Australian Aborigines were the first to find Australia and settle there.
If the question is not in relation to the original indigenous people:
The Asian people visited the northern coast regularly for hundreds of years before Europeans set foot on the continent, to collect sea-slugs (trepang), a valued delicacy in Asia.
The first recorded Europeans to find Australia were the Dutch. The best known among them were Willem Jansz (1606)and Dirk Hartog (1616),
Australia's first residents were the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
No. The Australian Aborigines were the first people who lived in Australia.
Yes. To our knowledge, the first people in Australia were the Aborigines.
The Aboriginal People first settle Australia.
Aborigines were the first people to live in Australia. Archaeological evidence proves this.
Yes, you can find people working as maids in Australia.
The indigenous people were the first in Australia. They originally came from the Indian sub-continent.
The first people sent to colonise Australia were convicts and the officers and marines sent to supervise them.
The word "aboriginal", by its very definition, means the people that are in an area first. Presuming that you mean the aboriginal people of Australia, archaeological evidence fully supports the belief that they were the first people in Australia.
The first white people to "immigrate" to Australia could be said to be the convicts and officers of the First Fleet, together with a handful of free settlers.
There have been people in Australia for tens of thousands of years. No one knows the name of the very first person in Australia.
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