reached them; and finding
they were growing close to a small channel (of which
there were many traversing the plain) containing a
little water, we pulled up at them for the night,
more especially as just at the same moment the hills,
before seen, again became visible, now bearing due
north. To scramble up into the box-trees and examine
them with our telescopes was but the work of a moment,
still it was doubtful whether they were rock or sand.
There were dark shadows on their faces, as if produced
by cliffs, and anxiously did we look at them so long
as they continued above the horizon, but again they
disappeared and left us in perplexity. They were,
however, much more distinct on the second occasion,
and Mr. Browne made out a line of trees, and what he
thought was grass on our side of them.
There was not a blade of anything
for our horses to eat round about our solitary bivouac,
so that we were obliged to fasten them to the trees,
only three in number, and to the cart. There was,
however, a dark kind of weed growing in the creek,
and some half dozen stalks of a white mallow, the
latter of which Flood pulled up and gave to the horses,
but they partook sparingly of them, and kept gnawing
at the bark of the trees all night long.
In reference to our movements on the
morrow, it became a matter of imperative necessity
to get the poor things to where they could procure
some food as soon as possible; I determined, therefore,
to make for the hills, whatever they might be, at
early dawn. The night was exceedingly cold, the
thermometer falling to freezing point. At day-break
there was a heavy fog, so we did not mount until half-past
six, when the atmosphere was clearer, the fog having
in some measure dispersed. We then proceeded,
and for the first time since commencing the journey
turned from the course 332 degrees, or one of N.N.W.
to one due north, allowing 5 degrees for easterly
variation. My object was to gain the trees Mr.
Browne had noticed, as soon as possible, but did not
reach them until a quarter to ten. We then discovered
that they lined a long muddy channel, in which was
a good deal of water, but not a blade of vegetation
anywhere to be seen. I turned back, therefore,
to a small sandy rise, whereon we had observed a few
tufts of grass, and allowed the animals to pick what
they could. At this spot we were about a mile
and a half from the hills, which now stood before
us, their character fully developed, and whatever hope
we might have before encouraged of the probability
of a change of country on this side of the desert,
was at one glance dispelled. Had these hills
been as barren as the wastes over which we had just
passed, so as they had been of stone we should have
hailed them with joy. But, no! sandy
ridges once more rose up in terrible array against
us, although we had left the last full 50 miles behind,
even the animals I think regarded them with dismay.
From the little rising ground on which
we had stopped, we passed to the opposite side of
the creek, which apparently fell to the east, and
traversing a bare earthy plain, we soon afterwards
found ourselves ascending one of the very hills we
had been examining with so much anxiety through a
glass the evening before. It was flanked on either
side by other hills, that projected into and terminated
on this plain, as those we had before seen terminated
in the Stony Desert; and they looked, as I believe
I have already remarked, like channel head-lands jutting
into the sea, and gradually shutting each other out.
The one we ascended was partly composed of clay and
partly of sand; but the former, protruding in large
masses, caused deep shadows to fall on the faces and
gave the appearance of a rocky cliff to the whole formation,
as viewed from a distance.
Broad and striking as were the features
of the landscape over which the eye wandered from
the summit of this hill, I have much difficulty in
describing them.
Immediately beneath was the low region
from which we had just ascended, occupying the line
of the horizon from the north-east point, southwards,
round to the west. Southward, and for some degrees
on either side, a fine dark line met the sky; but
to the north-east and south-west was a boundless extent
of earthy plain. Here and there a solitary clump
of trees appeared, and on the plain, at the distance
of a mile to the eastward, were two moving specks,
in the shape of native women gathering roots, but
they saw us not, neither did we disturb them, their
presence indicated that even these gloomy and forbidding
regions were not altogether uninhabited.
As the reader will, I have no doubt,
remember, the sandy ridges on the S.E. side of the
Desert were running at an angle of about 18 degrees
to the west of north, having gradually changed from
the original direction of about 6 degrees to the eastward
of that point. I myself had marked this gradual
change with great interest, because it was strongly
corroborative of my views as to the course the current
I have supposed to have swept over the central parts
of the continent must have taken, i. e. a course at
right angles to the ridges. It is a remarkable
fact that here, on the northern side of the Desert,
and after an open interval of more than 50 miles,
the same sand ridges should occur, running in parallel
lines at the same angle as before, into the very heart
of the interior, as if they absolutely were never
to terminate. Here, on both sides of us, to the
eastward and to the westward, they followed each other
like the waves of the sea in endless succession, suddenly
terminating as I have already observed on the vast
plain into which they ran. What, I will ask,
was I to conclude from these facts? that
the winds had formed these remarkable accumulations
of sand, as straight as an arrow lying on the ground
without a break in them for more than ninety miles
at a stretch, and which we had already followed up
for hundreds of miles, that is to say across six degrees
of latitude? No! winds may indeed have assisted
in shaping their outlines, but I cannot think, that
these constituted the originating cause of their formation.
They exhibit a regularity that water alone could have
given, and to water, I believe, they plainly owe their
first existence. It struck me then, and calmer
reflection confirms the impression, that the whole
of the low interior I had traversed was formerly a
sea-bed, since raised from its sub-marine position
by natural though hidden causes; that when this process
of elevation so changed the state of things, as to
make a continuous continent of that, which had been
an archipelago of islands, a current would have passed
across the central parts of it, the direction of which
must have been parallel to the sandy ridges, and consequently
from east to west, or nearly so that also
being the present dip of the interior, as I shall
elsewhere prove. I further think, that the line
of the Stony Desert being the lowest part of the interior,
the current must there have swept along it with greater
force, and have either made the breach in the sandy
ridges now occupied by it, or have prevented their
formation at the time when, under more favourable
circumstances, they were thrown up on either side
of it. I do not know if I am sufficiently clear
in explanation, finding it difficult to lay down on
paper all that crowds my own mind on this subject;
neither can I, without destroying the interest my
narrative may possess, now bring forward the arguments
that gradually developed themselves in support of
the foregoing hypothesis.
Although I had been unable to penetrate
to the north-west of Lake Torrens, that basin appeared
to me to have once formed part of the back waters
of Spencer’s Gulf; still I long kept in view
the possibility of its being connected with some more
central body of water. Having however gained
a position so much higher to the north, and almost
on the same meridian, and having crossed so remarkable
a feature as the Stony Desert (which, as I suppose,
was once the focus of a mighty current, to judge from
its direction passing to the westward), I no longer
encouraged hopes which, if realized, would have been
of great advantage to me, or regretted the circumstances
by which I was prevented from more fully examining
the north-east and northern shores of Lake Torrens.
I felt doubtful of the immediate proximity of an inland
sea, although many circumstances combined to strengthen
the impression on my mind that such a feature existed
on the very ground over which we had made our way.
I had assuredly put great credit on the statements
of the solitary old man who visited the Depot, but
his information as far as we could judge had turned
out to be false; and I was half angry with myself for
having been so credulous, well aware as I was of the
exaggerations of the natives, and how little dependence
can be placed on what they say.