In the 1770\u27s, Europeans first landed in Tasmania and met the inhabitants. Less than one hundred years later, all people indigenous to the island had been officially declared dead. These stories explore the first moments of contact between Europeans and Tasmanians, and their repercussions into today\u27s world
Biographical sketch [of the author] by the Rev. George Clark.--The French in Van Dieman's Land, and ...
Cook’s voyage in the Endeavour in 1770. However, most of these collections were never published, at ...
Since their original settlement, European Tasmanians have dramatically transformed the landscape. Th...
The essential aim of this article is to analyse the nature of the Aboriginal people on Bruny Island,...
Tasmania (known as Van Diemen’s Land until 1855) was occupied for at least 30,000 years by a hunter-...
The Southern part of Tasmania came in for a considerable amount of attention in the early days, mai...
© 2016 Graham Seal. All rights reserved. For centuries before the arrival in Australia of Captain Co...
The discovery of vast numbers of the highly prized fur seal in Bass Strait in 1797 attracted many in...
The British colonisation of Tasmania began in 1803. By 1876, the British declared the Tasmanian Abor...
In 1908 English gentleman, Ernest Westlake, packed a tent, a bicycle and forty tins of food and sail...
Tasmania was a distinctive location for nineteenth-century travellers, and a regular feature of the ...
The European discovery of the Chatham Islands in 1791 resulted in significant consequences for its i...
The Dutch, under Willem Janszoon in the Duyfken, and the British, under James Cook in the Endeavour,...
Little more than seventy years after the British settled Van Diemen s Land (later Tasmania) in 1803,...
Much has been written, theorised and assumed about Tasmanian Aboriginal peoples and histories, but f...
Biographical sketch [of the author] by the Rev. George Clark.--The French in Van Dieman's Land, and ...
Cook’s voyage in the Endeavour in 1770. However, most of these collections were never published, at ...
Since their original settlement, European Tasmanians have dramatically transformed the landscape. Th...
The essential aim of this article is to analyse the nature of the Aboriginal people on Bruny Island,...
Tasmania (known as Van Diemen’s Land until 1855) was occupied for at least 30,000 years by a hunter-...
The Southern part of Tasmania came in for a considerable amount of attention in the early days, mai...
© 2016 Graham Seal. All rights reserved. For centuries before the arrival in Australia of Captain Co...
The discovery of vast numbers of the highly prized fur seal in Bass Strait in 1797 attracted many in...
The British colonisation of Tasmania began in 1803. By 1876, the British declared the Tasmanian Abor...
In 1908 English gentleman, Ernest Westlake, packed a tent, a bicycle and forty tins of food and sail...
Tasmania was a distinctive location for nineteenth-century travellers, and a regular feature of the ...
The European discovery of the Chatham Islands in 1791 resulted in significant consequences for its i...
The Dutch, under Willem Janszoon in the Duyfken, and the British, under James Cook in the Endeavour,...
Little more than seventy years after the British settled Van Diemen s Land (later Tasmania) in 1803,...
Much has been written, theorised and assumed about Tasmanian Aboriginal peoples and histories, but f...
Biographical sketch [of the author] by the Rev. George Clark.--The French in Van Dieman's Land, and ...
Cook’s voyage in the Endeavour in 1770. However, most of these collections were never published, at ...
Since their original settlement, European Tasmanians have dramatically transformed the landscape. Th...