As this place afforded every convenience
for killing and curing another bullock, we remained
here for that purpose from the 29th March to the 2nd
of April. The weather was favourable for our operations,
and I took two sets of lunar observations, the first
of which gave me longitude 146 degrees 1 minutes,
and the second, 145 degrees 58 minutes. The mornings
were generally either cloudless, or with small cumuli,
which increased as the day advanced, but disappeared
at sunset; the wind was, as far as I could judge,
northerly, north-easterly, and easterly.
April 2. The Suttor was
reported by Charley to be joined by so many gullies
and small creeks, running into it from the high lands,
which would render travelling along its banks extremely
difficult, that I passed to the east side of Mount
McConnel, and reached by that route the junction of
the Suttor with the newly discovered river, which I
called the Burdekin, in acknowledgment of the liberal
assistance which I received from Mrs. Burdekin of
Sidney, in the outfit of my expedition. The course
of this river is to the east by south; and I thought
that it would most probably enter the sea in the neighbourhood
of Cape Upstart. Flood marks, from fifteen to
eighteen feet above the banks, showed that an immense
body of water occasionally sweeps down its wide channel.
I did not ascend Mount McConnel, but
it seemed to be composed of a species of domite.
On the subordinate hills I observed sienite. The
bed of the river furnished quite a collection of primitive
rocks: there were pebbles of quartz, white, red,
and grey; of granite; of sienite; of felspathic porphyry,
hornblende, and quartz-porphyry; and of slate-rock.
The morning was cloudless. In
the afternoon, heavy cumuli, which dissolved
towards sunset; a strong wind from the north and north
by east.
A very conspicuous hill, bearing E.N.E.
from the junction of the rivers, received the name
of Mount Graham, after R. Graham, Esq., who had most
liberally contributed to my expedition.
Mr. Gilbert found a large calabash
attached to its dry vine, which had been carried down
by the waters. Several other very interesting
cucurbitaceous fruits, and large reeds, were observed
among the rubbish which had accumulated round the
trees during the flood.
April 3. We travelled up
the Burdekin, in a north-north-west direction, to
latitude 20 degrees 31 minutes 20 seconds. The
country was hilly and mountainous; the soil was stony;
and the banks of the river were intersected by deep
gullies and creeks. The forest vegetation was
the same as that on the lower Suttor. Among the
patches of brush which are particularly found at the
junction of the larger creeks with the river, we observed
a large fig-tree, from fifty to sixty feet high, with
a rich shady foliage; and covered with bunches of
fruit. The figs were of the size of a small apple,
of an agreeable flavour when ripe, but were full of
small flies and ants. These trees were numerous,
and their situation was readily detected by the paths
of the natives leading to them: a proof that
the fruit forms one of their favourite articles of
food. The drooping tea trees, which had increased
both in number and size, grew in company with an arborescent
Calistemon, along the water’s edge; and a species
of Eucalyptus, somewhat resembling Angophora intermedia,
was discovered at this spot: it occurs frequently
to the northward, and is common round the gulf of
Carpentaria. The small Acacia tree of Expedition
Range was frequently seen in the forest, and was covered
with an amber-coloured gum, that was eatable, but
tasteless: Hakea lorea (R. Br.), and
Grevillea ceratophylla (R. Br.); the Ebenaceous
tree, and that with guava-like fruit (lareya), were
all numerous. The bed of the river was covered
with the leguminous annual I noticed at the Suttor;
it grew here so high and thick that my companions
were unable to see me, though riding only a few yards
from them.
Rock frequently crops out in the bed
of the river, and in the neighbouring hills.
Several hills at the right bank were formed by a kind
of thermantide of a whitish grey, or red colour, and
which might be scratched easily with a penknife.
Other conical hills or short ranges, with irregular
rugged crests, were composed of granite of many varieties,
red and white, fine grained without hornblende, or
containing the latter substance, and changing into
sienite; and, at one place, it seemed as if it had
broken through Psammite. I observed quartzite
in several localities, and a hard pudding-stone extending
for a considerable distance. We were, no doubt,
on the transition from the depository to the primitive
rocks; and a detailed examination of this interesting
part of the country would be very instructive to the
geologist, as to the relative age and position of
the rocks.
A small fish, with yellow and dark
longitudinal lines, and probably belonging to the
Cyprinidae, was caught. Wind prevailed from the
northward: the forenoon was cloudless; heavy cumuli
in the afternoon.
We travelled at first on the right
side of the river; but its banks became so mountainous
and steep, and the gullies so deep, that we were compelled
to cross it at a place where it was very deep, and
where our horses and cattle had to swim. Many
of our things got wet, and we were delayed by stopping
to dry them.
