May 1. We travelled west
by north, to latitude 18 degrees 55 minutes 41 seconds,
over almost a dead flat, which was only interrupted
by a fine Casuarina creek, with a broad sandy bed,
coming from the south-south-west. The soil was
stiff, and the forest in which the Box tree prevailed,
was very open. A species of Acacia, with narrow
blunt phyllodia, about an inch long, with spinous
stipules; Hakea lorea, and the Grevillea mimosoides
(R. Br.), with very long linear leaves, were
frequent. Towards the end of the journey, slight
ridges, composed of flint rock, rose on our left;
and the country became more undulating. Mr. Roper
saw extensive ranges about fifteen miles distant; shortly
before entering the camp, we passed a singularly broken
country, in which the waters rushing down from a slightly
inclined table land, had hollowed out large broad
gullies in a sandy loam and iron ochre, which was full
of quartz pebbles. The heavier masses had resisted
the action of the waters, and remained like little
peaks and islands, when the softer materials around
them had been washed away. We met with grass lately
burnt, and some still burning, which indicated the
presence of natives. It was generally very warm
during the hours of travelling, between eight and
twelve o’clock, but the bracing air of the nights
and mornings strengthened us for the day’s labour;
the weather altogether was lovely, and it was a pleasure
to travel along such a fine stream of water.
Easterly and north-easterly breezes still prevailed,
though I expected that the direction of the winds
would change as we passed the centre of York Peninsula.
Our two black companions, who until
now had been like brothers entertaining
each other by the relation of their adventures, to
a late hour of the night; singing, chatting, laughing,
and almost crying together; making common cause against
me; Brown even following Charley into his banishment quarrelled
yesterday, about a mere trifle, so violently that
it will be some time before they become friends again.
When Mr. Calvert and Brown returned yesterday to the
camp, they remarked that they had not seen the waterfall,
of which Charley had spoken whilst at our last camp;
upon which Charley insinuated that they had not seen
it, because they had galloped their horses past it.
This accusation of galloping their horses irritated
Brown, who was very fond and proud of his horse; and
a serious quarrel of a rather ridiculous character
ensued. Keeping myself entirely neutral, I soon
found that I derived the greatest advantage from their
animosity to each other, as each tried to outdo the
other in readiness to serve me. To-day, Charley,
who was usually the last to rise in the morning, roused
even me, and brought the horses before our breakfast
was ready. Brown’s fondness for spinning
a yarn will soon, however, induce him to put an end
to this feud with his companion and countryman.
In the early part of our journey, one or other of our
party kept a regular night-watch, as well to guard
us from any night attack of the natives, as to look
after our bullocks; but, latterly, this prudential
measure, or rather its regularity, has been much neglected.
Mr. Roper’s watch was handed from one to another
in alphabetical rotation at given intervals, but no
one thought of actually watching; it was, in fact,
considered to be a mere matter of form. I did
not check this, because there was nothing apparently
to apprehend from the natives, who always evinced
terror in meeting us; and all our communications with
them have been accidental and never sought by them.
On that point, therefore, I was not apprehensive;
and, as to the bullocks, they were now accustomed
to feed at large, and we seldom had any difficulty
in recovering them in the morning. I shall here
particularise the routine of one of our days, which
will serve as an example of all the rest. I usually
rise when I hear the merry laugh of the laughing-jackass
(Dacelo gigantea), which, from its regularity,
has not been unaptly named the settlers’ clock;
a loud cooee then roused my companions, Brown
to make tea, Mr. Calvert to season the stew with salt
and marjoram, and myself and the others to wash, and
to prepare our breakfast, which, for the party, consists
of two pounds and a-half of meat, stewed over night;
and to each a quart pot of tea. Mr. Calvert then
gives to each his portion, and, by the time this important
duty is performed, Charley generally arrives with the
horses, which are then prepared for their day’s
duty. After breakfast, Charley goes with John
Murphy to fetch the bullocks, which are generally brought
in a little after seven o’clock a.m. The
work of loading follows, but this requires very little
time now, our stock being much reduced; and, at about
a quarter to eight o’clock, we move on, and continue
travelling four hours, and, if possible, select a
spot for our camp. The Burdekin, which has befriended
us so much by its direct course and constant stream,
already for more than two degrees of latitude and two
of longitude, has not always furnished us with the
most convenient camps for procuring water. The
banks generally formed steep slopes descending into
a line of hollows parallel to the river, and thickly
covered with a high stiff grass; and then another
steep bank covered with a thicket of drooping tea-trees,
rose at the water’s edge; and, if the descent
into the bed of the river was more easy, the stream
frequently was at the opposite side, and we had to
walk several hundred yards over a broad sheet of loose
sand, which filled our mocassins, when going to
wash. At present, the river is narrower, and
I have chosen my camp twice on its dry sandy bed,
under the shade of Casuarinas and Melaleucas, the stream
being there comparatively easy of access, and not
ten yards off. Many unpleasant remarks had been
made by my companions at my choice of camping places;
but, although I suffered as much inconvenience as they
did, I bore it cheerfully, feeling thankful to Providence
for the pure stream of water with which we were supplied
every night. I had naturally a great antipathy
against comfort-hunting and gourmandizing, particularly
on an expedition like ours; on which we started with
the full expectation of suffering much privation,
but which an Almighty Protector had not only allowed
us to escape hitherto, but had even supplied us frequently
with an abundance in proof of which we
all got stronger and improved in health, although
the continued riding had rather weakened our legs.
This antipathy I expressed, often perhaps too harshly,
which caused discontent; but, on these occasions,
my patience was sorely tried. I may, however,
complete the picture of the day: as soon as the
camp is pitched, and the horses and bullocks unloaded,
we have all our alloted duties; to make the fire falls
to my share; Brown’s duty is to fetch water for
tea; and Mr. Calvert weighs out a pound and a-half
of flour for a fat cake, which is enjoyed more than
any other meal; the large teapot being empty, Mr.
Calvert weighs out two and a-half pounds of dry meat
to be stewed for our late dinner; and, during the
afternoon, every one follows his own pursuits, such
as washing and mending clothes, repairing saddles,
pack-saddles, and packs; my occupation is to write
my log, and lay down my route, or make an excursion
in the vicinity of the camp to botanize, etc.
or ride out reconnoitring. My companions also
write down their remarks, and wander about gathering
seeds, or looking for curious pebbles. Mr. Gilbert
takes his gun to shoot birds. A loud cooee again
unites us towards sunset round our table cloth; and,
whilst enjoying our meals, the subject of the day’s
journey, the past, the present, and the future, by
turns engage our attention, or furnish matter for conversation
and remark, according to the respective humour of the
parties. Many circumstances have conspired to
make me strangely taciturn, and I am now scarcely
pleased even with the chatting humour of my youngest
companion, whose spirits, instead of flagging, have
become more buoyant and lively than ever. I consider
it, however, my invariable duty to give every information
I can, whenever my companions inquire or show a desire
to learn, and I am happy to find that they are desirous
of making themselves familiar with the objects of
nature by which they are surrounded, and of understanding
their mutual relations. Mr. Roper is of a more
silent disposition; Mr. Calvert likes to speak, and
has a good stock of “small talk,” with
which he often enlivens our dinners; he is in that
respect an excellent companion, being full of jokes
and stories, which, though old and sometimes quaint,
are always pure, and serve the more to exhilarate
the party. Mr. Gilbert has travelled much, and
consequently has a rich store of impressions de voyage:
his conversation is generally very pleasing and instructive,
in describing the character of countries he has seen,
and the manners and customs of the people he has known.
