Captain Charles Sturt, like many explorers, usually explored on horseback and on foot. However, on his most famous and significant journey, the tracing of the Murray River, he used a whaleboat.
The grave of Captain Charles Sturt is in the Cheltenham cemetery in the United Kingdom.
Charles Sturt's first expedition departed in November 1828 and returned several months later in March 1829.
Captain Charles Sturt found the Sturt Desert Pea in 1844.
Captain Charles Sturt found the Sturt Desert Pea in 1844.
Sturt Plain is named after explorer Charles Sturt.
Charles Sturt's second journey was sponsored by Governor Darling who commissioned Sturt to trace the course of the Murrumbidgee River, and to see whether it joined to the Darling. This was in December 1829- February 1830. On this expedition, Sturt discovered that the Murrumbidgee River flowed into the Murray (previously named the Hume), as did the Darling.
The Simpson Desert in Australia was discovered by Captain Charles Sturt in 1844. Captain Charles Sturt led an expedition into the desert interior, together with Scottish explorer John MacDougall Stuart. Sturt hoped to find the inland sea which had eluded him since he first followed the Murray River in the late 1820s. All the explorers found was Sturt's Stony Desert and the Simpson Desert.
Charles Sturt was accompanied on his expedition by a team of explorers, including Hamilton Hume and William Hovell. Sturt also had a party of convicts, soldiers, and Indigenous guides that assisted him during his journeys through the Australian outback.
Captain Charles Sturt discovered the Darling River whilst tracing the Macquarie River. Following the Macquarie inland, he came to a smaller river, the Bogan, which, due to the drought, was merely a series of waterholes. Sturt followed the Bogan downstream until he arrived suddenly at what he described as "a noble river", on 2 February 1829. This was the Darling, which Sturt named after Governor Darling.
He travelled with George Macleay
It depends on which expedition is meant. Captain Charles Sturt undertook to solve the mystery of where the inland rivers of New South Wales flowed. Sturt first traced the Macquarie River as far as the Darling, which he named after Governor Darling. Pleased with Sturt's discoveries, Governor Darling sent Sturt to trace the course of the Murrumbidgee River, and to see whether it joined to the Darling. On this expedition, Sturt discovered that the Murrumbidgee River flowed into the Murray (previously named the Hume), as did the Darling. By following the Murray in a collapsible whaleboat, Sturt found that it flowed to the southern ocean, emptying out at Lake Alexandrina on the south coast. The expedition was valuable for opening up Australia's inland waterways to the transportation of people and goods. Sturt led further expeditions into Australia's interior to determine conclusively whether there was an inland sea, but found only the desert and harsh conditions, completely unsuitable for settlement.
Charles Sturt travelled on the Murray River in a whaleboat and a skiff. He was the first explorer to trace the Murray to its mouth, at Encounter Bay, on the southern coast.