April 4. We moved our camp
to latitude 20 degrees 24 minutes 12 seconds, a distance
of about nine miles N.W. by N. We passed several granitic
peaks and ranges; one of which I ascended, and enjoyed
an extensive view. The character of the country
changed very little: open narrow-leaved Ironbark
forest on a granitic sand, full of brilliant leaflets
of mica. Some deep creeks came from the eastward.
To the west and north-west nothing was to be seen
but ridges; but high imposing ranges rise to the north
and north-east. At one spot, large masses of calcareous
spar were scattered over the ground; they were probably
derived from a vein in the granite.
Three black ducks, (Anas Novae
Hollandiae) were shot. Tracks of native dogs
were numerous; and a bitch came fearlessly down to
the river, at a short distance from our camp.
Our kangaroo dog ran at her, and both fell into the
water, which enabled the bitch to escape.
April 5. We re-crossed
the river, which was not very deep, and travelled
about nine miles degrees W. The river flows parallel
to a high mountain range, at about three or four miles
from its left bank. I named this after Mr. Robey,
another friendly contributor to my outfit. A large
creek very probably carries the waters from this range
to the Burdekin, in latitude 20 degrees 23 minutes.
The country was very ridgy and hilly; and we found
it exceedingly difficult to proceed along the river.
We observed the poplar-gum again in the open forest,
and a fine drooping loranthus growing on it.
Pandanus was also very frequent, in clusters from
three to eight trees. The clustered fig-tree gave
us an ample supply of fruit, which, however, was not
perfectly mellow.
Veins of calcareous spar and of quartz
were again observed. I ascended a lofty hill,
situated about a mile and a half to the west of our
encampment, and found it composed of felspathic porphyry,
with a greyish paste containing small crystals of
felspar; but, in the bed of the river, the same rock
was of a greenish colour, and contained a great number
of pebbles of various rocks, giving it the aspect
of a conglomerate; but recognisable by its crystals
of felspar, and from its being connected with the
rock of the hill. From the top of the hill, which
is wooded with a silver-leaved Ironbark, I saw a very
mountainous country to the N.N.W. and northward, formed
into detached ranges and isolated peaks, some of which
were apparently very high; but to the north-west and
west no ranges were visible.
A thunder-storm threatened on the
4th, but we had only some light showers: the
morning of the 5th was very hot, and the afternoon
rainy. Wind from north and north-east. Nights
clear.
April 6. We travelled about
ten miles degrees W. over a ridgy, openly timbered,
stony and sandy country, and crossed several sandy
creeks, in which a species of Melaleuca, and another
of Tristania were growing. No part of the country
that we had yet seen, resembled the northern parts
of New England so much as this. The rock was almost
exclusively granitic isolated blocks; detached heaps,
and low ridges composed of it were frequently met
with in the open forest. We passed two small
hillocks of milkwhite quartz; fragments of this rock,
as well as of calcareous spar, were often observed
scattered over the ground. The river here made
a large bend to the northward, still keeping parallel
to Robey’s Range, or a spur of it; and, when
it again turned to the westward, another fine high
range was visible to the north by east and north-east
of it; which I named “Porter’s Range,”
in acknowledgment of the kindness of another of the
contributors to my expedition. Its latitude is
about 20 degrees 14 minutes.
April 7. Travelled about
ten miles degrees W. The country became more
level, more open, and better grassed; the gullies were
farther apart, and headed generally in fine hollows.
Two large creeks joined the river from the westward;
and a still larger one came from the northward, and
which probably carries off the water from the country
round a fine peak, and a long razorback mountain which
we saw in that direction. North-west of Porter’s
Range, and between it and the razorback, were two
small peaks. The timber is of the same kind, but
larger. The poplar-gum was more frequent, and
we always found patches of fine grass near it; even
when all the surrounding Ironbark bark forest was burnt.
The large clustered fig-trees were not numerous along
the river; we perhaps passed from three to five in
the course of a day’s journey; though young ones,
without fruit, were often seen.
Heavy clouds gathered during the afternoon
of the 6th, and it rained throughout the night; the
wind was from N. and N.E. In the morning of the
7th some drops of rain fell, but the weather cleared
up during the day; wind easterly. The moon changed
this day, and we experienced a heavy thunder-storm
during the afternoon.
