a motorcycle
uyomtoec..
Motetcycle
Australia had the largest flocks of sheep in the world and for many year made large amounts of money exporting wool overseas. As a result of this came the expression that "Australia rode on the sheep's back".
A diver bagged him off the reef and they rode to land in his boat.
lt depends on the person. Someone in my family rode across the United States on a bike. I have done a 4 mile bike trip. I don't know about other people though.
50% - 80% of people rode horses during that time.
People walked, rode animals like donkeys, rode in carts pulled by oxen or donkeys, rode horses, and rode in boats. Very rich people were carried by their slaves in chairs suspended between poles.
Early humans would have first gone to Europe. Australia is a island and early humans would have probably walked to europe far before they rode the ocean to Australia.
Henry Abrams is a convict who rode the so-called 'First Fleet' from England to Australia in 1788. He rode the transport ship, Scarborough. He was convicted on March 9, 1785.
3 miles
They mostly rode on horses, even the commoners. The richer people rode in chariots.
Ted Rosevelt
i think horses
The expression is not actually "rode on the sheep's back" but "built on the sheep's back". Australia is often referred to as the country that was built on the sheep's back. That is because the wool industry is one of Australia's earliest industries, and the one that initially propelled Australia into success as a self-sufficient colony, able to trade with England in its own right. Australia's economic success and political development was "built on the sheep's back".