James Cook only named the eastern half of the continent. He gave it the name of New South Wales.
No. James Cook only named the eastern half of the continent New South Wales.The name "Australia" was derived from the name proposed by Matthew Flinders, which was "Terra Australis". Captain Cook named the eastern coast "New South Wales" because it reminded him of Wales.
James Cook explored the east coast of the continent of Australia, naming it New South Wales, in 1770.
New South Wales was the name of the eastern half of the Australian continent which had been claimed by James Cook for England. New Holland was the name of the western half of the continent. Van Diemen's Land was the name of the island now known as Tasmania, Australia's island state.
The name "Australia" was not determined by Captain Cook. It was derived from the name proposed by Matthew Flinders, which was "Terra Australis". James Cook named the eastern coast "New South Wales" because it reminded him of Wales.
He didn't.James Cook, who was the first European to chart the area, named the eastern coast of Australia New South Walesbecause the countryside bore a resemblance (in his mind) to parts of southern Wales.Australia, as a name, was not yet being used by the Europeans to refer to the continent, and it was not even clear whether or not the land that Cook charted was part of a larger continent.
James Cook, who was not yet a captain when he first visited Australia, did not call it anything. However, he claimed just the eastern coastline for Great Britain under the name of "New South Wales".
In 1770, James Cook claimed the eastern side of Australia for England under the name of New South Wales.
Lieutenant James Cook (not yet a captain when he charted the east coast of Australia) did not name the continent, but just the eastern coastline. He gave it the name of New South Wales as he took possession "of the whole eastern coast, from latitude 38 degrees S to this place, latitude 10.5 degrees S, in right of His Majesty King George the Third".
James Cook named the eastern half of Australia New South Wales when he charted it in 1770 and claimed it for England.
James Cook did not name the first colony of Australia. He sailed up the eastern coast 18 years before the continent was colonised.Cook claimed the eastern half of Australia as New South Wales, and recommended that the site of Botany Bay be colonised. However, when Arthur Phillip led the First Fleet into Botany Bay, he found it was not suitable for settlement, for several reasons, and moved north to Port Jackson.
Captain Cook was a captain and his full name was James Cook.