He is well informed in Australian Ornithology.
As night approaches, we retire to our beds. The
two Blackfellows and myself spread out each our own
under the canopy of heaven, whilst Messrs. Roper,
Calvert, Gilbert, Murphy, and Phillips, have their
tents. Mr. Calvert entertains Roper with his
conversation; John amuses Gilbert; Brown tunes up his
corroborri songs, in which Charley, until their late
quarrel, generally joined. Brown sings well,
and his melodious plaintive voice lulls me to sleep,
when otherwise I am not disposed. Mr. Phillips
is rather singular in his habits; he erects his tent
generally at a distance from the rest, under a shady
tree, or in a green bower of shrubs, where he makes
himself as comfortable as the place will allow, by
spreading branches and grass under his couch, and
covering his tent with them, to keep it shady and
cool, and even planting lilies in blossom (Crinum)
before his tent, to enjoy their sight during the short
time of our stay. As the night advances, the
Blackfellows’ songs die away; the chatting tongue
of Murphy ceases, after having lulled Mr. Gilbert
to sleep; and at last even Mr. Calvert is silent,
as Roper’s short answers became few and far between.
The neighing of the tethered horse, the distant tinkling
of the bell, or the occasional cry of night birds,
alone interrupt the silence of our camp. The
fire, which was bright as long as the corroborri songster
kept it stirred, gradually gets dull, and smoulders
slowly under the large pot in which our meat is simmering;
and the bright constellations of heaven pass unheeded
over the heads of the dreaming wanderers of the wilderness,
until the summons of the laughing jackass recalls them
to the business of the coming day.
May 2. We travelled in
a N.W. direction to la degrees 50 minutes 11
seconds; at first over the box flats, alternating with
an undulating open country. About three miles
before making our camp, we passed several small plains
at the foot of what appeared to be basaltic ridges,
and came to the dry channel of a river, with reeds
and occasional water-holes, and lined with fine flooded-gum
trees and Casuarinas, but without the dropping tea
trees and the Moreton Bay ash, the latter of which
seemed to be the prerogative of the Burdekin.
At its left side a basaltic ridge rose, covered with
thick scrub, and at its base extended a small plain,
with black soil strewed with quartz pebbles. The
river came, as well as I could judge, from the W.N.W.
Mr. Roper and Brown caught a kangaroo, but they had
a dangerous ride after it, and the poor brute, when
hard pressed, showed fight, and endeavoured to lay
hold of Mr. Roper.
In one of the creeks I observed pegmatite;
pebbles of talc-schiste and of white quartz
covered the bed of the river.
May 3. We had to travel
for a considerable distance in the bed of the river,
for the hills approached close to its banks, and numerous
deep gullies intercepted their slopes. When,
however, the ridges receded, we passed several fine
sound flats. The forest was open everywhere, and
the grass was good, though old. After travelling
about five miles, we saw a hill to the north-east,
and, when we came almost abreast of it, the river
turned to the eastward, and a wild field of broken
basaltic lava rendered it impossible for us to follow
its banks. The black rough masses of rock were
covered with thick scrub, in which I observed numerous
bottle trees with the platanus leaf. Keeping
to the westward of the scrub, I followed a creek which
farther on divided in a chain of ponds, into which
the waters of the field of basalt, as well as of the
basaltic ridges to the westward of it, collected.
These ridges were perfectly level at their summits,
and were connected with a table land which extended
far to the west. At their foot sienite, quartz
rock, and leptinite, were observed. After turning
round the field of lava to the eastward, we entered
into a large flat, with patches of narrow-leaved tea
tree, with reedy swamps and fine flooded-gum trees,
and made our camp at a strong running brook, without
trees, but densely surrounded with reeds, ferns, and
pothos. This stream formed the outlet of some
fine lagoons, which extended along the steep slopes
of the basaltic table land. I crossed the creek
and its flat to the opposite hills. The flat
was one level sheet or floor of basalt, here and there
covered with a very shallow soil, but sometimes bare,
though clothed with a fair supply of grass and with
scattered flooded-gum trees. At the foot of the
eastern hills, however, deep holes existed in a water-course,
with black blocks of basalt heaped over each other,
on which the fig tree with its dark green foliage
formed a shady bower, most delightful during the heat
of the day. The hills were composed of a lamellar
granite, approaching the stratified appearance of gneiss,
but the leaflets of mica, instead of forming continuous
layers, were scattered. The east side of the
narrow watercourse was of primitive rock, the west
side basaltic. Having passed over the hills, I
made the river at their east side. Its banks
were open for access as far as the primitive rock
extended, but another field of lava commenced higher
up, and rendered any progress with our cattle impossible.
A native low shrubby Mulberry was
found in this scrub, the fruit of which was good to
eat, but of very small size.
From the top of the hills I enjoyed
a most beautiful view of the valley of the river,
with its large lagoons covered with Nymphaeas and
Damasoniums. On one of the lagoons, Charley shot
a Parra gallinacea, a bird which Mr. Gilbert
had observed only at Port Essington. A well beaten
path of the natives showed that they were numerous
in this part of the country: we saw many of their
camping places during the stage; and the fires of
their camps were numerous; we saw a party of them,
but they were too frightened to allow us to approach.
Our latitude was 18 degrees 44 minutes 48 seconds.
Our course was about N.N.W.
May 4. We ascended the
basaltic ridges, and reaching the table land, found
it perfectly level, openly timbered, well grassed,
but occasionally stony, by which our poor foot-sore
bullocks suffered severely. About five miles
north-west by west from our camp, we discovered an
extensive valley with large lagoons and lakes, and
a most luxuriant vegetation, bounded by blue distant
ranges, and forming the most picturesque landscape
we had yet met with. A chain of lagoons connected
by a reedy brook followed the outlines of the table
land, along the foot of its steep slopes. We
descended by a tolerably gentle slope into the valley,
and encamped near the reedy brook, which must be the
same as that on which, lower down, our last camp was
formed. Water, grass, hills, mountains, plains,
forest land; all the elements of a fine pasturing
country, were here united.
During one of the last stages, we
discovered a leguminous tree, with the dark fissured
bark of the Ironbark, but with large bipinnate leaves,
the leaflets oblong, an inch in length; the pods broad
and thin, and two or three inches long: this
tree is common all over the northern part of the continent,
and was found growing abundantly around Victoria, the
principal settlement of Port Essington.
