From Adelaide, Burke and Wills travelled north to just west of today's Balranald, north to Menindee, Torowoto, Bulloo and reached their camp at Cooper Creek. From here they made their way to the corner where Queensland and South Australia meet (but do not meet any other state), then north to the Gulf of Carpentaria.
A map of Burke and Wills' route can be found at the related link below.
They didn't.
Burke and Wills reached the tidal flats of the Gulf of Carpentaria on 11 February 1861.
No. Burke and Wills did not know each other before being appointed their positions in the exploration to cross the continent.
Yes. Explorers Burke and Wills did meet Aborigines. Initially,the indigenous people tried to assist the explorers by feeding them. However, Burke became suspicious of the Aborigines and fearful that they were stealing supplies, so he frightened them off with gunshots. As a result, the indigenous people abandoned Burke and Wills, although they did keep John King alive.
Because Robert O'Hara Burke and William Wills were the first to travel through western and northern Queensland, there are several places named after them in that part of Queensland.BurketownBurke RiverO'Hara's Gap in the Selwyn RangesBurke and Wills were both from Victoria, so there are numerous sites around the state commemorating the two men.Burke Museum, Beechworth (where Burke was Superintendent of Police for some time) and a minument to Burke in Castlemaine, where he was also SuperintendentA monumental bronze statue, currently in the centre of Melbourne, but which has previously been in various other locations around MelbourneA memorial cairn in Melbourne's Royal Park, the point of Burke and Wills' departureA Burke & Wills memorial fountain in Ballarat's main streetA monument in the main Bendigo CemeteryThe Dig Tree, the Burke Tree and other monuments at Cooper Creek, where the men spent their final weeks awaiting rescueA huge memorial in Melbourne General CemeteryThe Victorian electorate of Wills is named after William Wills.In addition:The Haast Pass area of New Zealand was being explored about the time of the searches for Burke and Wills. Julius von Haast named several features after them, There is the Burke River, and the Wills River, both extraordinarily different from the country of their patronym's exploration country.
No. Explorers Burke and Wills were unrelated.
There were no long-term effects of the Burke and Wills expedition. The expedition did not result in the discovery of any new good land; it did not allow for the establishment of new transport routes across the inland; the track taken by Burke and Wills was not the route eventually followed by the Overland Telegraph Line, which was the main purpose of the expedition.
Burke and Wills travelled from Melbourne, Victoria to the Gulf of Carpentaria.
The exploration of Burke and Wills took place in 1860-1861.
Australian explorers Burke and Wills spoke English.
Burke came from Ireland, Wills from England
The Burke and Wills expedition left Melbourne in 1860.
On the Burke and Wills expedition, Wills was initially appointed as third-in-command, surveyor, astronomical and meteorological observer. When George Landells resigned after a dispute with Burke (some sources say Burke fired Landells), Wills was then appointed second-in-command.
The Burke and Wills expedition left Melbourne in 1860.
Thoroughly. Burke and Wills both died in June/July 1861.
The reward for being the first to find a route to the north was 2000 pounds.
During Burke and Wills' expedition, they used both horses and camels.