As a result of Flinders' circumnavigation of Australia, there were more accurate maps of the continent, which paved the way for future settlements, especially a she was able to identify suitable ports for future trade (such as Port Curtis near Gladstone).
Flinders also proved that there was no entrance from the Gulf of Carpentaria to a navigable inland sea.
Report back to Capt Flinders.
Matthew Flinders's most famous expedition was his circumnavigation of Australia. Between 1802 and 1803, Flinders circumnavigated and charted the entire Australian continent.
Explorer Matthew Flinders had one brother named Samuel, who accompanied him on his circumnavigation of Australia, but he had no sisters. Samuel Flinders was second lieutenant on board the ship "Investigator".
The Great Australian Bight was named by Captain Matthew Flinders during his circumnavigation of the Australian continent in 1801-1802.
Matthew Flinders accompanied Captain William Bligh on his first journey. On some of his later voyages, he was accompanied by fellow sea-explorer George Bass. On his circumnavigation of Australia he was accompanied by his younger brother Lt. Samuel Flinders and the ship's artist William Westall. Flinders also made mention in his journals of a number of crew members who fell sick and died, usually of dysentery-related causes, during the circumnavigation of Australia. These included James Greenhalgh, sergeant of marines; quarter-master John Draper; seaman Thomas Smith; and botanist Peter Good. Flinders also had a cat named Trim, a faithful companion on many voyages.
After Matthew Flinders completed his circumnavigation of the Australian continent, he was aboard the HMS Porpoise when it was shipwrecked on Wreck Reef off the coast of Queensland. Now known as Wreck Reefs, these reefs are located in the southern Coral Sea.
The entire point of Matthew Flinders' exploration was to improve knowledge of Australia's coastline and to increase the accuracy of shipping charts. His circumnavigation of the Australian continent determined conclusively that Australia was a single continent, and not divided into smaller islands. This had implications for future settlement in Australia, and Flinders among the first to recommend the southern coast as suitable for colonisation.
Matthew Flinders proved that Tasmania is an island during his exploration in 1798-1800. His circumnavigation of Tasmania, which he completed in 1798, provided clear evidence that it was separated from the Australian mainland by the Bass Strait. This finding was significant in mapping and understanding Australia's geography. Flinders published his results in his 1814 work, "A Voyage to Terra Australis."
Matthew Flinders did not discover Australia. Australia had already been "discovered" by the Aborigines, followed by Asian traders of trepang (sea slugs), followed by Dutch seaman Willem Jansz in 1606.
Matthew Flinders, together with George Bass, did much sea exploration around Australia: between 7 October 1798 and 7 January 1799, they completed the first circumnavigation of Van Diemen's land (now Tasmania).Between December 1801 and June 1803, Matthew Flinders also circumnavigated the continent of Australia, charting the entire coastline.
This was Matthew Flinders. Matthew Flinders's circumnavigation of Australia was undertaken between December 1801 and June 1803. On this journey, he discovered that Australia was a single continent, and not split by a large gulf or river, as had been theorised.
No. Flinders Island was discovered in 1773 by Tobias Furneaux, the commander of Captain Cook's support ship Adventure, when it became separated from Cook's flagship Resolutionby fog in the Great Southern Ocean.The island was named for Matthew Flinders by Governor Hunter in Sydney in 1798 after Flinder's successful circumnavigation of Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) in the sloop Norfolk. This proved that Tasmania was an island. Part of that task was also the proper charting of the Furneaux Group of islands - including the largest - Flinders Island.Note that Flinders never named anything for himself.There is also a 2nd Flinders Island off the south coast of Australia. Matthew Flinders named this small island in honour of his younger brother Lt. Samuel Flinders during their exploration of the south coast in the Investigator is 1802.