Mr. Roper and Brown, upon an excursion
after ducks, which were very numerous on the lagoons,
met with Blackfellows, who were willing to accost
Brown, but could not bear the sudden sight of a white
face. In trying to cross the valley, my course
was intercepted every way by deep reedy and sedgy
lagoons, which rendered my progress impossible.
I saw, however, that this valley was also floored
with a sheet of lava hollowed out into numerous deep
basins, in which the water collected and formed the
lagoons.
May 5. I went with Charley
to reconnoitre the upper part of the reedy brook,
with a view to find a passage over the table land to
the westward; at the same time I sent Mr. Roper and
Brown to trace the river through the lagoons, and
to examine whether there was any connection between
them. I followed the base of the basaltic table
land, along which the brook came down, and, after
a two miles’ ride on its banks, through oak
trees, low fern trees, and several bush trees, found
that it came down a valley deeply cut into the table
land. The floor of the valley was of basaltic
rock, and its steep slopes were covered with boulders
of the same formation. The water ran in two distinct
beds through the fissures, hollows, and caves of the
rock. As our horses could not travel over the
sharp edges of the rock without injuring their feet,
we ascended the table land, and rode to the northward
about four miles, and then came on plains, in which
we distinguished a meandering band of green verdure,
which proved to be the same brook we had left, or one
of its head waters. We followed it through a
series of plains, from one of which a blue mountain
was visible to the north-west. I called it “Mount
Lang,” after Dr. Lang, the distinguished historiographer
of New South Wales. Smoke was seen to the westward.
At the right side of the brook, a stream of lava bounded
the plains, and was, as usual, covered with dense scrub.
Box, with occasional patches of narrow-leaved tea
trees, grew along the plains. The forest was
very open, and principally consisted of narrow-leaved
Ironbark; the grass in the forest and on the plains,
was of the best description. Finer stations for
the squatter cannot exist.
May 6. Following the brook
about four miles farther, I came to its source at
a gentle slope of basalt. Plains stretched along
both sides of its course, and even beyond it.
Luxuriant reeds, Plothos, and several deep green trees,
crowded round its head. Kangaroos, which abounded
particularly along the scrub, had formed numerous paths
through the high grass to the water’s edge.
I now directed my course to the W.N.W., but soon found
myself checked by a dyke or wall of basaltic lava,
composed of boulders and tabular blocks heaped over
each other in wild confusion, and covered by scrub;
it stretched from N.W. to S.E. I travelled round
its edge to the southward, after having made a vain
attempt to cross it. The outlines of the stream
ran out in low heads into the flat table land, and
there we met occasionally with springs and chains of
water-holes which united lower down into a water-course,
which, after following alternately the outline of
the scrub, and turning into the stream of lava, became
lost among its loose rocks. The lava was very
cellular; the basalt of the table land solid.
The whole appearance of this interesting locality
showed that the stream of lava was of much more recent
date than the rock of the table land, and that the
latter was probably formed under water, whilst the
cellular scorified lava was poured out into the open
air. The stream of lava enlarged so much, and
descended into so broad a valley, that I considered
it to be the head of the Burdekin. I walked across
it, in order to ascertain the presence of water, but
found nothing but deep dry hollows surrounded with
drooping tea trees, and the black basaltic rocks covered
with wild bottle-tree scrub. It joined the valley
of lagoons very much like the valley of the reedy
brook, and seemed to unite with the latter, and to
expand all over the large basin. Numerous headlands
protruded from the table land into the valley of lagoons,
between the stream of lava and reedy brook. Many
of them were composed of quartzite and pegmatite [Graphic
granite, composed of quartz and laminated felspar. Ed.],
the detritus of which formed sandy slopes very different
from the black and loamy soil of the table land and
its plains. Several isolated hills and short
ridges rise out of the basaltic floor of the valley
of lagoons; they are composed of a different rock;
and if it may be allowed me to judge by the colour
and by analogy, I should say that they were pegmatite
and quartzite. It would, therefore, appear that
the valley of lagoons is connected with three streams
of lava; one following down the river to the southward,
a second coming down the valley of Reedy Brook from
W.N.W., and the third coming from the N.W. The
course of the Burdekin has no connection with this
valley, but runs apparently along its eastern side,
and divides the primitive rocks from the streams of
lava; for I had not observed any lava on its left bank.
In returning to our camp, we saw a
great number of women and children, who ran away upon
seeing us, screaming loudly, which attracted some young
men to the spot, who were much bolder and approached
us. I dismounted and walked up within five yards
of them, when I stopped short from a mutual disinclination
for too close quarters, as they were armed with spears
and waddies. They made signs for me to take off
my hat, and to give them something; but, having nothing
with me, I made a sign that I would make them a present
upon returning to the camp. They appeared to be
in no way unfriendly, and directed us how to avoid
the water. When I reached the camp, I found that
the Blackfellows had been there already, and had been
rather urgent to enter it, probably in consequence
of the small number of my companions then present,
who, however, managed to keep them in good humour
by replying to their inquiries respecting our nature
and intentions; among which one of the most singular
was, whether the bullocks were not our gins.
This occurred last night; in the morning they returned
again in great numbers, and climbed the trees on the
other side of the brook to observe what was doing
within the camp. It now became necessary to show
them our superiority; which we attempted to do by
shooting at a kite, numbers of which were perched on
the neighbouring trees; our shots, however, unfortunately
missed, and the natives answered the discharge of
the gun with a shout of laughter. At this time,
however, Mr. Roper, Charley, and myself returned from
our excursion, when they became quiet. I threw
a tin canister over to them, and they returned me a
shower of roasted Nymphaea fruit. It seems that
the seed-vessels of Nymphaea and its rhizoma form
the principal food of the natives; the seeds contain
much starch and oil, and are extremely nourishing.
I then gave them some pieces of dried meat, intimating
by signs that it must be grilled; soon afterwards
they retired. Mr. Roper came in with sad tidings;
in riding up the steep bank of the river, his horse,
unable to get a footing among the loose rocks, had
fallen back and broken its thigh. I immediately
resolved upon going to the place where the accident
had happened, and proposed to my companions, that we
should try to make the best of the meat, as the animal
was young and healthy, and the supply would greatly
assist in saving our bullocks to the end of our long
journey; and they declared themselves willing at all
events to give a fair trial to the horse-flesh.
Our bullocks were foot-sore and required rest.
We, therefore, shot the horse, skinned and quartered
it the same night; and ate its liver and kidneys,
which were quite as good as those of a bullock.
May 7. We cut the meat
in slices, and dried it; and though there was some
prejudice against it, it would have been very difficult
to have detected any difference between it and beef;
particularly if the animals had been in the same condition.
May 8. As I found it necessary
to follow the right bank of the river, in order to
get out of this intricate country, I sent Mr. Gilbert
and Charley to trace the river through the valley
of lagoons. Having accomplished their object,
they informed me that the river had no connexion with
the lagoons of the large valley, but that several very
large ones were even on its left bank; and that all
tree vegetation disappeared from its banks where it
passed through a part of the valley of lagoons.