April 8. We travelled about
nine miles degrees W., to latitude 20 degrees
9 minutes 11 seconds. The river made a bend to
the southward, and then, at a sharp angle, turned
again to the north-west. At this angle a large
creek joined it from the south; another instance of
creeks joining larger channels, coming in a direction
almost opposite to their course. Two other creeks
joined the Burdekin during this stage; one from the
south-west, and another from the north. The grass
was particularly rich at these junctions. The
river became considerably narrower, but still had
a fine stream. Thunder-storms had probably fallen
higher up its course, causing a fresh; for its waters,
hitherto clear, had become turbid. Narrow patches
of brush were occasionally met with along its banks,
and I noticed several brush trees, common in other
parts of the country. Besides the clustered fig,
and another species with rough leaves and small downy
purple fruit, there were a species of Celtis; the Melia
Azederach (White Cedar); a species of Phyllanthus,
(a shrub from six to ten feet high); an Asclepiadaceous
climber, with long terete twin capsules; and several
Cucurbitaceae, one with oblong fruit about an inch
long, another with a round fruit half an inch in diameter,
red and white, resembling a gooseberry; a third was
of an oblong form, two inches and a half long and
one broad; and a fourth was of the size and form of
an orange, and of a beautiful scarlet colour:
the two last had an excessively bitter taste.
The night and morning were cloudy, with a southerly
wind, but it cleared up at eleven o’clock.
Cumuli in the afternoon, with wind from the south-east.
From our camp we saw a range of hills,
bearing between degrees W. and degrees
W.; they were about three miles distant. I called
them “Thacker’s Range,” in acknowledgment
of the support I received from Thacker,
Esq., of Sidney.
April 9. We travelled about
nine miles W. by N., and made our latitude 20 degrees
8 minutes 26 seconds. The western end of Thacker’s
Range bore N.E. Two large creeks joined the river
from the south and south-west. The country was
openly timbered; the Moreton Bay ash grew along the
bergue of the river, where a species of Grewia seemed
its inseparable companion. The flooded-gum occupied
the hollows and slopes of the river banks, which were
covered with a high stiff grass to the water’s
edge, and the stream was fringed with a thicket of
drooping tea trees, which were comparatively small,
and much bent by the force of floods, the probable
frequency of which may account for the reduced size
of the tree. The ridges were covered with rusty
Gum and narrow-leaved Ironbark. An Erythrina
and the Acacia of Expedition Range were plentiful.
The grass was rich and of various species. The
granite rock still prevailed. A felspathic rock
cropped out near the second creek, where I met with
a dark rock, composed of felspar and horneblende (Diorite.)
Our camp was pitched at the foot of a series of small
conical hills, composed of porphyry. A larger
range to the southward of it was also porphyritic,
very hard, as if penetrated by quartz, and containing
small crystals of flesh-coloured felspar. Sienite
cropped out on the flats between these two ranges.
I commanded a most extensive view from the higher range.
High and singularly crenelated ranges were seen to
the south-west; detached peaks and hills to the westward;
short ranges and peaks to the north; and considerable
ranges between north and north-east. A river was
observed to join the Burdekin from the ranges to the
south-west.
Numerous kangaroos were seen bounding
over the rocky slopes to the grassy glens below.
A stunted silver-leaved Ironbark covered the hills.
April 10. The night was
very cold, particularly towards morning, and the dew
heavy; the morning was calm; a breeze from the south-east
set in at nine o’clock a.m.; cumuli formed
about eleven o’clock, and became very heavy
during the afternoon.
The country over which we travelled
about eight miles N. by W., was one of the finest
we had seen. It was very open, with some plains,
slightly undulating or rising into ridges, beautifully
grassed and with sound ground. We crossed the
river I had seen the preceding day from the hill,
and found it running. Two large creeks, one from
the right and the other from the left, also joined
the Burdekin. I observed Pegmatite of a white
colour, and hornblende Porphyry and Diorite. A
shrubby Clerodendron and an arborescent Bursaria,
covered with white blossoms, adorned the forest.
The latitude was 20 degrees 0 minutes 36 seconds.
April 11. We continued
our journey up the river, in a W.N.W. direction, for
about ten miles. The first part of our journey
lay through a most beautiful country. The hollows
along the river were covered with a dense sward of
various grasses, and the forest was open as far as
the eye could reach. Farther on, however, we
occasionally met with patches of Vitex scrub, and
crossed some stony ridges. A small river joined
from the north-east, at about a mile and a half from
the last camp, and also two large creeks from the
south-west. I ascended the hills opposite our
camp, and looked over an immense and apparently flat
country, out of which small peaks and short ranges
rose. The hills on which I stood were composed
of Pegmatite, with patches of white Mica in large leaflets.
During the journey we found granite changing into gneiss,
diorite, and quartz rock.
On the rocky crest of the hill, I
gathered the pretty red and black seeds of a leguminous
climbing shrub (Abrus precatorius). Phonolithic
or basaltic pebbles made me suppose that we were near
to a change of country. Our latitude was 19 degrees
58 minutes 11 seconds.
April 12. We had scarcely
travelled a mile and a half, when we had to cross
a large creek, which increased in size higher up.
