Tasman was viewing the west coast of the South Island of New Zealand when he wrote A great land uplifted high. He was referring to the Southern Alps.
Abel Janszoon Tasman was sent to New Zealand on an exploration expedition. His trip from Tasmania to New Zealand was treacherous, and he noted in his diary that the only reason he lived through it was because he had a good compass.
Abel Tasman is important to Australia because he was the first European to discover Tasmania. Abel Janszoon Tasman was a Dutch seafarer and explorer born in 1603 in the village of Lutjegast, Netherlands. Some time after Tasman joined the Dutch East India Company in 1634, he was ordered to explore the south-east waters in order to find a new sea trade route to Chile in South America. During this voyage, in 1642, he discovered a previously unknown island on his voyage past the "Great South Land", or "New Holland", as the Dutch called Australia. He named it "Antony Van Diemen's Land" in honour of the High Magistrate, or Governor-General of Batavia.
Ruben Hernandez From Chap High School
Although the Maori had been living in New Zealand for hundreds of years, Tasman is considered the first European explorer to discover New Zealand, and why he came across it was something of a fluke. In 1634 Tasman joined the Dutch East India Company and, after gaining further experience and promotions, was ordered to explore the south-east waters in order to find a new sea trade route to Chile in South America.He was on an expedition to find the "Great South Land" which was marked, but undefined, on maps of the area. This still-hypothetical land was believed to be rich in minerals, and the Dutch hoped it would provide more trade opportunities for them. It was, of course, Australia that he was unknowingly seeking, but he never found the great continent he expected. This was, however, the catalyst for his discovery of New Zealand.Late in November 1642, Tasman discovered a previously unknown island on his voyage past the "Great South Land", or "New Holland", as the Dutch called Australia. He named the island "Antony Van Diemen's Land" (now Tasmania).He continued to sail east and, on 13 December 1642, sighted a new land which he described as 'large high-lying land', mountainous and covered in cloud in the south, but more barren in the north. This was New Zealand. However, he did not choose to explore further, assuming that the two lands were part of a larger continent. Tasman originally named New Zealand as Staten Landt, for he thought it might have been linked to a Staten Land close to Cape Horn which had been discovered by navigator Jacob Le Maire in 1616. Dutch cartographers subsequently named the islands New Zeeland after that province in Holland, and on English maps it became New Zealand, literally "sea land".
Abel Tasman did not set out to be an explorer. He was a sea-trader for the Dutch East India Company, and he was ordered to explore the south-east waters in order to find a new sea trade route to Chile in South America. He was also instructed to search for the hypothetical "Great South land" which was believed to be rich in minerals, and hence may have provided good trade opportunities for the Dutch.
its a plateau
Yes. It can get you high because it is a stimulant.
A mountain is a high, uplifted area with steep slopes. Mountains are large elevated area that rises from level ground. They are large and steep hills.
mountains hills things like that
fjord
An uplift is a hill , a mountain , or change in the usual high-tide mark.
plateau
Basin and Ridge
Dutchman Abel Janszoon Tasman was the first European to discover Tasmania, as it is known today, in November 1642. Originally, he named it "Van Diemen's Land", after the Governor of Batavia, Antony Van Diemen.
Some words that are on they synonym list for high are tall, great, immense, huge, colossal, gigantic, and sky-high. Also on the list are alpine, elevated, high-reaching, and uplifted.
Abel Janszoon Tasman was sent to New Zealand on an exploration expedition. His trip from Tasmania to New Zealand was treacherous, and he noted in his diary that the only reason he lived through it was because he had a good compass.
Abel Tasman is important to Australia because he was the first European to discover Tasmania. Abel Janszoon Tasman was a Dutch seafarer and explorer born in 1603 in the village of Lutjegast, Netherlands. Some time after Tasman joined the Dutch East India Company in 1634, he was ordered to explore the south-east waters in order to find a new sea trade route to Chile in South America. During this voyage, in 1642, he discovered a previously unknown island on his voyage past the "Great South Land", or "New Holland", as the Dutch called Australia. He named it "Antony Van Diemen's Land" in honour of the High Magistrate, or Governor-General of Batavia.