May 9. As my bullocks were
still extremely foot-sore, it was necessary that we
should travel only by short stages until they recovered;
consequently, the day’s journey did not exceed
five miles in a N.N.E. direction; and, with the exception
of some ridges, upon excellent travelling ground,
along the left bank of the river. The latter formed,
as I have already stated, the line of separation, first,
between basalt and granite, and afterwards between
basalt and a quartzose rock (probably baked Psammite).
The country was beautifully open and well grassed;
the river forming a simple channel, without trees,
well filled with water and flowing between chains
of lakes and lagoons on either side; one of which
was covered with flocks of ducks and pelicans, resembling
islands of white lilies.
Beyond the almost treeless flats round
the lagoons, Casuarinas and Callistemon re-appeared
along the river.
We saw some Blackfellows in the distance,
who immediately withdrew as we approached them; but
the tribe, which we had met at Reedy Brook, came to
the other side of the river, and had much to say; we
did not, however, take any notice of them, until we
had unloaded our bullocks and finished our luncheon,
when I went down to them, and gave them a horn of one
of our slaughtered bullocks. Roper had saved
the mane of his horse, and threw it over to them,
but it seemed to frighten them very much. We
inquired by signs as to the course of the river, and
we understood by their answers, that it came a long
way from the northward. At Reedy Brook the natives
had given my companions to understand that the brook
had its source not very far off to the W.N.W., by
pointing at their heads, then at the brook, and then
in the direction mentioned. I was therefore inclined
to trust to their information about the river’s
source. They threw some yam-roots over to us,
the plant of which we were not able to ascertain:
and after that they retired.
May 10. This morning they
came again, and, when our bullocks were loaded and
we were about to start, I went down to them and took
a sort of leave. We had scarcely proceeded half
a mile, when we missed the tinkling of our bell, and
found that Charley had forgotten to put it on the horse’s
neck, and had left it behind. Mr. Calvert and
Brown, therefore, returned to look for it, and, upon
reaching the place where the camp had been made, saw
the natives examining and beating every part of it;
at the approach of the horsemen, however, they retired
to the other side of the river; but when they turned
their horses’ heads, after having found the bell,
the natives followed them, and threw three spears after
them whether it was out of mere wantonness,
or with hostile intentions, I do not know, though
I was inclined to believe the first. It was, nevertheless,
a warning to us not to repose too much confidence
in them. Mr. Roper met to-day with a severe accident,
which nearly cost him his life. It was a very
common practice to make our horses stop by catching
them by the tails; as he tried to do this with his
horse, which was not yet accustomed to him, the animal
struck out at him, and kicked him with both feet on
the chest. Roper happily recovered after some
faintness, but complained for several days afterwards
of external pain. We travelled this day about
four miles and a half N.N.E. along the river side,
following a well-beaten path of the natives.
The river was again confined in its
own valley, with quartzose rocks (Psammite) on one
side, and the falls of the basaltic table land on the
other. Basalt was, however, observed here about
on several spots at the left bank, and quartz porphyry
composed the ridges near our last encampment.
The river divided here into a great number of anabranches,
but all confined in the same valley, and united by
intermediate channels. The bed of it had again
become sandy, with small pebbles of pegmatite and
quartz. Casuarinas were plentiful on its banks;
the poplar-gum, and the Moreton Bay ash on the adjacent
flats; Tristania, with pubescent leaves round some
lagoons; narrow-leaved Ironbark, and poplar-gum grew
on the hills; and rich grass every where.
The night was clear, but the morning
foggy, and the dew very heavy. The wind was from
the northward, and, as usual, very strong after sunset.
May 11. We travelled four
miles to the E.N.E. The anabranches of the river
continued; the ranges of quartz porphyry approached
several times close to the river. Oak trees and
drooping Melaleucas grew abundantly in its bed, and
along the banks. Higher up we crossed fine flats
with lagoons and lakes covered as usual with Nymphaeas.
We encamped in latitude 18 degrees 32 minutes 37 seconds,
after passing a Casuarina creek, with high banks and
a sandy bed. This creek separated the table land
from a broken low range of hills, composed of a coarse-grained
sandstone. The banks of the river here seemed
to have been swept away; a broad sheet of sand, covered
with fine drooping tea trees, was slightly furrowed
by a narrow stream of water, which seemed for the greater
part filtering through the sands; chains of water-holes
at its left side, fringed with Casuarinas, appeared
to be anabranches of the river, and to be connected
with the main stream during the rainy season.
I have to mention that a species of
Sciadophyllum, nearly allied to Sc. lucidum,
(Don. iii. ,) was found in the lava scrub of
the valley of lagoons: it was a small tree with
large digitate leaves, each of them composed of from
eleven to thirteen oblong acuminate, glabrous leaflets,
which were about five inches long; and it attracted
the attention of my companions as much by its ornamental
foliage as its numerous terminal racemes of bright
scarlet coloured flowers.
After having celebrated Whit-Sunday
with a double allowance of fat cake and sweetened
tea, I started with Charley to reconnoitre the country
to the westward. Our friendly stream not only
turned to the north, but afterwards to north-east
and east-north-east; and though I had not succeeded
in leaving it from Reedy Brook not having
been able to cross the lava streams of the basaltic
table land I now concluded, from the nature
of the pebbles, and sands of the creek which we had
crossed last, that the basalts and lavas had
ceased, and that a passage to the westward would be
practicable.
I followed the Casuarina Creek up
to its head, and called it “Big Ant-hill Creek,”
in consequence of numerous gigantic strangely buttressed
structures of the white ant, which I had never seen
of such a form, and of so large a size.
The general course of the creek was
north-north-west: for the first ten miles it
was without water, but its middle and upper course
was well provided with fine reedy holes, the constant
supply of water in which was indicated by Nymphaeas,
and other aquatic plants. At its left side near
the junction I observed, as before mentioned, a coarse
grained sandstone, and, at less than a mile higher
up, I found flint rock; and, wherever I examined afterwards,
the rocks proved to be coarse grained granite and
pegmatite, the decomposition of which formed a sandy
soil on the slopes, and clayey flats along the creek.
The latter, however, were very limited. The ant-hills
were intimately connected with the rock, as the ants
derived their materials for building from the minute
particles of clay among the sand. The primitive
rock was cut with deep gullies and ravines, and several
tributary creeks joined Big Ant-hill Creek from the
primitive side. The basaltic table land, which
extended all along the right side of the creek, formed
steep slopes into its valley, and were generally topped
with loose basaltic boulders. The table land was
highest near the creek, and its drainage was not towards
the creek, but to the south-west, into the valley
of lagoons. White quartz rock was observed in
a few places on the right side of the creek, where
the primitive rock seemed to encroach into the territory
of the basalt; and felspathic porphyry formed probably
a dyke in the pegmatite, but was most evidently broken
by the basalt. Where the upper part of the creek
formed a shallow watercourse, and turned altogether
into the primitive formation, a plain came down from
the west-north-west with a shallow watercourse, which
continued the separation of the two formations; the
right side of the plain being basaltic, the soil of
the Box and Ironbark forest loamy, with sharp pieces
of the rock; the left side being sandy, and covered
with a very pleasing poplar gum forest, in which the
grotesque ant-hills were exceedingly numerous.
