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The Dutch were the first recorded European explorers to land in Australia. Willem Jansz/Janszoon was the first to land, doing so in 1606. He was not particularly complimentary about Australia. He encountered hostility from the local indigenous people when he came achore on Cape York peninsula, and he lost ten of his crew during visits to the shore. He found the land swampy, but still charted 320 kilometres of the shore before returning to the Netherlands.

Later Dutch explorers did not think the land worthwhile enough to pursue any claims.

Englishman William Dampier also landed on the western coast, in 1688 and again in 1699. He was unimpressed by the dry, barren landscape, the lack of water and what he described as the "miserablest people in the world" - the native population. His negative reports led to the delay of England's colonisation of what is now Australia.

It was only when James Cook charted the east coast of the continent that a favourable report was sent back to England. Cook and his chief botanist, Sir Joseph Banks, made extensive notes about the fauna and flora, and both recommended Australia as a good site to establish a penal colony. They said the land was green and fertile, holding great promise.

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13y ago
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13y ago

At first the Aborigines regarded the strange white men in large ships as ghosts, possibly ghosts of their own ancestors. They were prepared to deal with them peacefully. As long as the two groups of people stayed out of each other's way, there was no conflict.

The real problems started when cultural misunderstandings occurred. In one example, Captain Arthur Phillip sought to meet with an aboriginal tribesman on the beach. In standard English manner, he thrust out his hand in welcome, to shake hands. Not understanding the cultural context, the Aborigine believed it was an act of aggression, and speared him in the shoulder.

The Aborigines had no concept of ownership, and they did not see why the white strangers couldn't share the land. They also didn't see why they were not permitted to spear the big, easy-to-catch livestock of the white settlers for their own food. These beasts were valuable and so naturally, the white settlers saw the aboriginal actions as attacks, and hostilities began to grow, with landowners sometimes gathering together and setting out to eradicate groups of "troublesome" Aborigines.

In Tasmania, one of the earliest massacres of Aborigines occurred when the European settlers thought they were being attacked. All that really happened was that a party of around 300 aboriginal men were on a kangaroo hunt, and inadvertently stumbled across a white settlement. The "Battle of Risdon", as it came to be called, resulted in the deaths of anywhere between 3 and 50 Aborigines (eyewitness accounts vary dramatically), all because the Aborigines were hunting kangaroos. They had not formed an attacking party. This was the start of years of conflict between Tasmanian Aborigines and white settlers which eventually resulted in the loss of the purebred aboriginal race from Tasmania. It also typified the misunderstandings that eventually led to more and more aboriginal massacres and attacks from Aborigines.

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12y ago

aboriginal people was confused why white people came to Australia in the 1870's.

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Q: What impression did the first explorers have of Australia when they landed?
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Apart from the first sea explorers who landed on Australia's shores, people began exploring Australia from the the first year that European settlement began. Governor Arthur Phillip first began exploring beyond Sydney in April 1788, and numerous other explorers followed after him.


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The first fleet of ships that landed in Australia was simply called the First Fleet.


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The first recorded instance of the Australian coastline being seen by Dutch explorers occurred in 1606 when Willem Janszoon, often known as Willem Jansz, landed on Australia's shores at the Pennefather River, near where the Queensland town of Weipa now stands, on the western shore of Cape York Peninsula.


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Who was the first British man to come to Australia?

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