Early Navigators of Bass Strait 1770 – 1803 Poster Small

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Early Navigators of Bass Strait 1770 – 1803 Flat Poster, Paper and Laminated

Size 1280mm x 500mm

Scale Scale 1:500,000 [1 cm. = 5 km.] Lambert Conformal Conic. proj. E 139°40’00–E 151°20’00/S 37°10’00–S 41°25’00
Description [Melbourne] : State of Victoria, Department of Sustainability and Environment, c2010
Size 2100 x 825cm .
Full contents
  • “Routes of the navigators”: J. Cook, HM Bark “Endeavour” Apr 1770
  • G. Hamilton, Merchant ship “Sydney Cove” Feb 1797
  • G. Bass, Whale boat Dec 1797-Feb 1798
  • M. Flinders, HM Sloop “Norfolk” Oct 1798-Jan 1799
  • J. Black, Brig “Harbinger” Jan 1801
  • J. Murray, Armed survey vessel “Lady Nelson” Nov 1801-Mar 1802
  • E. Hamelin, Corvette “Le Naturaliste” Mar-Apr 1802 & Nov-Dec 1802
  • L. de Freycinet, Schooner “Casuarina” Nov-Dec 1802
  • T. Furneaux, Bark “Adventure” Mar 1773 mbtg
  • W. Clark, Longboat of “Sydney Cove” Feb-Mar 1797
Biography/History

Background: proposed in 2004, the map was developed over a period of five years (2005-2010) to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the first known charting of part of the western coastline of Cape York Peninsula, Queensland by Willem Janszoon in the Duyfken (1606). Each Australian state and territory was encouraged by the “Australia on the Map 1606-2006” (AOTM) organisation to celebrate the charting of its own coastline.

Notes

Relief not shown.

Map won the Judge’s Special Prize for Excellence at the Royal Historical Society of Victoria’s 2011 Victorian Community History Awards in October 2011.

Includes index and references to accompany student activities.

Map “shows the route of the [European] navigators who were passing near or through Bass Strait between 1770 and 1803 …”.

Nautical chart of Bass Strait with the southern coastline of Victoria, King Island, southern part of South Australia up to Rivoli Bay, northern coastline of Tasmania and the islands of Bass Strait.

Map includes a “selection of contemporary Aboriginal” language area, dialect and place names.

Cartography team led by Rolando Garay of the Victorian Surveyor-General’s Department, with research by Greg Eccleston, a retired surveyor.

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