About two miles higher up the plain, separated into
several distinct plains, the largest of which was from
twelve to fifteen miles long, and from two to three
miles broad, and came from Mount Lang; another plain
came from an isolated razorback hill, and a third continued
on the line of contact of the basaltic and primitive
rocks. The upper parts of the small creeks, which
come down in these plains, were full of water, and
had their source generally between heaps of bare basaltic
rocks, surrounded by rich grass, and a scanty scrub
of Pittosporum, of the native mulberry, of the
fig-tree, and of several vines, with Polypodiums,
Osmundas, and Caladiums growing between them.
Several other hills and mountains
rose on the table land, generally with open plains
at their base. The greater part, however, was
open forest, principally of narrow-leaved Ironbark
and Box, and occasionally poplar-gum.
One locality was particularly striking:
a great number of rocky basins within the basalt,
and surrounded by its black blocks, formed evidently
so many lagoons during the wet season, as sedges and
Polygonums always inhabitants of constantly
moist places grew abundantly in most of
them. These basins were situated between low
basaltic rises, along which narrow flats frequently
extended. The flooded gum-trees were fine and
numerous, and made me frequently believe that I was
approaching a creek. I rode, however, over eighteen
miles of country to the westward without observing
the slightest watercourse. Long flats bounded
by slight undulations extended some to the northward,
and others to the westward; but their inclination
was imperceptible. I passed some hills and plains;
and ascending one of the hills, I obtained a fine
view. To the west by south I saw other isolated
mountains: the country to the westward was not
broken by any elevation; a fine long range was visible
to the north-west.
It was now 3 o’clock P.M., and
my Blackfellows had left me, as usual; my horse was
foot-sore, and neither the poor animal nor myself had
tasted water for the last thirty-six hours. Under
these circumstances, though I ardently desired to
push on to the north-west ranges, I thought it prudent
to return; and after a short rest to my horse, during
which I chewed some dry pieces of beef, I rode on
my way back until 9 o’clock, and then encamped.
The coldness of the night reminded me too strongly
of the pleasures of the fire and the heavy dew which
had fallen, though a comfort to my horse, rendered
it difficult to light one; by dint of patience, however,
I succeeded, and then stretched myself, hungry and
thirsty as I was, by the side of a large Ironbark log;
whilst my horse, which I had hobbled and tethered,
drooped his head over me, little inclined either to
feed or move. I started early in the morning of
the 14th, and passed between Mount Lang and Razorback
Hill. At the foot of the latter I met a small
creek, which I followed through a long series of plains
until I came on my old track, not very far from Big
Ant-hill Creek. At the sight of water, which
we had been without full fifty hours, my horse and
I rushed simultaneously into it, and we drank, and
drank, and drank again, before I could induce myself
to light a fire and make some tea, which was always
found to be much more wholesome, and to allay thirst
sooner than the water alone.
Near the large water-hole at which
I halted, was an old camping place of the natives,
and the remnants of many a hut lay scattered round
two large flooded gum trees. The smoke of the
natives fires was seen in every direction. This
part of the country is doubtless well supplied with
water-holes: but as they are unconnected with
a watercourse, the traveller, unless by accident,
has little chance of finding them.
In returning along Ant-hill Creek,
I passed a few native men sitting before their gunyas;
they were not a hundred yards from me, yet they remained
silent and motionless, like the black stumps of the
trees around them, until the strange apparition passed
by. At sunset, just as I was taking the saddle
from my horse, I heard a cooee, and not considering
it prudent to encamp in the vicinity of the natives,
I began to tighten up the girths again; but, at the
same time, answered the cooee, and soon after I saw
Master Charley and his wearied horse descending from
the opposite range. He had not had anything to
eat since the morning of the preceding day, and was
therefore exceedingly pleased to meet me. He had
not been able to follow me, in consequence of the foot-soreness
of his horse, but he had succeeded in finding a small
spring at the foot of Mount Lang, near which the natives
had often and recently encamped.
May 15. We returned to
our camp. The natives [These natives are probably
the same as, or are connected with, the tribe that
frequent Rockingham Bay, who have always been noticed
for their friendly bearing in communications with
ships visiting that place. Rockingham Bay is situated
due east from the position of Dr. Leichhardt’s
party.] had visited
my companions, and behaved very amicably towards them,
making them not only presents of spears and wommalas,
but supplying them with seed-vessels of Nymphaea,
and its mealy roasted stems and tubers, which they
were in the habit of pounding into a substance much
resembling mashed potatoes. They took leave of
my companions to go to the sea-coast, pointing to
the east and east by south, whither they were going
to fetch shells, particularly the nautilus, of which
they make various ornaments.
May 16 and 17. We moved
our camp about twenty miles N.N.W. to latitude 18
degrees 16 minutes 37 seconds, to one of the head brooks
of Big Ant-hill Creek. We travelled the whole
distance over the basaltic table-laud without any
impediment. The natives approached our camp, but
retired without any communication.
I had not found any westerly waters
on my ride of the 13th, but had seen a range to the
north-west, and that was the goal of a new exploration.
As we had been fortunate enough to find water at the
contact of the primitive and basaltic formation, I
wished to follow the same line of contact as long
as it would not carry us much out of our course.
We crossed, in a northerly direction, several granitic
ranges which ran out into the table land, and were
separated from each other by very large swamps, at
the time mostly dry, and covered with a short withered
swamp grass, but bearing the marks of frequent inundations.
The bed of these swamps was perfectly level, and formed
by an uninterrupted sheet of basalt. Chains of
water-holes between the ranges, which I hoped would
lead me to creeks, were lost in the level of these
swamps; indeed, these granitic ranges were remarkably
destitute of watercourses. The coarse elements
of the decomposed rock, principally pegmatite, had
formed uniform slopes, in which even heavy showers
of rain were readily absorbed; but rounded blocks
of rock, sometimes curiously piled, protruded from
the granitic sands. Pandanus spiralis fringed
the scattered water-holes; and Grevillea chrysodendron,
(R. Br.) formed a wreath, of pale silver-colour,
round the swamps, but grew on sandy soil. White
cranes, the ibis, geese, native companions, and plovers,
were very numerous; and the large ant-hills scattered
through the forest at the foot of the hills, looked
like so many wigwams.
From one of the ranges I had another
view of the north-west range, and we started for it,
leaving the primitive country behind us. A cold,
southerly wind set in on the morning of the 18th, which
made Brown and myself shiver, and I most gladly availed
myself of a flannel shirt, whilst Brown covered himself
with his blanket. We rode about five hours over
an undulating forest land, interrupted by one or two
plains, and for the greater part exceedingly stony.
