Some explorers were excited by the oportunities opened up by Charles Sturt's exploration. A significant exception to this was Major Thomas Mitchell. Mitchell never accepted Sturt's conclusion that the Darling River flowed into the Murray, and several of Mitchell's own expeditions were attempts to discredit Sturt's discoveries.
Charles Sturt was not an Australian Gallipoli leader. He was one of Australia's greatest explorers, following the course of the Murrumbidgee and Murray Rivers, and opening up the southeastern corner of the continent for settlement and river transportation. And yes, it is after the explorer Charles Sturt that the Charles Sturt University is named.
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.
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.
Charles Napier Sturt.
charles sturt was a explorer
Yes. The last school he attended was Harrow.
Charles Sturt's occupation was Surveyor-General.
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 collapsible whaleboat and a skiff.
City of Charles Sturt was created in 1997.
Charles Sturt University was created in 1989.
Charles Sturt, one of Australia's most famous explorers, suffered blindness as a result of the ordeal he underwent when he and his party had to row upstream up the fllooded Murray River, against the current, for 2000 kilometres after following the Murray River to its mouth. It was an exhausting journey that took its toll on Sturt and his men.
Charles Sturt's discoveries were received with gratitude and considerable acclaim as one of Australia's greatest explorers. He solved the mystery of where the inland rivers of New South Wales flowed. The Sydney Gazette newspaper reported that "Captain Sturt has inscribed his name in indelible characters upon the records of our history." Governor Darling also acknowledged that Sturt had added "in a highly important degree" to knowledge of what lay inland.When Sturt first traced the Macquarie River as far as the Darling, which he named after Governor Darling, the governor was sufficiently pleased with Sturt's discoveries, sending him 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. It also contributed significantly to the decision to open South Australia for settlement.