Box-tree flats and open Vitex scrub extended along
its banks, and the latter, according to Mr. Roper’s
account, changed into dense Bricklow scrub. At
the junction of the creek and the river, we came on
a dyke of basalt, the flat summit of which was so
rough that we were compelled to travel along the flats
of the creek, which for a long distance ran parallel
to the Burdekin. The soil on the basalt was so
shallow that it sustained only a scanty vegetation
of grass and some few scattered narrow-leaved Ironbark
trees. We crossed this dyke, however, and at about
three miles descended from it into a fine narrow-leaved
Ironbark flat, extending along the river, in which
another large creek from the south-west joined the
Burdekin. The flat was bounded by hills of limestone,
cropping out in large blocks, with visible stratification,
but without fossils. Having passed the third
creek in the course of this day’s journey, we
encamped on the commencement of another basaltic dyke.
The bed of the creek was full of blocks of Sienite,
of hornblende Porphyry, of greenish Pegmatite, and
of cellular Basalt. The river here formed a large
sheet of water; large masses of a white Sienite protruded
out of it, opposite the junction of the creek.
The opposite bank exhibited a very perfect and instructive
geological section of variously bent and lifted strata
of limestone, which was afterwards found to contain
innumerable fossils, particularly corals and
a few bivalve shells. The Rev. W. B. Clarke, of
Paramatta, kindly undertook to examine the fossils
brought from this locality. One he determined
to be an undescribed species of Cyathophyllum, and
has done me the honour to give my name to it. The others belonged
principally to the following genera, viz., Asterias,
Caryophyllea, and Madrépora. The right bank
of the river rose into steep cliffs of basalt, under
which the clustered fig tree, with its dense foliage,
formed a fine shady bower. The basaltic dyke was
about a mile and a half broad, and I followed it about
five miles up the river. Its summit was flat,
rough, and rocky; at the distance of four miles from
our camp it receded a little from the river, and there
limestone was observed, crowded with fossils like
that on the opposite side of the river. Two miles
farther, the bed of the river was formed by a felspathic
rock, with beautiful dendrites. A small island,
with a chain of lagoons on one side, and with the
river on the other, was also composed of this rock,
in contact with, and covered by, basalt in several
places. There were small falls and rapids in
several parts of the river. A beaten foot-path
of the natives, and many fire-places, showed that this
part of it was much frequented by them. Wallabies
were very numerous between the cliffs of the felspathic
rock; and the fine fig trees along the banks of the
river were covered with ripe fruit. The river
made a wide sweep round the left side of a large limestone
hill, whilst a chain of deep basaltic water-holes
continued on its right. The basalt ceased to the
westward of the limestone hill, and was succeeded
by considerable flats of Ironbark, Moreton Bay ash,
and Bloodwood. The Capparis still exhibited
a few showy flowers. I examined the country thus
far on the 12th April, after the camp had been formed;
on returning, I took with me a large supply of ripe
figs, of which we partook freely, and which caused
several of us to suffer severely from indigestion,
though we had frequently eaten small quantities of
them without inconvenience.
April 13. We avoided the
field of basalt by moving up the creek we last crossed,
about four miles, and by crossing over to the flats
of the river where the basalt terminated. These
flats, however, were again interrupted by a basaltic
dyke, over which we were compelled to travel, as the
steep banks of the river were on one side, and black
bare rocks, forming sometimes regular walls with a
dense scrub between them, prevented us from turning
to the other. After descending from the basalt,
we crossed a good-sized creek from the south-west,
and travelled over a fine open country to la
degrees 49 minutes 41 seconds.
Two hills were close to the left side
of the Burdekin, which, at their base, were joined
by a large running creek from the N.N.W. From
the limestone hill of yesterday, no other hill was
visible to the westward, though ranges and isolated
hills lay to the north and north-east, and a high
blue mountain to the south-west.
Some days ago I found, for the first
time, Spathodea alternifolia (R. Br.), which
we continued to meet with throughout the remainder
of our journey. I saw but one flower of it, but
its falcate seed-vessels, often more than a foot long,
were very numerous. Pandanus spiralis was frequent.
The box (Eucalyptus), on the flats along the creek,
the soil of which is probably formed of the detritus
of basaltic rock, had a lanceolate glossy leaf, uniting
the character of the box with glossy orbicular leaves
growing generally on the whinstone soil of the northern
parts of the colony, and of the box with long lanceolate
leaves which prefers stiff flats on the tributary
creeks of the Hunter. A Bottle-tree with a Platanus
leaf (Sterculia?) grew in the scrub on the field of
basalt, and was in full blossom. A pretty species
of Commelyna, on the flats, a cucurbitaceous plant
with quinquepalmate leaves and large white blossoms,
grew along the river, the approaches of which were
rendered almost inaccessible by a stiff high grass.
