Initially, there was not a lot of impact. William Dampier landed on Australia's far northwestern shores, where the land is dry and infertile. He was unimpressed by the dry, barren landscape, the lack of water and what he described as the "miserablest people in the world" - the native population. He even returned eleven years later to see if the countryside was as bad as he remembered it - and it was.
His negative reports led to the delay of England's colonisation of what is now Australia. It was another 70 years or so before England sent anyone else to investigate the continent.
William Dampier was an English explorer and pirate. He was also a keen scientist who made observations of both plant and animal life. Dampier is known for being the first Englishman (though certainly not the first explorer) to land on Australia's shores. He landed in northwestern Australia, but was unimpressed by the dryness of the land, and the native inhabitants.
William Dampier was an English pirate, and the first English explorer to land in Australia. In 1688 and again in 1699, he landed on the far northwest coast, but he was unimpressed by the land and by the native inhabitants.
No. This statement was made by English explorer and pirate William Dampier in 1688, 82 years prior to James Cook.
Lieutenant James Cook officially claimed the eastern coast of Australia for Britain in 1770.The First Fleet arrived on January 26 1788.However, prior to that, Captain William Dampier, an English pirate and sea explorer, had seen the western coast of Australia, first in 1688, and then a decade later. Dampier was unimpressed with the dry barrenness of the northwest coast, and claimed that the indigenous people were "the miserablest people in the world". It was Dampier's negative report which put off further British interest in the Australian continent for almost another 100 years.
No. James Cook came to Australia in 1770. He was preceded by English pirate, explorer and naturalist William Dampier, who explored northwestern Australia in 1688, and again in 1699. Dampier was most unimpressed by the flat, barren countryside of the northwest, and his negative reports deterred further English exploration for another 70 years.
The pirate William Dampier was the first English man to visit Australia.
This was William Dampier. William Dampier was an English explorer and pirate. He was also a keen scientist who made observations of both plant and animal life. Dampier is known for being the first Englishman (though certainly not the first explorer) to land on Australia's shores. He landed in northwestern Australia, but was unimpressed by the dryness of the land, and the native inhabitants.
William Dampier
English explorer and pirate William Dampier is not known to have had a middle name.
William Dampier was an English explorer and pirate. He was also a keen scientist who made observations of both plant and animal life. Dampier is known for being the first Englishman (though certainly not the first explorer) to land on Australia's shores. He landed in northwestern Australia, but was unimpressed by the dryness of the land, and the native inhabitants.
The first Englishman to record the existence of Aborigines was English pirate and explorer William Dampier, in 1688. He was not impressed with either the country or the people, and noted in his journal that he considered them to be "the miserablest people in the world".
William Dampier was a pirate and later an explorer in Australia. He was born in East Coker in Somerset England. Little is known about his mother. Both his parents had died before he was seven years old.
William Dampier was an English pirate who first landed on Western Australia's northwest coast in 1688.
William Dampier was a pirate and a naturalist. He was a meticulous observer of nature and note-taker, and to this end, his curiosity led him to explore.
To repair it. As an experienced sea captain and pirate, Dampier became the first Englishman to explore and map parts of New Holland and New Guinea. On 4 January 1688, his ship the 'Cygnet' was beached on the northwest coast of Australia, at King Sound near Buccaneer Archipelago on the north-west coast of Australia. While the ship was being repaired Dampier made notes on the fauna and flora he found there.
No, the dutchmen Abel Tasman & Dirk Hartog, and an English pirate, William Dampier, got there first.
Yes: William Dampier was indeed a pirate, but that is not all he was. He was an explorer and a naturalist. He explored not for wealth and fame, but because he was curious and interested. He could, however, be bought by the highest bidder, whether it was the English government, or a private hirer of his services, and he banded with other English ships to rout the Spanish ships off the coast of Panama and Mexico.