We came at last to fresh burnt grass, and observed
recent marks of the stone tomahawk of the natives;
and, having passed a stony slope, with irregular low
stony ridges, we saw an oak-tree creek before us,
on the opposite side of which rose the granitic range
for which we had directed our course. This creek
also ran on the line of contact of primitive and basaltic
rocks; the primitive side was cut by gullies and ravines,
whilst the basalt formed a steep uninterrupted slope,
though covered with boulders which had been carried
down even into the sandy bed of the creek, where they
were intermingled with those of granite and pegmatite.
I called this creek “Separation Creek,”
in allusion to its geological relations: at the
point where we met it, it turned to the north and
north-west, which made me believe that it was a westerly
water; but in this I was mistaken.
We had some slight showers of drizzling
rain during the afternoon. The wind veered towards
evening to the northward, and the night was clear.
We saw several kangaroos, and their
tracks to the water showed that they were numerous.
One of them, which we saw in the creek, was of a light
grey colour, with rich fur and a white tail.
May 19. We returned to
the camp. A cold easterly wind continued during
the day; low rainy clouds in the morning formed into
heavy cumuli during the afternoon.
My geological observations lead me
to the conclusion, that an immense valley between
granitic ranges has here been filled by a more modern
basaltic eruption, which (supposing that Mount Lang
is basaltic in the centre of elevation) rose in peaks
and isolated hills, but formed in general a level
table land. The basalt has been again broken by
still more recent fissures, through which streams
of lava have risen and expanded over the neighbouring
rock.
May 20. We moved our camp
about eighteen miles N.N.W., to Separation Creek,
the latitude of which was 18 degrees 2 minutes 22 seconds.
John Murphy found Grevillea chrysodendron
in blossom, the rich orange colour of which excited
general admiration. The stringy-bark tree, and
Tristania, were growing on the sandy soil, and the
latter near watercourses. Several native bustards
(Otis Novae Hollandiae, Gould.) were shot, and
I found their stomachs full of the seeds of Grewia,
which abounded in the open patches of forest ground.
In crossing a plain we observed, under the shade of
a patch of narrow-leaved tea trees, four bowers of
the bowerbird, close together, as if one habitation
was not sufficient for the wanton bird to sport in;
and on the dry swamps I mentioned above, small companies
of native companions were walking around us at some
distance, but rose with their sonorous cu-r-r-r-ring
cry, whenever Brown tried to approach them. [The natives
of Argyle call the cry of the native companion, Ku-ru-duc
Ku-ru-duc; the natives of Port Essington
call the bird Ororr.]
May 21. I went with Brown
to reconnoitre the course of the creek, and to ascertain
whether it flowed to the westward. We soon found,
however, that it turned to the north and north-east,
and that it was still an eastern water. As far
as I followed it down, it formed the separation between
the primitive rocks and the basalt, but received several
creeks from the westward. In riding along we
heard the cooees of natives, and passed several large
camping places near the large water-holes of the creek.
A Blackfellow emerged suddenly from the creek, holding
a Casuarina branch in his hand, and pointing to the
westward. We made a sign that we were going down
the creek, and that we had no intention of hurting
him; the poor fellow, however, was so frightened that
he groaned and crouched down in the grass. Wishing
not to increase his alarm, we rode on. I followed
up one of the largest tributary creeks coming from
the westward towards its head; it was lined with Casuarinas
and flooded-gum trees, like Separation Creek, and
came from an entirely granitic country, ridges and
ranges, with some high hills, bounding its valley on
both sides; it soon divided, however, into branches,
and as one turned too much to the north and the other
to the south, I kept between them to the westward,
and passed over a hilly, broken, granitic country.
Large blocks of granite crested the summits of the
hills, and their slopes were covered with Acacia thickets,
and arborescent Hakeas and Grevilleas. A dwarf
Acacia, with rhomboid downy phyllodia, an inch long,
grew between the rocks. The natives were busy
on the hills, cutting out opossums and honey.
We heard their calls and the cries of their children.
As we descended into another valley, the whole slope
was on fire; we passed through it, however, with little
difficulty. We crossed ridges after ridges, passed
from one little creek and watercourse to another,
all of which turned to the northward. At last,
heartily tired, and almost despairing of attaining
the object of our search, viz., a western water,
we came into a valley which went down to the south-west;
and, following it down, found that it joined a larger
one which went to the westward. A broad creek,
with the drooping tea tree and a sandy bed, gave us
the promise of soon finding water; and, following
the tracks of numerous kangaroos and native dogs, we
came to a small pool. After passing over very
rocky granitic hills, we came into a more open country;
the banks of the creek became reedy, and water was
more abundant, and at last a fine pool, surrounded
by a rich belt of reeds, was before us. Brown
was fortunate enough to shoot two ducks; and, as the
sun was setting behind a neighbouring hill, we made
our camp for the night.
May 22. We returned to
our companions, and by taking a W.N.W. course, we
avoided all the ranges and gullies that we had crossed
yesterday. At the westerly creek I found a rose-coloured
Sterculia, with large campanulate blossoms and tomentose
seed-vessels: the tree had lost all its foliage.
I had met with this species on the rocky ranges of
Moreton Bay (at Mount Brisbane), but there it was
a low shrub, whereas in this place, and all round
the gulf of Carpentaria, it formed a middle sized tree
with spreading branches. A new Hakea, with long
thin terete leaves (different from H. lorea) and Grevillea
chrysodendron, grew along the creek. Grevillea
ceratophylla (R. Br.) and another Grevillea,
with a compound terminal thyrsus, and long lanceolate
falcate leaves, grew on the slopes, in company with
a Xylomelum, with smooth and smaller seed-vessels than
those of X. pyriforme. The rocky ridges were occupied
by the stringy-bark, fine Cypress-pine trees, the
stunted silver-leaved Ironbark, a Eucalyptus, with
very scanty foliage, orange-coloured blossoms, seed-vessels
longitudinally ribbed, and as large as the egg of
a fowl; its butt was covered with a lamellar bark,
but the upper part and the branches were white and
smooth; also by another Eucalyptus, with a scaly butt
like the Moreton Bay ash, but with smooth upper trunk
and cordate ovate leaves, which was also new to me;
we called it the Apple-gum. We frequently met
with the grass tree (Xanthorrhaea.)
May 23. We moved our camp
to the westerly creek I had found the day before,
which with several others formed the heads of a river,
flowing to the N.W. I called this river the “Lynd,”
after R. Lynd, Esq., a gentleman to whom I am under
the greatest obligation, for his unmeasured liberality
and kindness enabled me to devote my time exclusively
to the pursuits of science and exploration.
The nights had been as usual very
cold, and the dew very heavy. The prevailing
breeze was from the east, veering towards evening to
the north-east; during the morning a cold south-east
wind. The rock was primitive, granite and pegmatite
in several varities, with a few exceptions of anagenitic
formation. Near the place of our first encampment
on the Lynd, in la degrees 58 minutes, I observed
a sienite, to which the distribution of the hornblende
in layers had given the stratified appearance of gneiss.