Charley brought me the long flower-stalk of Xanthorrhaea
from some ridges, which were, doubtless, composed
of sandstone.
Two kangaroos were seen; they were
of middle size, and of a yellowish grey colour, and
seemed to live principally about the basaltic ridges.
The cooee of natives had been heard
only once during our journey along the banks of the
Burdekin; and the traces of their former presence had
not been very frequently observed. Large lagoons
full of fish or mussels form a greater attraction
to the natives than a stream too shallow for large
fish, and, from its shifting sands, incapable of forming
large permanent holes. Wherever we met with scrub
with a good supply of water, we were sure of finding
numerous tracks of the natives, as game is so much
more abundant where a dense vegetation affords shelter
from its enemies.
April 14. Last night, at
seven o’clock, a strong breeze set in from the
northward, and continued for about an hour, when it
became perfectly calm. If this was the same breeze
which we had observed at the Mackenzie at eight o’clock,
and which set in earlier and earlier, as we travelled
along the Isaacs and Suttor (though it was less regular
in these places) until we felt it at about six o’clock,
we were now most evidently receding from the eastern
coast.
We travelled in a degrees W.
direction to la degrees 45 minutes 36 seconds.
A basaltic ridge, similar to those we had passed,
extended in an almost straight line from south-east
to north-west; it was covered with a scanty vegetation,
with a few small narrow-leaved Ironbark trees and
Erythrinas; the river now approached it, now left it
in wide sweeps enclosing fine narrow-leaved Ironbark
flats. To the south-west side of this ridge or
dyke, the soil is basaltic, with box-trees and open
Vitex scrub. The sharp conical hills of the white
ant, constructed of red clay, were very numerous.
A very perfect bower of the bower-bird was seen in
a patch of scrub trees.
In a gully, a loose violet coloured
sandstone cropped out, over which the basalt had most
evidently spread. Farther on, the ridge enlarged
and formed small hillocks, with bare rock cropping
out at their tops; a form of surface peculiar
to the basaltic or whinstone country of this colony.
Charley shot the sheldrake of Port
Essington, (Tadorna Rajah). The singular hissing
or grinding note of the bower bird was heard all along
the river; the fruit of the fig trees growing near,
which seemed to supply it with its principal food
during this part of the year.
April 15. One of our bullocks
had gone back on our tracks, and thereby prevented
our starting so early as usual. We travelled in
a degrees W. direction to latitude 19 degrees
41 minutes 25 seconds. The basaltic country continued,
and apparently extended a great distance from the
river. The flats along the latter were less extensive.
Sandstone cropped out in deep gullies, and in the
bed of the river; it was naturally soft and coarse,
but where it rose into hillocks near basalt, it changed
into a fine baked sandstone, resembling quartzite,
which, when in contact with the igneous rock, looked
like burnt bricks. Near our camp, a dyke or wall
of the aspect of a flinty red conglomerate, crossed
the river from south-west to north-east. I believe
that this rock belongs to the porphyries of Glendon,
and of the upper Gloucester. We continued to feel
the breeze, or rather a puff of wind, between 7 and
8 o’clock at night; it was often very strong
and cold, and prevented the mosquitoes from molesting
us.
April 16. We proceeded
north by west to latitude 19 degrees 32 minutes, and
crossed several gullies coming from the basaltic ridges:
these, however, receded far from the river, and large
box and Ironbark flats took their place for about
three miles, when the ridges re-appeared. Between
four and five miles from the bar of red rock above
mentioned, a fine large creek joined the Burdekin
from the westward. The box and Ironbark forest
was interrupted by slight rises of limestone full of
corals; and by a higher hill of baked sandstone,
at the foot of which a limestone hill was covered
with a patch of Vitex scrub. The strata of the
limestone seemed to dip to the southward.
The opposite banks of the river were
ridgy, but openly timbered, and this fine country,
with its well grassed flats, and its open ridges, seemed
to extend very far on both sides. Messrs. Gilbert
and Roper went to the top of the hill, and saw ranges
trending from west to north, with that crenelated
outline which I had before seen and mentioned:
they distinguished a large valley, and the smoke of
several fires of the natives along the range.
A large lagoon was at the western foot of the hill
on which they were. A large creek was seen, by
Brown, to join the Burdekin from the north-east, at
a short mile from our encampment. A baked sandstone
and pudding-stone of a white colour projected into
the river at the place, which not only exhibited the
transition from one rock into the other, but it showed
the action of igneous rocks on both, and gave a clue
to the nature of the red rock I described yesterday.
In the thicket which covered the rock, I observed
Pomaderris of Moreton Bay. In decreasing our
latitude, both Mr. Gilbert and myself were inclined
to think that, whenever a bird or a plant disappeared,
it was owing to that circumstance. In this, however,
we were frequently mistaken: trees and herbaceous
plants disappeared with the change of soil, and the
decrease of moisture, and the birds kept to a certain
vegetation: and, as soon as we came to similar
localities, familiar forms of plants and birds re-appeared.
Almost all the scrub-trees of the Condamine and Kent’s
Lagoon were still to be seen at the Burdekin; and the
isolated waters near grassy flats were visited by
swarms of little finches, which Mr. Gilbert had observed
at Port Essington, and which, in all probability,
belonged to the whole extent of country between that
place and the region of the tropics. This slight
change of vegetation, and particularly of the inland
Flora, from south to north, is no doubt connected with
the uniformity of the soil and climate: and the
immense difference which exists between the eastern
and western coast, has led men of science and of observation,
not without good reason, to infer that this continent
was originally divided into two large islands, or
into an archipelago, which have been united by their
progressive, and, perhaps, still continued, elevation.
As an exception, however, to this remark, a very sudden
change of the Flora was observed, when we entered
into the basin of the gulf of Carpentaria, after leaving
the eastern waters, although the Flora of the north-west
coast and Port Essington, was little different from
that of the gulf.
April 17. We travelled
about nine miles degrees W. On our way we passed
a hill of baked sandstone, and several gullies.
About five miles from our last camp, a large creek
joined the river; beyond that creek, the country was,
without exception, open, and rather of a more undulating
character; the flats were somewhat rotten: the
river became narrower, but was still running strong;
and numerous ducks sported on its shady pools.
April 18. Last night we
had a very cold north-easterly wind, and, during the
day, some few drops of drizzling rain. We travelled
about N. by W. to latitude 19 degrees 18 minutes 16
seconds. After passing some gullies, we came
into a more broken and hilly country; the river formed
here a large anabranch. The Ironbark trees, which
timbered the extensive flat along the river, became
much finer; but the soil was rotten: the poplar-gum
grew on the stiff soil of the hollows. About six
miles from our last camp, we came to ranges of high
hills of a conical form, and with rounded tops, striking
from west to east, and then entered a narrow valley,
bounded on each side by rocky hills. Mr. Roper
observed a rugged country to the northward, and a
fine high range to the south-east. The whole
country from the large flat to our camp, was composed
of felspathic porphyry, containing crystals of felspar,
and accidentally of quartz, in a paste varying in
colour and hardness. In the bed of the river,
I still found pebbles of pegmatite, granite, quartz,
and basalt; indicating that a country of varied character
was before us.
The stream wound its way from one
side of the broad sandy bed to the other; and those
parts where it flowed, were generally very steep, and
covered with a dense vegetation, whilst, on the opposite
side, the banks sloped gently into the broad sands.
Among the shrubs and grasses, a downy Abutelon was
easily distinguished by its large bright yellow blossoms.
My Blackfellows procured several messes
of ducks; and Brown brought me a piece of indurated
clay with impressions of water-plants.
April 19. Continuing our
journey in a north-west direction, we passed over
some very rocky hills, composed of indurated clay,
and thin strata of sandstone, and pudding-stone.
By moving along the foot of a range of high hills,
we avoided all those deep gullies which intersected
the banks of the river, and travelled with ease through
a flat, well grassed Ironbark forest. The hills
were covered, as usual, with stunted silver-leaved
Ironbark. A large creek came from the range, and
entered the river. A good section on its right
bank exposed to view the strata of indurated clay
and sandstone; and I was induced to believe that coal
might be found below them. As we were passing
over the flat between the creck and the river, we
saw a native busily occupied in burning the grass,
and eagerly watching its progress: the operation
attracted several crows, ready to seize the insects
and lizards which might be driven from their hiding
places by the fire. Mr. Calvert, Brown, and Charley,
rode nearly up to the man before he was aware of their
approach; when he took to his heels, and fled in the
greatest consternation.
Upon reaching the river, at about
eight miles from our last camp, we found that it was
joined by another river of almost the same size as
the Burdekin: it had a stream, and came from
the northward, whilst the course of the Burdekin at
this place was from the west to east. From the
junction a long range trended to the north-east, and
moderate ranges bounded the valley of the river from
the northward; another range extended along the left
side of the Burdekin above the junction; and basaltic
ridges, which had broken through the sandstone, approached
on its right. The cucurbitaceous plant with palmate
leaves, bore a fruit of the size of a large orange,
of a fine scarlet colour when ripe; its rind is exceedingly
bitter, but the seeds are eaten by birds. Mr.
Phillips found a flesh-coloured drupaceous oblong
fruit, about half an inch long, with a very glutinous
pericarp, containing a slightly compressed rough stone:
in taste it resembled the fruit of Loranthus, and the
birds, particularly the coekatoos, appeared very fond
of it. We all ate a great quantity of them, without
the slightest injury. It grew on a small tree,
and had a persistent calyx.