Another rock was composed of felspar and large leaflets
of white mica, or of quartz and white mica. The
veins which traversed these rocks were all of quartz,
which, within the pegmatite, enlarged into big masses
and hills, particularly where basaltic rock was near.
Mr. Gilbert and Charley went down the creek to find
water and a practicable road, in case the country should
prove mountainous and rocky. I had a view from
a small peak near our camp; the country was full of
ridges, but openly timbered, and I saw a low range
to the northward, trending from east to west.
May 24. It was the Queen’s
birth-day, and we celebrated it with what as
our only remaining luxury we were accustomed
to call a fat cake, made of four pounds of flour and
some suet, which we had saved for the express purpose,
and with a pot of sugared tea. We had for several
months been without sugar, with the exception of about
ten pounds, which was reserved for cases of illness
and for festivals. So necessary does it appear
to human nature to interrupt the monotony of life
by marked days, on which we indulge in recollections
of the past, or in meditations on the future, that
we all enjoyed those days as much, and even more, than
when surrounded with all the blessings of civilized
society; although I am free to admit, that fat-cake
and sugared tea in prospectu might induce us to watch
with more eagerness for the approach of these days
of feasting. There were, besides, several other
facts interesting to the psychologist, which exhibited
the influence of our solitary life, and the unity of
our purpose, on our minds. During the early part
of our journey, I had been carried back in my dreams
to scenes of recent date, and into the society of
men with whom I had lived shortly before starting on
my expedition. As I proceeded on my journey,
events of earlier date returned into my mind, with
all the fantastic associations of a dream; and scenes
of England, France, and Italy passed successively.
Then came the recollections of my University life,
of my parents and the members of my family; and, at
last, the days of boyhood and of school at
one time as a boy afraid of the look of the master,
and now with the independent feelings of the man,
communicating to, and discussing with him the progress
of my journey, the courses of the rivers I had found,
and the possible advantages of my discoveries.
At the latter part of the journey, I had, as it were,
retraced the whole course of my life, and I was now,
in my dreams, almost invariably in Sydney, canvassing
for support, and imagining that, although I had left
my camp, yet that I should return with new resources
to carry us through the remainder of our journey.
It was very remarkable, that all my companions were
almost invariably anticipating the end of our journey,
dreaming that they reached the sea-coast, and met with
ships, or that they were in Port Essington and enjoying
the pleasures of civilized life; whilst I, on awaking,
found my party and my interests on the place where
I had left them in my dreams. During the leisure
moments of the day, or at the commencement of night,
when seated at my fire, all my thoughts seemed riveted
to the progress and success of my journey, and to
the new objects we had met with during the day.
I had then to compel myself to think of absent friends
and past times, and the thought that they supposed
me dead or unsuccessful in my enterprize, brought me
back immediately to my favourite object. Much,
indeed the greater portion, of my journey had been
occupied in long reconnoitring rides; and he who is
thus occupied is in a continued state of excitement,
now buoyant with hope, as he urges on his horse towards
some distant range or blue mountain, or as he follows
the favourable bend of a river; now all despairing
and miserable, as he approaches the foot of the range
without finding water from which he could start again
with renewed strength, or as the river turns in an
unfavourable direction, and slips out of his course.
Evening approaches; the sun has sunk below the horizon
for some time, but still he strains his eye through
the gloom for the dark verdure of a creek, or strives
to follow the arrow-like flight of a pigeon, the flapping
of whose wings has filled him with a sudden hope, from
which he relapses again into a still greater sadness;
with a sickened heart he drops his head to a broken
and interrupted rest, whilst his horse is standing
hobbled at his side, unwilling from excessive thirst
to feed on the dry grass. How often have I found
myself in these different states of the brightest
hope and the deepest misery, riding along, thirsty,
almost lifeless and ready to drop from my saddle with
fatigue; the poor horse tired like his rider, footsore,
stumbling over every stone, running heedlessly against
the trees, and wounding my knees! But suddenly,
the note of Grallina Australis, the call of cockatoos,
or the croaking of frogs, is heard, and hopes are
bright again; water is certainly at hand; the spur
is applied to the flank of the tired beast, which already
partakes in his rider’s anticipations, and quickens
his pace and a lagoon, a creek, or a river,
is before him. The horse is soon unsaddled, hobbled,
and well washed; a fire is made, the teapot is put
to the fire, the meat is dressed, the enjoyment of
the poor reconnoiterer is perfect, and a prayer of
thankfulness to the Almighty God who protects the
wanderer on his journey, bursts from his grateful lips.
May 25. We travelled about
eight miles down the Lynd. The country was very
mountainous; granitic and pegmatite ranges bounded
the valley on both sides.
May 26. We continued our
journey over the most mountainous and rocky country
we had ever passed. The ranges formed the banks
of the river itself, and even entered its bed, which
gradually enlarged and was frequently formed by several
channels fringed with large drooping tea trees.
At the end of the stage, basalt was found to have broken
through the granite.
May 27. The river turned
more to the northward, and, joined by many gullies,
wound its way between wild and rocky, though low ranges.
At a place where it left a range of rugged little
peaks, basalt re-appeared at its banks, and extended
for some distance, now filling flats with its rough
and cellular blocks and pebbles, and again forming
small hillocks of black bare rock. As soon, however,
as the river had fairly left the basaltic formation,
fine large flats of a light sandy soil succeeded on
both sides; on which Pandanus spiralis grew in great
abundance, and to a larger size than we had seen before.
The bed of the river became very broad, and was covered
with sands, shingle, and pebbles of the rocks of its
upper course. I passed through a broad rocky gap
of a range tending from east to west, and, at about
two miles beyond and to the north-west of it, we encamped,
in la degrees 54 minutes 40 seconds.
In passing this gap, on a previous
reconnoitring ride with Brown, I met with several
natives with their wives and children, encamped at
the north entrance of it. When they saw us, the
men poised their spears, and shook their waddis to
frighten us, but when, notwithstanding their menaces,
we approached them, they left all their goods, and
with their weapons only hurried up the rocks with
wonderful agility. Three koolimans (vessels of
stringy bark) were full of honey water, from one of
which I took a hearty draught, and left a brass button
for payment. Dillis, fish spears, a roasted bandicoot,
a species of potatoe, wax, a bundle of tea-tree bark
with dry shavings; several flints fastened with human
hair to the ends of sticks, and which are used as
knives to cut their skin and food; a spindle to make
strings of opossum wool; and several other small utensils,
were in their camp. One of my Blackfellows found a fine rock-crystal in one
of their bags, when we passed the place next day with
our bullocks. The poor people had evidently not
yet ventured to return. The natives we had formerly
met, had generally watched our movements from a distance,
and had returned to their camp as soon as we had fairly
left it; but these seemed too much frightened; and
I should not be surprised to find that the mountainous
nature of their country had given them a greater share
of superstition.