April 20. We travelled
in a degrees W. course to latitude 19 degrees
9 minutes 88 seconds. Rocky ranges frequently
approached the river, and deep and intricate gullies
descended from them to the latter. Our progress
was consequently very difficult, and we were compelled
to ascend a very high hill to avoid its slopes towards
the river, which were too steep for us to cross.
As a recompense, however, for the difficulty of the
ascent, I had the pleasure of finding some very interesting
plants on its summit; particularly a small Acacia
with verticillate leaves, which Dr. Binoe, the surgeon
of H. M. S. Beagle, had found on the north-west coast;
and two other Acacias equally new to me, and which
were afterwards found to extend to the heads of the
South Alligator River. From this hill we had
a magnificent view of the country before us: it
was enclosed on all sides by high mountain ranges,
of which one in particular overtopped the rest.
Porphyry was observed on several spots; indurated
clay frequently; and, on the top of the hill below
which we encamped, I found quartz porphyry, and at
the foot a psammite? which I had met several times
associated with talc-schiste.
April 21. We continued
our journey in a degrees W. course to latitude
19 degrees 13 minutes. The country became still
more mountainous; we passed, notwithstanding, many
large well grassed flats, on which the timber grew
to a greater size than we had observed it at the lower
part of the river. The poplar-gum was very frequent
in the hollow, and low stiff flats extended parallel
to the river. The prevailing rock was talc-schiste,
alternating with layers of psammite. On the hills
and in the creeks, I frequently observed conglomerate,
with many pieces of quartz.
The drooping Hakea of Kent’s
Lagoon (Hakea lorea, R. Br.; Grevillea lorea,
R. Br. Prodr. Nov. Holl. I.
was in blossom; and on the rocky slopes I
found a new species of Hakea, having linear lanceolate
leaves with axillary fascicules of small brownish
flowers: it was an arborescent shrub, from three
to six feet high; and is nearly allied to H. arborescens
(R. Br. Prodr. .
A high imposing range was visible to the northward.
April 22. We travelled
about nine miles west, making our latitude 19 degrees
12 minutes. Ranges ran parallel to the river at
different distances: we left a very fine one
to the south-west and south, from which the large
creek we passed about two miles from our last camp,
probably descends. Three miles farther, a river
as large or even larger than the Burdekin, joins the
latter from the westward and south-west
the Burdekin coming down from the north-west.
I was doubtful which of the two rivers I ought to
follow; but finding, after a close examination, that
the north-west branch was running, whilst the south-west
one contained only large, long, but unconnected reaches
of water, I determined upon following the north-west
branch. I called the south-west branch the “Clarke,”
in compliment to the Rev. W. B. Clarke of Paramatta,
who has been, and is still, most arduously labouring
to elucidate the meteorology and the geology of this
part of the world. About three miles above the
junction, a creek of considerable size joined the Burdekin
from the northward. Wherever the ridges approached
the banks of the river, gullies which were scrubby
at their heads, became numerous. After having
encamped, I rode over to the “Clarke,”
to examine the intervening country. The flat
along the Burdekin was about two miles and a half
broad, and was skirted by silver-leaved Ironbark ridges.
In approaching the Clarke, we came to a low basaltic
range, which bounded its fine broad openly timbered
valley to the northward. The bed of the river
was formed by talc-schiste, in strata, the
strike of which was from north by west to south by
east, standing almost perpendicular, with a slight
dip to the eastward. The stream was perpendicular
on the line of striking. The pebbles in its bed
were mostly basaltic, baked sandstone, conglomerate,
quartz, sienite, and porphyry. I had observed
the valley of this river from a high hill near our
last camp, and had distinguished many headlands, which
I now think were the bluff terminations of lateral
basaltic ranges. The valley was bounded on its
southern side by a long low range.
The blue mountain parrot was very frequent near our
camp.
I have mentioned a small round eatable
tuber, which I found in the basket of a native gin
on the 2nd January. I here found it to be the
large end of the tap root of a Potamogeton, or a plant
nearly allied to that genus; I found it with another
interesting water-plant, with foliated spikes of blue
flowers, in a small water-hole near our last camp.
April 23. We travelled
about north-west to latitude 19 degrees 4 minutes
41 seconds, over a succession of fine flats; one or
two of which were almost exclusively timbered with
poplar-gum, which always indicated a sound stiff soil.
These flats were separated by shallow gullies, and
some Casuarina creeks, which come probably from the
dividing ridges of the two rivers. Ridges and
ranges were seen on both sides, at different distances.
The Casuarina became more frequent along the banks
of the river. It was rather remarkable that the
Moreton Bay ash, which is so abundant along the Burdekin,
was altogether wanting at the Clarke. Several
lagoons were observed at the foot of the ridges; and
near them we saw two flocks of the harlequin pigeon
(Peristera histrionica). Talc-schiste
cropped out in one of the deep creeks. Whilst
travelling on the Burdekin, with the exception of
some ducks and a few kangaroos, we had seen but very
little game; but yesterday, when riding to the Clarke,
two flocks of kangaroos passed me: a proof that
the country is not so destitute of game as I had thought.
The waters are inhabited by four varieties of fish;
one was probably a Gristes, about eight inches long,
and from one and a half to two inches broad, of a lanceolate
shape, with bright yellow spots all over the body;
a second smaller than Gristes, with dark stripes;
a third about a foot long, and three inches broad,
belonging to the Percidae; and a fourth, a small fish,
which seemed to be allied to the Cyprinidae.
Larger fish exist, probably, in the deep rocky basins
of water which we occasionally passed; but we never
succeeded in catching any; nor did we hear any of
the splashing, which was so incessant during the night
at the Mackenzie. The shell and bones of the
turtle indicated its presence in the shady ponds fringed
by drooping tea trees. Large holes in the banks
immediately above the water, were probably inhabited
by water rats or lizards. A common carpet snake
was killed. Whenever we passed through open Vitex
scrub, with its stiff loamy soil, we were sure of
meeting a great number of the conical constructions
of the white ant: they were from one to three
feet high, very narrow, and tapering to a sharp point.
April 24. To-day we travelled
along the river over an open country, intersected
by some gullies; the course of the river was, for about
four miles, from north to south, and, at that distance
from our camp, was joined by a river coming from the
northward, which I now take the liberty of naming
the “Perry,” after Captain Perry, Deputy
Surveyor-General, who has most kindly mapped my route
from the rough plans sketched during the journey.
The Burdekin here comes from the westward, and made
a large bend round several mountains, composed of
quartz porphyry, with a sub-crystalline felspathic
paste. The latitude was 19 degrees 1 minutes
(Unclear:)18.
April 25. We travelled
almost due west, about nine miles along the river,
our latitude being 19 degrees 1 minutes 3 seconds.
Our route lay through a fine well grassed country;
the grass being very dense: at a distance from
the river, I observed box flats, and poplar-gum flats;
the latter are probably swampy during the rainy season.
A good sized creek joined the Burdekin; a range of
high hills extended along its left side, and its right
became equally hilly as we approached our camping place.
After establishing our camp, and making the necessary
preparations, we killed one of our little steers,
and found it in excellent condition. The graziers
will judge by this simple fact, how well the country
is adapted for pastoral pursuits; particularly when
it is remembered that we were continually on the march,
and had frequently to pass over very rocky ranges,
which made our cattle footsore; and that the season
was not the most favourable for the grass, which,
although plentiful, was very dry. The steer gave
us 120 lbs. of dried beef.
In this place I observed and calculated
three sets of lunar observations; one gave longitude
144 degrees 4 minutes, and the other longitude 144
degrees 14 minutes. As usual, we greased our harness,
although not without considerable discussion, as to
whether it would not be more advisable to eat the
fat than to apply it to the leather; we also repaired
our packs and pack-saddles, and put every thing in
travelling order.
On the 29th April we started from
our killing camp, and travelled about seven miles
degrees W.; making our latitude 18 degrees 59
minutes. The ranges now approached the banks
of the river, and retarded our progress very much.
April 30. In consequence
of Charley’s statement, that the banks of the
river in advance were so steep and rocky that it would
be impossible for us to pass, I left the river side,
and crossed over the ranges, and had a very heavy
stage for my bullocks; which I regretted the more,
as Mr. Calvert and Brown, who returned to our last
camp for a sword, had found the route by the river
quite practicable. The ranges were composed of
a Psammite, which was frequently baked, probably by
neighbouring out-bursts of igneous rock. Several
familiar forms of plants were discovered; also a new
Eucalyptus, with a glaucous suborbicular subcordate
leaf, and the bark of the rusty gum: a stunted
or middle-sized tree, which grew in great abundance
on the ranges. We passed a fine large but dry
Casuarina creek, coming from the westward, with a
broad sandy bed. A large tree, with dark green
broad lanceolate stinging leaves, grew on its banks;
it resembled the nettle tree, but belonged to neither
of the two species growing in the bushes of the east
coast.
Our last day’s travelling had
not advanced us more than five miles in a straight
line, and we had not made any northing, our latitude
being again 18 degrees 59 minutes; but we had left
the mountains behind us, and had travelled, during
the latter part of the stage, over well grassed, openly
timbered flats. The ranges on the left side of
the river extended several miles farther, but gradually
sunk into a level country.