Among the new and interesting scrubs
and trees which we met with at almost every step,
I shall only mention a small Grevillea, from one to
two feet in height, with pubescent pinnatifid leaves,
and a simple or compound thyrsus of scarlet flowers;
Cochlospermum gossypium, the native cotton tree of
Port Essington, whose bright showy yellow blossoms
and large capsules full of silky cotton, attracted
our attention; its leaves are deciduous, and the trees
were entirely leafless; a fine species of Calytrix
on the rocks, and two of Loranthus on the drooping
tea tree, the drooping foliage of which one of them
imitated, whilst the other belonged to the group I
mentioned as found at the Suttor, with its flowers
inserted on a leafy bract.
Exocarpus latifolius is so different
from E. cupressiformis, in its foliage and aspect,
that I did not suspect their near relation, until I
found blossom and fruit: the ripe kernel as well
as its yellow succulent leaf-stalk have a very agreeable
taste; a leguminous shrub, about five or six feet
high, with purple blossoms gathered into terminal oblong
heads; this would be an ornament to our gardens.
Along the river we discovered a large tree, about
forty or fifty feet in height, with rather singularly
disposed horizontal branches and rich dark green foliage;
its leaves were oblong acute, and frequently a foot
long; its flowers formed dense heads, which grew into
a fleshy body marked with the arcoles of every flower.
It is either Sarcocephalus or Zuccarinia, or nearly
allied to them. The tree has never been seen
on easterly waters, but it was the invariable companion
of all the larger freshwater rivers round the gulf.
A fine species of Gomphrena was found in the sandy
bed of the river. A species of Terminalia, a
fine shady tree, with spreading branches and broad
elliptical leaves, grew along the sandy creeks; and
another smaller one with Samara fruit preferred the
rocky slopes. Both of these, and a third species
growing on the west side of the gulph, which I shall
have to mention hereafter, supplied us with fine eatable
gum, and a fourth species, with smooth leaves, had
an eatable fruit of a purple colour.
The view I obtained from one of the
hills near our yesterday’s camp was very characteristic.
The country was broken by low ranges of various extent,
formed by exceedingly rocky hills and peaks, which
lifted their rugged crests above the open forest that
covered their slopes. Heaps of rocks with clusters
of trees, particularly the smooth-leaved fig tree,
the rose-coloured Sterculia, Exocarpus latifolius,
were scattered over the slopes, or grew on the summits,
to which they gave the resemblance of the lifted crest
of an irritated cockatoo, particularly when huge fantastic
blocks were striking out between the vegetation.
As we travelled along, ranges of hills of this character
appeared one after another; to which wallums and wallabies
fled for security as we scared them from the river’s
side; the rose-breasted cockatoo (Cocatua Eos, Gould.)
visited the patches of fresh burnt grass, in large
flocks; bustards were numerous on the small flats
between basaltic hillocks, where they fed on the ripe
fruit of Grewia.
On the evening of the 27th May, we
killed one of our bullocks, which had suffered more
than any of the others by the journey, in consequence
of his having carried our ammunition, which had decreased
comparatively little, and the great weight of which
had raised large lumps on his ribs, which had formed
into ulcers. We were very disagreeably disappointed
in not finding sufficient fat to fry the liver, which
was our favourite dish; even the fat of the marrow
had disappeared and had left a watery tissue, which,
when grilled for some time, turned into a yellow substance,
having the taste of the fried yolk of an egg.
We dried our meat on the 28th, 29th, and 30th.
I took a set of lunar sights, and calculated my longitude
143 degrees 30 minutes.
May 31. We had scarcely
left, our camp, when swarms of crows and kites (Milvus
isiurus) took possession of it, after having given
us a fair fight during the previous days, whilst we
were drying the meat. Their boldness was indeed
remarkable, and if the natives had as much, we should
soon have had to quit our camp. Proceeding, we
travelled over a broken and very stony country, with
a stiff soil, but mixed with so much sand that even
the Severn tree grew well. There was another small
tree, the branches of which were thickly covered with
bright green leaves; it had round inferior fruit,
about half an inch in diameter, which was full of
seeds: when ripe, it was slightly pulpy and acidulous,
and reminded me of the taste of the coarse German
rye bread. In consequence of this resemblance,
we called this little tree the Bread tree of the Lynd.
I ate handfulls of this fruit without the slightest
inconvenience. A species of Pittosporum,
and several Acacias, Pandanus, and the leguminous
Ironbark, were scattered through an open forest of
Ironbark and lanceolate box. I observed here
a very ornamental little tree, with drooping branches
and linear lanceolate drooping leaves three inches
long; it very much resembled a species of Capparis
that I had seen at the Isaacs. Its blossoms are
very small, and the calyx and corolla have each five
divisions; the stamens are opposite the petals; it
bore a fruit like a small apple, with a hard outside,
but pulpy and many seeded within, like Capparis;
the calyx was attached to the base of the fruit.
The rock was still granitic, with
small outbreaks of basalt; the leaflets of white mica
were visible everywhere in the soil and in the large
ant-hills, whose building materials were derived from
the decomposed felspar. The bed of the river
was frequently rocky, and very broad, with low banks
and no water. The highest flood-marks we observed
were from six to eight feet above the level of the
bed; these marks were on the trunks of Casuarinas,
Melaleucas, and flooded-gum, which grew along the channel.
The country in general had a winterly appearance; and
the grass round the camp was dry, but I observed the
fine grass of the Isaacs, and many varieties which
grow on the Suttor and Burdekin, which will yield an
excellent feed in the proper season; and, even at the
present, neither our bullocks nor horses were starving.
The part of the country in which we
were, possesses great interest in a meteorological
point of view. In the centre of the York Peninsula,
between the east coast and the gulf, and on the slopes
to the latter, as might be expected, the northerly
and easterly winds which set in so regularly after
sunset, as well along the Burdekin as on the basaltic
table land, failed, and were succeeded here by slight
westerly and easterly breezes, without any great and
decided movement in the atmosphere; and westerly winds,
which had formerly been of rare occurrence, became
more frequent and stronger. The days, from the
stillness of the air, were very hot; but at night the
dews were heavy, and it was very cold. Charley
asserted that he had seen ice at our last camp.
The black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus
Banksii) has been much more frequently observed of
late.
We used the last of our salt at the
last camp; and what we should do without it, was a
question of considerable interest. As I had never
taken salt with me in my reconnoitring expeditions,
and had never felt the want of it with dried beef,
either grilled or raw, I recommended my companions
to eat their meat in the same state; and, in fact,
good dry beef, without any farther preparation, was
much relished by all of us: for, when grilled,
it became ashy and burnt, particularly when without
fat; and, if stewed, although it yielded a good broth,
it became tough and tasteless. The meat of the
last bullock was very hard and juiceless, and something
was to be done to soften it, and make it palatable:
as we had no fat, we frequently steamed it with water,
but this rendered it tough, without facilitating in
the least the mastication; and its fibres, entering
between our teeth, rendered them exceedingly tender,
and caused us much pain. After a week’s
trial, and several experiments, we returned to our
former practice of stewing it, and in a very short
time relished it as much without salt, as we had formerly
done with it.